summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--34807-8.txt9687
-rw-r--r--34807-8.zipbin0 -> 190417 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h.zipbin0 -> 6728582 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/34807-h.htm10952
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image1.pngbin0 -> 778012 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image10.pngbin0 -> 186749 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image11.pngbin0 -> 313142 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image12.pngbin0 -> 348305 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image13.pngbin0 -> 480362 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image14.pngbin0 -> 193161 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image15.pngbin0 -> 209135 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image16.pngbin0 -> 275283 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image17.pngbin0 -> 50122 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image18.pngbin0 -> 332565 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image19.pngbin0 -> 15666 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image2.pngbin0 -> 22498 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image20.pngbin0 -> 14507 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image21.pngbin0 -> 43398 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image22.pngbin0 -> 236376 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image23.pngbin0 -> 346396 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image24.pngbin0 -> 378870 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image3.pngbin0 -> 460127 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image4.pngbin0 -> 564995 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image5.pngbin0 -> 397505 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image6.pngbin0 -> 152764 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image7.pngbin0 -> 235724 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image8.pngbin0 -> 269967 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807-h/images/image9.pngbin0 -> 199924 bytes
-rw-r--r--34807.txt9687
-rw-r--r--34807.zipbin0 -> 190277 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
33 files changed, 30342 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/34807-8.txt b/34807-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..99ca585
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9687 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of What was the Gunpowder Plot?, by John Gerard
+
+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: What was the Gunpowder Plot?
+ The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence
+
+Author: John Gerard
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2011 [EBook #34807]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Adam Styles and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES: Text in italics is enclosed by underscore
+characters. Where small capitals were used, text has been presented in
+uppercase. Abbreviations use superscript; the caret, ^, is used before
+superscript characters. Where multiple superscript characters are used
+they are enclosed in curly braces, {}. A small number of macron
+diacritical marks are used in the text and appear as an overlined
+letter. These marks are indicated by [=a] where a is the overlined
+character.
+
+This text makes extensive use of archaic spellings in quoted material
+which has not been amended or modernized. Where typographic errors have
+been repaired, they are detailed in further transcribers' notes at the
+end of the text.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT]
+
+
+
+
+
+ WHAT WAS THE
+ GUNPOWDER PLOT?
+
+ THE TRADITIONAL STORY TESTED BY
+ ORIGINAL EVIDENCE
+
+ BY
+ JOHN GERARD, S.J.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ LONDON
+ OSGOOD, McILVAINE & CO.
+ 45, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
+ 1897
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+THE following study of the Gunpowder Plot has grown out of the
+accidental circumstance that, having undertaken to read a paper before
+the Historical Research Society, at Archbishop's House, Westminster, as
+the day on which it was to be read chanced to be the 5th of November,[1]
+I was asked to take the famous conspiracy for my subject. It was with
+much reluctance that I agreed to do so, believing, as I then did, that
+there was absolutely nothing fresh to say upon this topic, that no
+incident in our annals had been more thoroughly threshed out, and that
+in regard of none, so far, at least, as its broader outlines are
+concerned, was the truth more clearly established.
+
+When, however, I turned to the sources whence our knowledge of the
+transaction is derived, and in particular to the original documents upon
+which it is ultimately based, I was startled to find how grave were the
+doubts and difficulties which suggested themselves at every turn, while,
+though slowly and gradually, yet with ever gathering force, the
+conviction forced itself upon me, that, not merely in its details is the
+traditional story unworthy of credit, but that all the evidence points
+to a conclusion fundamentally at variance with it. Nothing contributed
+so powerfully to this conviction as to find that every fresh line of
+reasoning or channel of information which could be discovered inevitably
+tended, in one way or another, towards the same result. In the following
+pages are presented to the reader the principal arguments which have
+wrought this change of view in my own mind.[2]
+
+I cannot pretend to furnish any full or wholly satisfactory answer to
+the question which stands upon the title-page. The real history of the
+Plot in all its stages we shall, in all probability, never know. If,
+however, we cannot satisfy ourselves of the truth, it will be much to
+ascertain what is false; to convince ourselves that the account of the
+matter officially supplied, and almost universally accepted, is
+obviously untrue, and that the balance of probability lies heavily
+against those who invented it, as having been the real plotters,
+devising and working the scheme for their own ends.
+
+Neither have I any wish to ignore, or to extenuate, the objections which
+militate against such a conclusion, objections arising from
+considerations of a general character, rather than from any positive
+evidence. Why, it may reasonably be asked, if the government of the day
+were ready to go so far as is alleged, did they not go further? Why,
+being supremely anxious to incriminate the priests, did they not
+fabricate unequivocal evidence against them, instead of satisfying
+themselves with what appears to us far from conclusive? Why did they
+encumber their tale with incidents, which, if they did not really occur,
+could serve only to damage it, inasmuch as we, at this distance of
+time, can argue that they are impossible and absurd? How is it,
+moreover, that the absurdity was not patent to contemporaries, and was
+not urged by those who had every reason to mislike and mistrust the
+party in power?
+
+Considerations such as these undoubtedly deserve all attention, and must
+be fully weighed, but while they avail to establish a certain
+presumption in favour of the official story, I cannot but think that the
+sum of probabilities tells strongly the other way. It must be remembered
+that three centuries ago the intrinsic likelihood or unlikelihood of a
+tale did not go for much, and the accounts of plots in particular appear
+to have obtained general credence in proportion as they were incredible,
+as the case of Squires a few years earlier, and of Titus Oates somewhat
+later, sufficiently testify. It is moreover as difficult for us to enter
+into the crooked and complex methods of action which commended
+themselves to the statesmen of the period, as to appreciate the force of
+the cumbrous and abusive harangues which earned for Sir Edward Coke the
+character of an incomparable pleader. On the other hand, it appears
+certain that they who had so long played the game must have understood
+it best, and, whatever else may be said of them, they always contrived
+to win. In regard of Father Garnet, for example, we may think the
+evidence adduced by the prosecution quite insufficient, but none the
+less it in fact availed not only to send him to the gallows, but to
+brand him in popular estimation for generations, and even for centuries,
+as the arch-traitor to whose machinations the whole enterprise was due.
+In the case of some individuals obnoxious to the government, it seems
+evident that downright forgery was actually practised.
+
+The question of Father Garnet's complicity, though usually considered as
+the one point in connection with the Plot requiring to be discussed, is
+not treated in the following pages. It is doubtless true that to prove
+the conspiracy to have been a trick of State, is not the same thing as
+proving that he was not entangled in it; but, at the same time, the
+first point, if it can be established, will deprive the other of almost
+all its interest. Nevertheless, Father Garnet's case will still require
+to be fully treated on its own merits, but this cannot be done within
+the limits of such an inquiry as the present. It is not by confining our
+attention to one isolated incident in his career, nor by discussing once
+again the familiar documents connected therewith, that we can form a
+sound and satisfactory judgment about him. For this purpose, full
+consideration must be given to what has hitherto been almost entirely
+ignored, the nature and character of the man, as exhibited especially
+during the eighteen years of his missionary life in England, during most
+of which period he acted as the superior of his brother Jesuits. There
+exist abundant materials for his biography, in his official and
+confidential correspondence, preserved at Stonyhurst and elsewhere, and
+not till the information thus supplied shall have been duly utilized
+will it be possible to judge whether the part assigned to him by his
+enemies in this wild and wicked design can, even conceivably, represent
+the truth. It may, I trust, be possible at no distant date to attempt
+this work, but it is not possible now, and to introduce this topic into
+our present discussion would only confuse the issue which is before us.
+
+Except in one or two instances, I have judged it advisable, for the sake
+of clearness, to modernize the spelling of documents quoted in the text.
+In the notes they are usually given in their original form.
+
+I have to acknowledge my indebtedness in many particulars to Mr. H.W.
+Brewer, who not only contributes valuable sketches to illustrate the
+narrative, but has furnished many important notes and suggestions, based
+upon his exhaustive knowledge of ancient London. I have to thank the
+Marquis of Salisbury for permission to examine MSS. in the Hatfield
+collection, and his lordship's librarian, Mr. Gunton, for information
+supplied from the same source. Through the courtesy of the Deputy-Keeper
+of the Public Records, every facility has been afforded me for
+consulting the precious documents contained in the "Gunpowder Plot
+Book." The Dean of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, has kindly given me
+access to an important MS. in the College Library; and I have been
+allowed by the Rector of Stonyhurst to retain in my hands Father
+Greenway's MS. history of the Plot during the whole period of my work.
+The proprietors of the _Daily Graphic_ have allowed me to use two
+sketches of the interior of "Guy Faukes' Cellar," and one of his
+lantern, originally prepared by Mr. Brewer for that journal.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] 1894.
+
+[2] Some of these have been partially set forth in a series of six
+articles appearing in _The Month_, December 1894-May, 1895.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. THE STATE OF THE QUESTION 1
+
+ Disclosure of the Plot--Arrest of Guy Faukes--Flight of his
+ associates--Their abortive insurrection--Their fate--The crime
+ charged on Catholics in general--Garnet and other Jesuits proclaimed
+ as the ringleaders--Capture of Garnet--Efforts to procure evidence
+ against him--His execution--Previous history of the Plot as
+ traditionally narrated; Proceedings and plans of the
+ conspirators--Manner of the discovery.
+
+ Reasons for suspecting the truth of this history--Previous plots
+ originated or manipulated by the government--Suspicious
+ circumstances respecting the Gunpowder Plot in particular--Essential
+ points of the inquiry.
+
+ II. THE PERSONS CONCERNED 19
+
+ Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury--His character variously
+ estimated--Discreditable incidents of his career--Contemporary
+ judgments of him--His unpopularity--His political difficulties
+ largely dissipated in consequence of the Plot.
+
+ His hatred of and hostility towards the Catholics--Their numbers and
+ importance--Their hopes from King James, and their
+ disappointment--The probability that some would have recourse to
+ violence--The conspirators known as men likely to seek such a
+ remedy--Their previous history--Difficulties and contradictions in
+ regard of their character.
+
+ III. THE OPINION OF CONTEMPORARIES AND HISTORIANS 42
+
+ The government at once suspected of having contrived or fomented the
+ Plot--Persistence of these suspicions, to which historians for more
+ than a century bear witness--No fresh information accounts for their
+ disappearance.
+
+ IV. THE TRADITIONAL STORY 54
+
+ The old House of Lords and its surroundings--House hired by the
+ conspirators--They attempt to dig a mine beneath the Peers'
+ Chamber--Difficulties and improbabilities of the account--The
+ "Cellar" hired--Its position and character--The gunpowder bought and
+ stored--Further problems concerning it--The conspirators'
+ plans--Contradictions respecting them--Their wild and absurd
+ character--Impossibility of the supposition that the proceedings
+ escaped the notice of the government.
+
+ V. THE GOVERNMENT INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT 93
+
+ Evidence that the government were fully aware of what was in
+ progress--Various intelligence supplied to them--Cecil's uneasiness
+ on account of the spread of Catholicity, and the king's
+ communication with the pope--His evident determination to force on
+ James a policy of intolerance--He intimates that a great move is
+ about to be made, and acknowledges to information concerning the
+ conspirators and their schemes--His political methods illustrated.
+
+ VI. THE "DISCOVERY" 114
+
+ Importance of the letter received by Lord Monteagle--Extraordinary
+ prominence given to it--Monteagle's character--He receives the
+ letter--Suspicious circumstances connected with its arrival--It is
+ shown to Cecil--Hopeless contradictions of the official narrative as
+ to what followed--Impossibility of ascertaining what actually
+ occurred--The French version of the story--The conduct of the
+ government at variance with their own professions--Their
+ inexplicable delay in making the discovery--They take no precautions
+ against the recurrence of danger--The mystery of the
+ gunpowder--Incredibility of the official narration.
+
+ VII. PERCY, CATESBY, AND TRESHAM 147
+
+ Probability that the government had an agent among the
+ conspirators--Suspicious circumstances regarding Percy--His private
+ life--His alleged intercourse with Cecil--His death.
+
+ Catesby and Tresham likewise accused of secret dealings with
+ Cecil--Catesby's falsehood towards his associates and Father
+ Garnet--Tresham's strange conduct after the discovery--His
+ mysterious death.
+
+ Alleged positive evidence against the government.
+
+ VIII. THE GOVERNMENT'S CASE 163
+
+ A monopoly secured for the official narrative, which is admittedly
+ untruthful--Suspicions suggested by such a course, especially in
+ such a case--The confessions of Faukes and Winter, on which this
+ narrative is based, deserve no credit--Nor does the evidence of
+ Bates against Greenway--Indications of foul play in regard of Robert
+ Winter--The case of Owen, Baldwin and Cresswell; assertions made
+ respecting them of which no proof can be produced--Efforts to
+ implicate Sir Walter Raleigh and others--Falsification of
+ evidence--The service of forgers employed.
+
+ Catholic writers have drawn their accounts from the sources provided
+ by the government.
+
+ IX. THE SEQUEL 209
+
+ Cecil well informed as to the real nature of the conspiracy, and
+ apprehends no danger from it--At once turns it to account by
+ promoting anti-Catholic legislation--Honour and popularity resulting
+ to him--Ruin of the Earl of Northumberland--Cecil's manifesto--His
+ alleged attempt to start a second plot.
+
+ The popular history of the Plot, and how it was circulated--Singular
+ suitability of the Fifth of November for the "Discovery."
+
+ Summary of the argument.
+
+
+ APPENDIX A. NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS 235
+
+ APPENDIX B. SIR EVERARD DIGBY'S LETTER TO SALISBURY 245
+
+ APPENDIX C. THE QUESTION OF SUCCESSION 249
+
+ APPENDIX D. THE SPANISH TREASON 251
+
+ APPENDIX E. SITE OF PERCY'S LODGING 251
+
+ APPENDIX F. ENROLMENT OF CONSPIRATORS 252
+
+ APPENDIX G. HENRY WRIGHT THE INFORMER 254
+
+ APPENDIX H. MONTEAGLE'S LETTER TO KING JAMES 256
+
+ APPENDIX I. EPITAPH ON PETER HEIWOOD 258
+
+ APPENDIX K. THE USE OF TORTURE 259
+
+ APPENDIX L. MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE PLOT 260
+
+ APPENDIX M. MEMORIAL INSCRIPTIONS IN THE TOWER 264
+
+ APPENDIX N. GUY FAUKES' PUBLISHED CONFESSION 268
+
+
+ INDEX 279
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ 1. MEDAL COMMEMORATIVE OF THE GUNPOWDER PLOT _Title-page_
+
+ 2. THE GUNPOWDER PLOT. I. _Frontispiece_
+
+ 3. " " " II. 90
+
+ 4. " " " III. 215
+
+ 5. " " " IV. 227
+
+ 6. " " " V. 229
+
+ 7. DISCOVERY OF THE GUNPOWDER PLOT 136
+
+ 8. MONTEAGLE AND LETTER 115
+
+ 9. ARREST OF FAUKES 125
+
+ 10. GUY FAUKES' LANTERN 139
+
+ 11. GROUP OF CONSPIRATORS 3
+
+ 12. THOMAS PERCY 149
+
+ 13. HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT IN 1605 56-7
+
+ 14. GROUND PLAN OF THE SAME 59
+
+ 15. HOUSE OF LORDS IN 1807 61
+
+ 16. INTERIOR OF HOUSE OF LORDS, 1755 97
+
+ 17. INTERIOR OF "CELLAR" 71
+
+ 18. ARCHES FROM "CELLAR" 75
+
+ 19. VAULT UNDER PAINTED CHAMBER 73
+
+ 20. CELL ADJOINING PAINTED CHAMBER 83
+
+ 21. FACSIMILE OF PART OF WINTER'S CONFESSION, NOV. 23 168
+
+ 22. SIGNATURES OF FAUKES AND OLDCORNE 173
+
+ 23. FACSIMILE OF PART OF FAUKES' CONFESSION OF NOV. 9 199
+
+
+
+
+ "Quis hæc posteris sic narrare poterit, ut facta non ficta esse
+ videantur?"
+
+ "Ages to come will be in doubt whether it were a fact or a fiction."
+
+ _Sir Edw. Coke on the trial of the Conspirators._
+
+
+
+
+WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE STATE OF THE QUESTION.
+
+
+ON the morning of Tuesday, the 5th of November, 1605, which day was
+appointed for the opening of a new Parliamentary session, London rang
+with the news that in the course of the night a diabolical plot had been
+discovered, by which the king and legislature were to have been
+destroyed at a blow. In a chamber beneath the House of Lords had been
+found a great quantity of gunpowder, and with it a man, calling himself
+John Johnson, who, finding that the game was up, fully acknowledged his
+intention to have fired the magazine while the royal speech was being
+delivered, according to custom, overhead, and so to have blown King,
+Lords, and Commons into the air. At the same time, he doggedly refused
+to say who were his accomplices, or whether he had any.
+
+This is the earliest point at which the story of the Gunpowder Plot can
+be taken up with any certainty. Of what followed, at least as to the
+main outlines, we are sufficiently well informed. Johnson, whose true
+name was presently found to be Guy, or Guido, Faukes,[3] proved, it is
+true, a most obstinate and unsatisfactory witness, and obstinately
+refused to give any evidence which might incriminate others. But the
+actions of his confederates quickly supplied the information which he
+withheld. It was known that the "cellar" in which the powder was found,
+as well as a house adjacent, had been hired in the name of one Thomas
+Percy, a Catholic gentleman, perhaps a kinsman, and certainly a
+dependent, of the Earl of Northumberland. It was now discovered that he
+and others of his acquaintance had fled from London on the previous day,
+upon receipt of intelligence that the plot seemed at least to be
+suspected. Not many hours later the fugitives were heard of in
+Warwickshire, Worcestershire, and Staffordshire, the native counties of
+several amongst them, attempting to rally others to their desperate
+fortunes, and to levy war against the crown. For this purpose they
+forcibly seized cavalry horses[4] at Warwick, and arms at Whewell
+Grange, a seat of Lord Windsor's. These violent proceedings having
+raised the country behind them, they were pursued by the sheriffs with
+what forces could be got together, and finally brought to bay at
+Holbeche, in Staffordshire, the residence of one Stephen Littleton, a
+Catholic gentleman.
+
+There proved to have been thirteen men in all who had undoubtedly been
+participators in the treason. Of these Faukes, as we have seen, was
+already in the hands of justice. Another, Francis Tresham, had not fled
+with his associates, but remained quietly, and without attempting
+concealment, in London, even going to the council and offering them his
+services; after a week he was taken into custody. The eleven who either
+betook themselves to the country, or were already there, awaiting the
+issue of the enterprise, and prepared to co-operate in the rising which
+was to be its sequel, were Robert Catesby, Thomas Percy, Robert and
+Thomas Winter, John and Christopher Wright, John Grant, Robert Keyes,
+Ambrose Rokewood, Sir Everard Digby, and Thomas Bates. All were
+Catholics, and all, with the exception of Bates, Catesby's servant, were
+"gentlemen of blood and name," some of them, notably Robert Winter,
+Rokewood, Digby, and Tresham, being men of ample fortune.
+
+[Illustration: THE CONSPIRATORS, FROM A PRINT PUBLISHED AT AMSTERDAM.]
+
+On Friday, November 8th, three days after the discovery, Sir Richard
+Walsh, sheriff of Worcestershire, attacked Holbeche. Catesby, Percy, and
+the two Wrights were killed or mortally wounded in the assault. The
+others were taken prisoners on the spot or in its neighbourhood, with
+the exception of Robert Winter, who, accompanied by their host, Stephen
+Littleton, contrived to elude capture for upwards of two months, being
+at last apprehended, in January, at Hagley Hall, Worcestershire. All the
+prisoners were at once taken up to London, and being there confined,
+were frequently and diligently examined by the council, to trace, if
+possible, farther ramifications of the conspiracy, and especially to
+inculpate the Catholic clergy.[5] Torture, it is evident, was employed
+with this object.
+
+Meanwhile, on November 9th, King James addressed to his Parliament a
+speech, wherein he declared that the abominable crime which had been
+intended was the direct result of Catholic principles, Popery being "the
+true mystery of iniquity." In like manner Chichester, the Lord Deputy in
+Ireland, was informed by Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, his Majesty's
+Secretary of State, that the Plot was an "abominable practice of Rome
+and Satan,"[6] while the monarch himself sent word to Sir John Harington
+that "these designs were not formed by a few," that "the whole legion of
+Catholics were consulted," that "the priests were to pacify their
+consciences, and the Pope confirm a general absolution for this glorious
+deed."[7]
+
+Then follows an interval during which we know little of the course of
+events which were proceeding in the seclusion of the council-room and
+torture-chamber; but on December 4th we find Cecil complaining that he
+could obtain little or no evidence against the really important persons:
+"Most of the prisoners," he writes,[8] "have wilfully forsworn that the
+priests knew anything in particular, and obstinately refuse to be
+accusers of them, yea, what torture soever they be put to."
+
+On January 15th, 1605-6, a proclamation was issued declaring that the
+Jesuit fathers, John Gerard, Henry Garnet, and Oswald Greenway, or
+Tesimond, were proved to have been "peculiarly practisers" in the
+treason, and offering a reward for their apprehension. On the 21st of
+the same month Parliament met, having been prorogued immediately after
+the king's speech of November 9th, and four days later an Act was passed
+for the perpetual solemnization of the anniversary of the projected
+crime, the preamble whereof charged its guilt upon "Many malignant and
+devilish papists, jesuits, and seminary priests, much envying the true
+and free possession of the Gospel by the nation, under the greatest,
+most learned, and most religious monarch who had ever occupied the
+throne."[9]
+
+In consequence of this Act, was introduced into the Anglican liturgy the
+celebrated Fifth of November service, in the collect of which the king,
+royal family, nobility, clergy, and commons are spoken of as having
+been "by Popish treachery appointed as sheep to the slaughter, in a most
+barbarous and savage manner, beyond the examples of former ages;" while
+the day itself was marked in the calendar as the "Papists' Conspiracy."
+
+It will thus be seen that the Powder Plot was by this time officially
+stigmatized as the work of the Catholic body in general, and in
+particular of their priests; thus acquiring an importance and a
+significance which could not be attributed to it were it but the wild
+attempt of a few turbulent men. As a natural corollary we find
+Parliament busily engaged upon measures to insure the more effectual
+execution of the penal laws.[10]
+
+On January 27th the surviving conspirators, Robert and Thomas Winter,
+Faukes, Grant, Rokewood, Keyes, Digby, and Bates,[11] were put upon
+their trial. In the indictment preferred against them, it was explicitly
+stated that the Plot was contrived by Garnet, Gerard, Greenway, and
+other Jesuits, to whose traitorous persuasions the prisoners at the bar
+had wickedly yielded. All were found guilty, Digby, Robert Winter,
+Grant, and Bates being executed at the west end of St. Paul's Church, on
+January the 30th, and the rest on the following day in Old Palace Yard.
+
+On the very day upon which the first company suffered, Father Garnet,
+whose hiding-place was known, and who had been closely invested for nine
+days, was captured, in company with another Jesuit, Father Oldcorne. The
+latter, though never charged with knowledge of the plot, was put to
+death for having aided and abetted Garnet in his attempt to escape.
+Garnet himself, being brought to London, was lodged first in the
+Gatehouse and afterwards in the Tower.
+
+As we have seen, he had already been proclaimed as a traitor, and
+"particular practiser" in the conspiracy, and had moreover been
+officially described as the head and front of the treason. Of the latter
+charge, after his capture, nothing was ever heard. Of his participation,
+proofs, it appeared, still remained to be discovered, for on the 3rd of
+March Cecil still spoke of them as in the future.[12] In order to obtain
+the required evidence of his complicity, Garnet was examined
+three-and-twenty times before the council, and, in addition, various
+artifices were practised which need not now be detailed. On the 28th of
+March, 1606, he was brought to trial, and on May 3rd he was hanged at
+St. Paul's. The Gunpowder Conspirators were thenceforth described in
+government publications as "Garnet, a Jesuit, and his confederates."
+
+Such is, in outline, the course of events which followed the discovery
+of November 5th, all circumstances being here omitted which are by
+possibility open to dispute.
+
+It will probably be maintained, as our best and most circumspect
+historians appear to have assumed, that we are in possession of
+information enabling us to construct a similar sketch of what preceded
+and led up to these events,--whatever obscurity there may be regarding
+the complicity of those whose participation would invest the plot with
+the significance which has been attributed to it. If it were indeed but
+the individual design of a small knot of men, acting for themselves and
+of themselves, then, though they were all Catholics, and were actuated
+by a desire to aid the Catholic cause, the crime they intended could not
+justly be charged upon the body of their co-religionists. It would be
+quite otherwise if Catholics in general were shown to have countenanced
+it, or even if such representative men as members of the priesthood were
+found to have approved so abominable a project, or even to have
+consented to it, or knowingly kept silence regarding it. Of the
+complicity of Catholics in general or of their priesthood as a body
+there is no proof whatever, nor has it ever been seriously attempted to
+establish such a charge. As to the three Jesuits already named, who
+alone have been seriously accused, there is no proof, the sufficiency of
+which may not be questioned. But as to the fact that they who originated
+the Plot were Catholics, that they acted simply with the object of
+benefiting their Church, and that the nation most narrowly escaped an
+appalling disaster at their hands, can there be any reasonable doubt? Is
+not the account of their proceedings, to be read in any work on the
+subject, as absolutely certain as anything in our history?
+
+This account is as follows. About a year after the accession of James
+I.,[13] when it began to be evident that the hopes of toleration at his
+hands, which the Catholics had entertained, were to be disappointed,
+Robert Catesby, a man of strong character, and with an extraordinary
+power of influencing others, bethought him in his wrath of this means
+whereby to take summary vengeance at once upon the monarch and the
+legislators, under whose cruelty he himself and his fellows were
+groaning. The plan was proposed to John Wright and Thomas Winter, who
+approved it. Faukes was brought over from the Low Countries, as a man
+likely to be of much service in such an enterprise. Shortly afterwards
+Percy joined them,[14] and somewhat later Keyes and Christopher Wright
+were added to their number.[15] All the associates were required to take
+an oath of secrecy,[16] and to confirm it by receiving Holy
+Communion.[17]
+
+These are the seven "gentlemen of blood and name," as Faukes describes
+them, who had the main hand in the operations which we have to study. At
+a later period six others were associated with them, Robert Winter,
+elder brother of Thomas, and Grant, both gentlemen of property, Bates,
+Catesby's servant, and finally, Rokewood, Digby, and Tresham, all rich
+men, who were brought in chiefly for the sake of their wealth, and were
+enlisted when the preparations for the intended explosion had all been
+completed, in view of the rising which was to follow.[18]
+
+Commencing operations about the middle of December, 1604, these
+confederates first endeavoured to dig a mine under the House of Lords,
+and afterwards hired a large room, described as a cellar, situated
+beneath the Peers' Chamber, and in this stored a quantity of gunpowder,
+which Faukes was to fire by a train, while the King, Lords, and Commons,
+were assembled above.
+
+Their enemies being thus destroyed, they did not contemplate a
+revolution, but were resolved to get possession of one of the king's
+sons, or, failing that, of one of his daughters, whom they would
+proclaim as sovereign, constituting themselves the guardians of the new
+monarch. They also contrived a "hunting match" on Dunsmoor heath, near
+Rugby, which was to be in progress when the news of the catastrophe in
+London should arrive; the sportsmen assembled for which would furnish,
+it was hoped, the nucleus of an army.
+
+Meanwhile, as we are assured--and this is the crucial point of the whole
+story--the government of James I. had no suspicion of what was going on,
+and, lulled in false security, were on the verge of destruction, when a
+lucky circumstance intervened. On October 26th, ten days before the
+meeting of Parliament, a Catholic peer, Lord Monteagle, received an
+anonymous letter, couched in vague and incoherent language, warning him
+to absent himself from the opening ceremony. This document Monteagle at
+once took to the king's prime minister, Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury,
+who promptly divined its meaning and the precise danger indicated,
+although he allowed King James to fancy that he was himself the first to
+interpret it, when it was shown to him five days later.[19] Not for
+four other days were active steps taken, that is, till the early morning
+of the fatal Fifth. Then took place the discovery of which we have
+already heard.
+
+Such is, in brief, the accepted version of the history, and of its
+substantial correctness there is commonly assumed to be no room for
+reasonable doubt. As Mr. Jardine writes,[20] "The outlines of the
+transaction were too notorious to be suppressed or disguised; that a
+design had been formed to blow up the Parliament House, with the King,
+the Royal Family, the Lords and Commons, and that this design was formed
+by Catholic men and for Catholic purposes, could never admit of
+controversy or concealment." In like manner, while acknowledging that in
+approaching the question of Father Garnet's complicity, or that of other
+priests, we find ourselves upon uncertain ground, Mr. Gardiner has no
+hesitation in declaring that "the whole story of the plot, as far as it
+relates to the lay conspirators, rests upon indisputable evidence."[21]
+
+Nevertheless there appear to be considerations, demanding more attention
+than they have hitherto received, which forbid the supposition that, in
+regard of what is most vital, this official story can possibly be true;
+while the extreme care with which it has obviously been elaborated,
+suggests the conclusion that it was intended to disguise facts, to the
+concealment of which the government of the day attached supreme
+importance.
+
+As has been said, the cardinal point of the tale, as commonly told, is
+that the Plot was a secret and dangerous conspiracy, conducted with so
+much craft as to have baffled detection, but for a lucky accident; that
+the vigilance of the authorities was completely at fault; and that they
+found themselves suddenly on the very brink of a terrible catastrophe of
+which they had no suspicion.[22] If, on the contrary, it should appear
+that they had ample information of what was going on, while feigning
+absolute ignorance; that they studiously devised a false account of the
+manner in which it came to their knowledge; and that their whole conduct
+is quite inconsistent with that sense of imminent danger which they so
+loudly professed--the question inevitably suggests itself as to whether
+we can rely upon the authenticity of the opening chapters of a history,
+the conclusion of which has been so dexterously manipulated.
+
+A French writer has observed[23] that the plots undertaken under
+Elizabeth and James I. have this feature in common, that they proved,
+one and all, extremely opportune for those against whom they were
+directed. To this law the Gunpowder Plot was no exception. Whatever be
+the true history of its origin, it certainly placed in the hands of the
+king's chief minister a most effective weapon for the enforcement of his
+favourite policy, and very materially strengthened his own position.
+Without doubt the sensational manner of its "discovery" largely
+contributed to its success in this respect; and if this were ingeniously
+contrived for such a purpose, may it not be that a like ingenuity had
+been employed in providing the material destined to be so artistically
+utilized?
+
+There can be no question as to the wide prevalence of the belief that
+previous plots had owed their origin to the policy of the statesmen who
+finally detected them, a belief witnessed to by Lord Castlemaine,[24]
+who declares that "it was a piece of wit in Queen Elizabeth's days to
+draw men into such devices," and that "making and fomenting plots was
+then in fashion; nor can it be denied that good grounds for such an
+opinion were not lacking". The unfortunate man Squires had been executed
+on the ridiculous charge that he had come over from Spain in order to
+poison the pommel of Queen Elizabeth's saddle. Dr. Parry, we are
+informed by Bishop Goodman, whose verdict is endorsed by Mr. Brewer,[25]
+was put to death by those who knew him to be guiltless in their regard,
+they having themselves employed him in the business for which he
+suffered. Concerning Babington's famous plot, it is absolutely certain
+that, whatever its origin, it was, almost from the first, fully known to
+Walsingham, through whose hands passed the correspondence between the
+conspirators, and who assiduously worked the enterprise, in order to
+turn it to the destruction of the Queen of Scots. As to Lopez, the
+Jewish physician, it is impossible not to concur in the verdict that
+his condemnation was at least as much owing to political intrigue as to
+the weight of evidence.[26] Concerning this period Mr. Brewer says: "The
+Roman Catholics seem to have made just complaints of the subtle and
+unworthy artifices of Leicester and Walsingham, by whom they were
+entrapped into the guilt of high treason. 'And verily,' as [Camden]
+expresses it, there were at this time crafty ways devised to try how men
+stood affected; counterfeit letters were sent in the name of the Queen
+of Scots and left at papists' houses; spies were sent up and down the
+country to note people's dispositions and lay hold of their words; and
+reporters of vain and idle stories were credited and encouraged."[27]
+Under King James,[28] as Bishop Goodman declares, the priest Watson was
+hanged for treason by those who had employed him.[29]
+
+It must farther be observed that the particular Plot which is our
+subject was stamped with certain features more than commonly suspicious.
+Even on the face of things, as will be seen from the summary already
+given, it was steadily utilized from the first for a purpose which it
+could not legitimately be made to serve. That the Catholics of England,
+as a body, had any connection with it there is not, nor ever appeared to
+be, any vestige of a proof; still less that the official superiors of
+the Church, including the Pope himself, were concerned in it. Yet the
+first act of the government was to lay it at the door of all these, thus
+investing it with a character which was, indeed, eminently fitted to
+sustain their own policy, but to which it was no-wise entitled. Even in
+regard of Father Garnet and his fellow Jesuits, whatever judgment may
+now be formed concerning them, it is clear that it was determined to
+connect them with the conspiracy long before any evidence at all was
+forthcoming to sustain the charge. The actual confederates were, in
+fact, treated throughout as in themselves of little or no account, and
+as important only in so far as they might consent to incriminate those
+whom the authorities wished to be incriminated.
+
+The determined manner in which this object was ever kept in view, the
+unscrupulous means constantly employed for its attainment, the vehemence
+with which matters were asserted to have been proved, any proof of which
+was never even seriously attempted--in a word, the elaborate system of
+falsification by which alone the story of the conspiracy was made to
+suit the purpose it so effectually served, can inspire us with no
+confidence that the foundation upon which such a superstructure was
+erected, was itself what it was said to be.
+
+On the other hand, when we examine into the details supplied to us as to
+the progress of the affair, we find that much of what the conspirators
+are said to have done is well-nigh incredible, while it is utterly
+impossible that if they really acted in the manner described, the public
+authorities should not have had full knowledge of their proceedings. We
+also find not only that the same authorities, while feigning ignorance
+of anything of the kind, were perfectly well aware that these very
+conspirators had something in hand, but that long before the
+"discovery," in fact, at the very time when the conspiracy is said to
+have been hatched, their officials were working a Catholic plot, by
+means of secret agents, and even making arrangements as to who were to
+be implicated therein.
+
+These are, in brief, some of the considerations which point to a
+conclusion utterly at variance with the received version of the story,
+the conclusion, namely, that, for purposes of State, the government of
+the day either found means to instigate the conspirators to undertake
+their enterprise, or, at least, being, from an early stage of the
+undertaking, fully aware of what was going on, sedulously nursed the
+insane scheme till the time came to make capital out of it. That the
+conspirators, or the greater number of them, really meant to strike a
+great blow is not to be denied, though it may be less easy to assure
+ourselves as to its precise character; and their guilt will not be
+palliated should it appear that, in projecting an atrocious crime, they
+were unwittingly playing the game of plotters more astute than
+themselves. At the same time, while fully endorsing the sentiment of a
+Catholic writer,[30] that they who suffer themselves to be drawn into a
+plot like fools, deserve to be hanged for it like knaves, it is
+impossible not to agree with another when he writes:[31] "This account
+does not excuse the conspirators, but lays a heavy weight upon the
+devils who tempted them beyond their strength."
+
+The view thus set forth will perhaps be considered unworthy of serious
+discussion, and it must be fully admitted, that there can be no excuse
+for making charges such as it involves, unless solid grounds can be
+alleged for so doing. That any such grounds are to be found historians
+of good repute utterly deny. Mr. Hallam roundly declares:[32] "To deny
+that there was such a plot, or, which is the same thing, to throw the
+whole on the contrivance and management of Cecil, as has sometimes been
+done, argues great effrontery in those who lead, and great stupidity in
+those who follow." Similarly, Mr. Gardiner,[33] while allowing that
+contemporaries accused Cecil of inventing the Plot, is content to
+dismiss such a charge as "absurd."
+
+Whether it be so or not we have now to inquire.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[3] So he himself always wrote it.
+
+[4] Also described as "Great Horses," or "Horses for the great Saddle."
+
+[5] "The great object of the Government now was to obtain evidence
+against the priests."--GARDINER, _History of England_, i. 267. Ed. 1883.
+
+[6] See his despatch in reply. _Irish State Papers_, vol. 217, 95.
+Cornwallis received Cecil's letter on November 22nd.
+
+[7] See Harington's account of the king's message, _Nugæ Antiquæ_, i.
+374.
+
+[8] To Favat. (Copy) Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, fol. 625.
+
+[9] Statutes: Anno 3^o Jacobi, c. 1.
+
+[10] This work was taken in hand by the Commons, when, in spite of the
+alarming circumstances of the time, they met on November 5th, and was
+carried on at every subsequent sitting. The Lords also met on the 5th,
+but transacted no business. _Journals of Parliament._
+
+[11] Tresham had died in the Tower, December 22nd. Although he had not
+been tried, his remains were treated as those of a traitor, his head
+being cut off and fixed above the gates of Northampton (_Dom. James I._
+xvii. 62.)
+
+[12] "That which remaineth is but this, to assure you that ere many
+daies you shall hear that Father Garnet ... is layd open for a
+principall conspirator even in the particular Treason of the
+Powder."--_To Sir Henry Bruncard, P.R.O. Ireland_, vol. 218, March
+3rd, 1605-6. Also (Calendar) _Dom. James I._ xix. 10.
+
+[13] In Lent, 1603-4. Easter fell that year on April 8th.
+
+[14] "About the middle of Easter Term."--_Thomas Winter's declaration_,
+of November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[15] "Keyes, about a month before Michaelmas."--_Ibid._ About
+Christopher Wright there is much confusion, Faukes (November 17th, 1605)
+implying that he was introduced before Christmas, and Thomas Winter
+(November 23rd, 1605) that it was about a fortnight after the following
+Candlemas, _i.e._, about the middle of February.
+
+[16] The form of this oath is thus given in the official account: "You
+shall swear by the blessed Trinity, and by the Sacrament you now propose
+to receive, never to disclose directly or indirectly, by word or
+circumstance, the matter that shall be proposed to you to keep secret,
+nor desist from the execution thereof until the rest shall give you
+leave." It is a singular circumstance that the form of this oath, which
+was repeated in official publications, with an emphasis itself
+inexplicable, occurs in only one of the conspirators' confessions, viz.,
+the oft-quoted declaration of T. Winter, November 23rd, 1605. This--as
+we shall see, a most suspicious document--was one of the two selected
+for publication, on which the traditional history of the plot depends.
+Curiously enough, however, the oath, with sundry other matters, was
+omitted from the published version of the confession.
+
+[Published in the "King's Book:" copy, or draft, for publication, in the
+Record Office: original at Hatfield. Copy of original Brit. Mus. Add.
+MSS., 6178, 75.]
+
+[17] T. Winter says: "Having upon a primer given each other the oath of
+secrecy, in a chamber where no other body was, we went after into the
+next room and heard mass, and received the blessed Sacrament upon the
+same."--_Declaration_, November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[18] Digby was enlisted "about Michaelmas, 1605;" Rokewood about a month
+before the 5th of November. Tresham gives October 14th as the date of
+his own initiation. _Examination_, November 13th, 1605.
+
+[19] This is clear from a comparison of Cecil's private letter to
+Cornwallis and others (Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 170), with the official
+account published in the _Discourse of the manner of the Discovery of
+the Gunpowder Plot_.
+
+[20] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 3.
+
+[21] _History of England_, i. 269 (1883).
+
+[22] "We had all been blowne up at a clapp, if God out of His Mercie and
+just Reuenge against so great an Abomination, had not destined it to be
+discovered, though very miraculously, even some twelve Houres before the
+matter should have been put in execution."--_Cecil to Cornwallis_,
+November 9th, 1605. Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 170.
+
+[23] M. l'Abbé Destombes, _La persécution en Angleterre sous le règne
+d'Elizabeth_, p. 176.
+
+[24] _Catholique Apology_, third edition, p. 403.
+
+[25] Goodman's _Court of King James_, i. 121.
+
+[26] Mr. Sidney Lee, _Dictionary of National Biography_, _sub nom._
+
+[27] Goodman's _Court of King James_, i. 121. Ed. J.S. Brewer.
+
+[28] _Court of King James_, p. 64.
+
+[29] Of this affair,--the "Bye" and the "Main,"--Goodman says, "[This] I
+did ever think to be an old relic of the treasons in Q. Elizabeth's
+time, and that George Brooks was the contriver thereof, who being
+brother-in-law to the Secretary, and having great wit, small means, and
+a vast expense, did only try men's allegiance, and had an intent to
+betray one another, but were all taken napping and so involved in one
+net. This in effect appears by Brooks' confession; and certainly K.
+James ... had no opinion of that treason, and therefore was pleased to
+pardon all save only Brooks and the priests."--_Court of King James_, i.
+160.
+
+[30] _A plain and rational account of the Catholick Faith_, etc. Rouen,
+1721, p. 200.
+
+[31] Dodd, _Church History of England_, Brussels, 1739, i. 334.
+
+[32] _Constitutional History_, i. 406, note, Seventh Edition. In the
+same note the historian, discussing the case of Father Garnet, speaks of
+"the damning circumstance that he was taken at Hendlip in concealment
+along with the other conspirators." He who wrote thus can have had but a
+slight acquaintance with the details of the history. None of the
+conspirators, except Robert Winter, who was captured at Hagley Hall,
+were taken in concealment, and none at Hendlip, where there is no reason
+to suppose they ever were. Father Garnet was discovered there, nearly
+three months later, in company with another Jesuit, Father Oldcorne, on
+the very day when the conspirators were executed in London, and it was
+never alleged that he had ever, upon any occasion, been seen in company
+with "the other conspirators."
+
+[33] _History_, i. 255, note.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE PERSONS CONCERNED.
+
+
+AT the period with which we have to deal the chief minister of James I.
+was Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury,[34] the political heir of his
+father, William Cecil, Lord Burghley,[35] and of Walsingham, his
+predecessor in the office of secretary. It is clear that he had
+inherited from them ideas of statesmanship of the order then in vogue,
+and from nature, the kind of ability required to put these successfully
+in practice. Sir Robert Naunton thus describes him:[36]
+
+"This great minister of state, and the staff of the Queen's declining
+age, though his little crooked person[37] could not provide any great
+supportation, yet it carried thereon a head and a headpiece of vast
+content, and therein, it seems, nature was so diligent to complete one,
+and the best, part about him, as that to the perfection of his memory
+and intellectuals, she took care also of his senses, and to put him in
+_Lynceos oculos_, or to pleasure him the more, borrowed of Argus, so to
+give him a perfective sight. And for the rest of his sensitive virtues,
+his predecessor had left him a receipt, to smell out what was done in
+the Conclave; and his good old father was so well seen in the
+mathematicks, as that he could tell you throughout Spain, every part,
+every ship, with their burthens, whither bound, what preparation, what
+impediments for diversion of enterprises, counsels, and resolutions."
+The writer then proceeds to give a striking instance to show "how
+docible was this little man."
+
+Of his character, as estimated by competent judges, his contemporaries,
+we have very different accounts. Mr. Gardiner, who may fairly be chosen
+to represent his apologists, speaks thus:[38]
+
+"Although there are circumstances in his life which tell against him, it
+is difficult to read the whole of the letters and documents which have
+come down to us from his pen, without becoming gradually convinced of
+his honesty of intention. It cannot be denied that he was satisfied with
+the ordinary morality of his time, and that he thought it no shame to
+keep a State secret or to discover a plot by means of a falsehood. If he
+grasped at power as one who took pleasure in the exercise of it, he used
+it for what he regarded as the true interests of his king and country.
+Nor are we left to his own acts and words as the only means by which we
+are enabled to form a judgment of his character. Of all the statesmen of
+the day, not one has left a more blameless character than the Earl of
+Dorset. Dorset took the opportunity of leaving upon record in his will,
+which would not be read till he had no longer injury or favour to expect
+in this world, the very high admiration in which his colleague was held
+by him."
+
+This, it must be allowed, is a somewhat facile species of argument.
+Though wills are not formally opened until after the testators' deaths,
+it is not impossible for their contents to be previously communicated to
+others, when there is an object for so doing.[39] But, however this may
+be, it can scarcely be said that the weight of evidence tends in this
+direction. Not to mention the fact that, while enjoying the entire
+confidence of Queen Elizabeth, Cecil was engaged in a secret
+correspondence with King James, which she would have regarded as
+treasonable--and which he so carefully concealed that for a century
+afterwards and more it was not suspected--there remains the other
+indubitable fact, that while similarly trusted by James, and while all
+affairs of State were entirely in his hands, he was in receipt of a
+secret pension from the King of Spain,[40] the very monarch any
+communication with whom he treated as treason on the part of others.[41]
+It is certain that the Earl of Essex, when on his trial, asserted that
+Cecil had declared the Spanish Infanta to be the rightful heir to the
+crown, and though the secretary vehemently denied the imputation, he
+equally repudiated the notion that he favoured the King of Scots.[42] We
+know, moreover, that one who as Spanish Ambassador had dealings with
+him, pronounced him to be a venal traitor, who was ready to sell his
+soul for money,[43] while another intimated[44] that it was in his
+power to have charged him with "unwarrantable practices." Similarly, we
+hear from the French minister of the ingrained habit of falsehood which
+made it impossible for the English secretary to speak the truth even to
+friends;[45] and, from the French Ambassador, of the resolution imputed
+to the same statesman, to remove from his path every rival who seemed
+likely to jeopardize his tenure of power.[46]
+
+What was the opinion of his own countrymen, appeared with startling
+emphasis when, in 1612, the Earl died. On May 22nd we find the Earl of
+Northampton writing to Rochester that the "little man" is dead, "for
+which so many rejoice, and so few even seem to be sorry."[47] Five days
+later, Chamberlain, writing[48] to his friend Dudley Carleton, to
+announce the same event, thus expresses himself: "As the case stands it
+was best that he gave over the world, for they say his friends fell from
+him apace, and some near about him, and however he had fared with his
+health, it is verily thought he would never have been himself again in
+power and credit. I never knew so great a man so soon and so openly
+censured, for men's tongues walk very liberally and freely, but how
+truly I cannot judge." On June 25th he again reports: "The outrageous
+speeches against the deceased Lord continue still, and there be fresh
+libels come out every day, and I doubt his actions will be hardly
+censured in the next parliament, if the King be not the more gracious to
+repress them." Moreover, his funeral was attended by few or none of the
+gentry, and those only were present whose official position compelled
+them. His own opinion Chamberlain expresses in two epigrams and an
+anagram, which, although of small literary merit, contrive clearly to
+express the most undisguised animosity and contempt for the late
+minister.[49]
+
+There is abundant proof that such sentiments were not first entertained
+when he had passed away, though, naturally, they were less openly
+expressed when he was alive and practically all powerful. Cecil seems,
+in fact, to have been throughout his career a lonely man, with no real
+friends and many enemies, desperately fighting for his own hand, and for
+the retention of that power which he prized above all else, aspiring, as
+a contemporary satirist puts it, to be "both shepherd and dog."[50]
+Since the accession of James he had felt his tenure of office to be
+insecure. Goodman tells us[51] that "it is certain the king did not love
+him;" Osborne,[52] "that he had forfeited the love of the people by the
+hate he expressed to their darling Essex, and the desire he had to
+render justice and prerogative arbitrary."[53] Sir Anthony Weldon speaks
+of him[54] as "Sir Robert Cecil, a very wise man, but much hated in
+England by reason of the fresh bleeding of that universally beloved Earl
+of Essex, and for that clouded also in the king's favour." De la
+Boderie, the French Ambassador, tells us[55] that the nobility were
+exceedingly jealous of his dignity and power, and[56] that he in his
+turn was jealous of the growing influence of Prince Henry, the heir
+apparent, who made no secret of his dislike of him. Meanwhile there were
+rivals who, it seemed not improbable, might supplant him. One of these,
+Sir Walter Raleigh, had already been rendered harmless on account of his
+connection with the "Main," the mysterious conspiracy which inaugurated
+the reign of James. There remained the Earl of Northumberland, and it
+may be remarked in passing that one of the effects of the Gunpowder Plot
+was to dispose of him likewise.[57] Even the apologists of the minister
+do not attempt to deny either the fact that he was accustomed to work by
+stratagems and disguises, nor the obloquy that followed on his
+death;[58] while by friends and foes alike he was compared to Ulysses of
+many wiles.[59]
+
+But amongst those whom he had to dread, there can be no doubt that the
+members of the Catholic party appeared to the secretary the most
+formidable. It was known on all hands, nor did he attempt to disguise
+the fact, that he was the irreconcilable opponent of any remission of
+the penal laws enacted for the purpose of stamping out the old
+faith.[60] The work, however, had as yet been very incompletely done. At
+the beginning of the reign of King James, the Catholics formed at least
+a half, probably a majority,[61] of the English people. There were
+amongst them many noblemen, fitted to hold offices of State. Moreover,
+the king, who before his accession had unquestionably assured the
+Catholics at least of toleration,[62] showed at his first coming a
+manifest disposition to relieve them from the grievous persecution under
+which they had groaned so long.[63] He remitted a large part of the
+fines which had so grievously pressed upon all recusants, declaring that
+he would not make merchandise of conscience, nor set a price upon
+faith;[64] he invited to his presence leading Catholics from various
+parts of the country, assuring them, and bidding them assure their
+co-religionists, of his gracious intentions in their regard;[65] titles
+of honour and lucrative employments were bestowed on some of their
+number;[66] one professed Catholic, Henry Howard, presently created Earl
+of Northampton, being enrolled in the Privy Council; and in the first
+speech which he addressed to his Parliament James declared that, as to
+the papists, he had no desire to persecute them, especially those of the
+laity who would be quiet.[67] The immediate effect of this milder
+policy was to afford evidence of the real strength of the Catholics,
+many now openly declaring themselves who had previously conformed to the
+State church. In the diocese of Chester alone the number of Catholics
+was increased by a thousand.[68]
+
+It is scarcely to be wondered at that men who were familiar with the
+political methods of the age should see in all this a motive sufficient
+to explain a great stroke for the destruction of those who appeared to
+be so formidable, devised by such a minister as was then in power, "the
+statesman," writes Lord Castlemaine,[69] "who bore (as everybody knew) a
+particular hatred to all of our profession, and this increased to hear
+his Majesty speak a little in his first speech to the two Houses against
+persecution of papists, whereas there had been nothing within those
+walls but invectives and defamations for above forty years together."
+
+This much is certain, that, whatever its origin, the Gunpowder Plot
+immensely increased Cecil's influence and power, and, for a time, even
+his popularity, assuring the success of that anti-Catholic policy with
+which he was identified.[70]
+
+Of no less importance is it to understand the position of the Catholic
+body, and the character of the particular Catholics who engaged in this
+enterprise. We have seen with what hopes the advent of King James had
+been hailed by those who had suffered so much for his mother's sake, and
+who interpreted in a too sanguine and trustful spirit his own words and
+deeds. Their dream of enjoying even toleration at his hands was soon
+rudely dispelled. After giving them the briefest of respites, the
+monarch, under the influence, as all believed, of his council, and
+especially of his chief minister,[71] suddenly reversed his line of
+action and persecuted his Catholic subjects more cruelly than had his
+predecessor, calling up the arrears of fines which they fancied had been
+altogether remitted, ruining many in the process who had hitherto
+contrived to pay their way,[72] and adding to the sense of injury which
+such a course necessarily provoked by farming out wealthy recusants to
+needy courtiers, "to make their profit of," in particular to the Scots
+who had followed their royal master across the border. Soon it was
+announced that the king would have blood; all priests were ordered to
+leave the realm under pain of death, and the searches for them became
+more frequent and violent than ever. In no long time, as Goodman tells
+us,[73] "a gentlewoman was hanged only for relieving and harbouring a
+priest; a citizen was hanged only for being reconciled to the Church of
+Rome; besides the penal laws were such and so executed that they could
+not subsist." Father Gerard says:[74] "This being known to Catholics, it
+is easy to be seen how first their hopes were turned into fears, and
+then their fears into full knowledge that all the contrary to that they
+had hoped was intended and prepared for them", and, as one of the victims
+of these proceedings wrote, "the times of Elizabeth, although most
+cruel, were the mildest and happiest in comparison with those of King
+James."[75]
+
+In such circumstances, the Catholic body being so numerous as it was, it
+is not to be wondered at that individuals should be found, who, smarting
+under their injuries, and indignant at the bad faith of which they
+considered themselves the dupes, looked to violent remedies for relief,
+and might without difficulty be worked upon to that effect. Their case
+seemed far more hopeless than ever. Queen Elizabeth's quarrel with Rome
+had been in a great degree personal; and moreover, as she had no direct
+heir, it was confidently anticipated that the demise of the crown would
+introduce a new era. King James's proceedings, on the other hand, seemed
+to indicate a deliberate policy which there was no prospect of
+reversing, especially as his eldest son, should he prove true to his
+promise, might be expected to do that zealously, and of himself, which
+his father was held to do under the constraint of others.[76] As Sir
+Everard Digby warned Cecil, in the remarkable letter which he addressed
+to him on the subject:[77] "If your Lordship and the State think fit to
+deal severely with the Catholics, within brief space there will be
+massacres, rebellions, and desperate attempts against the King and the
+State. For it is a general received reason among Catholics, that there
+is not that expecting and suffering course now to be run that was in the
+Queen's time, who was the last of her line, and last in expectance to
+run violent courses against Catholics; for then it was hoped that the
+King that now is, would have been at least free from persecuting, as his
+promise was before his coming into this realm, and as divers his
+promises have been since his coming. All these promises every man sees
+broken."[78]
+
+It must likewise be remembered that if stratagems and "practices" were
+the recognized weapons of ministers, turbulence and arms were, at this
+period, the familiar, and indeed the only, resource of those in
+opposition, nor did any stigma attach to their employment unless taken
+up on the losing side. Not a little of this kind of thing had been done
+on behalf of James himself. As is well known, he succeeded to the throne
+by a title upon which he could not have recovered at law an acre of
+land.[79] Elizabeth had so absolutely forbidden all discussion of the
+question of the succession as to leave it in a state of utter
+confusion.[80] There were more than a dozen possible competitors, and
+amongst these the claim of the King of Scots was technically not the
+strongest, for though nearest in blood his claims had been barred by a
+special Act of Parliament, excluding the Scottish line. As Professor
+Thorold Rogers says, "For a year after his accession James, if Acts of
+Parliament are to go for anything, was not legally King."[81]
+
+Nevertheless the cause of James was vigorously taken up in all
+directions, and promoted by means which might well have been styled
+treason against the authority of Parliament. Thus, old Sir Thomas
+Tresham, father of Francis Tresham, the Gunpowder Conspirator, who had
+been an eminent sufferer for his religion, at considerable personal
+risk, and against much resistance on the part of the local magistrates
+and the populace, publicly proclaimed the new king at Northampton, while
+Francis Tresham himself and his brother Lewis, with Lord Monteagle,
+their brother-in-law, supported the Earl of Southampton in holding the
+Tower of London on his behalf.[82] In London indeed everybody took to
+arms as soon as the queen's illness had been known; watch and ward were
+kept in the City; rich men brought their plate and treasure from the
+country, and placed them where they would be safest,[83] and the
+approaches were guarded. Cecil himself related in open court, in praise
+of the Londoners, how, when he himself, attended by most of the peers
+and privy councillors of the kingdom, wished to enter the City to
+proclaim the new sovereign, they found the gates closed against them
+till they had publicly declared that they were about to proclaim James
+and no one else.[84]
+
+In times when statesmen could approve such methods of political action,
+it was inevitable that violent enterprises should have come to be
+considered the natural resource of those out of power, and it is very
+clear that there were numerous individuals, of whom no one party had the
+monopoly, who were ready at any moment to risk everything for the cause
+they served, and such men, although their proclivities were well known,
+did not suffer much in public esteem.
+
+The Gunpowder Conspirators were eminently men of this stamp, and
+notoriously so. So well was their character known, that when, in 1596,
+eight years before the commencement of the Plot, Queen Elizabeth had
+been unwell, the Lords of the Council, as a precautionary measure
+arrested some of the principal amongst them, Catesby, the two Wrights,
+Tresham, and others, as being persons who would certainly give trouble
+should a chance occur.[85] Since that time they had not improved their
+record. All those above-named, as well as Thomas Winter, Christopher
+Wright, Percy, Grant, and perhaps others, had been engaged in the
+ill-starred rebellion of Essex, on which occasion Catesby was wounded,
+and both he and Tresham came remarkably near being hanged.[86] They had
+likewise been variously implicated in all the seditious attempts which
+had since been made--Catesby and Tresham being named by Sir Edward Coke
+as being engaged with Watson in the "Bye." Thomas Winter, Christopher
+Wright, and Faukes, had, if we may believe the same authority, been sent
+to Spain on treasonable embassies.[87] Grant made himself very
+conspicuous by frequently resisting the officers of the law when they
+appeared to search his house.[88] John Wright and Percy had, at least
+till a very recent period, been notorious bravoes, who made a point of
+picking a quarrel with any man who was reported to be a good swordsman,
+they being both expert with the weapon.[89]
+
+It is evident that men of this stamp were not unlikely to prove restive
+under such treatment as was meted out to the Catholics, from which
+moreover, as gentlemen, they themselves suffered in a special degree.
+Lord Castlemaine remarks that loose people may usually be drawn into a
+plot when statesmen lay gins, and that it was no hard thing for a
+Secretary of State, should he desire any such thing, to know of
+turbulent and ambitious spirits to be his unconscious instruments,[90]
+and it is obvious that no great perspicacity would have been required to
+fix upon those who had given such evidence of their disposition as had
+these men.
+
+It must, at the same time, be confessed that the character of the
+plotters is one of the most perplexing features of the Plot. The crime
+contemplated was without parallel in its brutal and senseless atrocity.
+There had, it is true, been powder-plots before, notably that which had
+effected the destruction of the king's own father, Lord Darnley, a fact
+undoubtedly calculated to make much impression upon the timorous mind
+of James. But what marked off our Gunpowder Plot from all others, was
+the wholesale and indiscriminate slaughter in which it must have
+resulted, and the absence of any possibility that the cause could be
+benefited which the conspirators had at heart. It was at once reprobated
+and denounced by the Catholics of England, and by the friends and near
+relatives of the conspirators themselves.[91] It might be supposed that
+those who undertook such an enterprise were criminals of the deepest
+dye, and ruffians of a more than usually repulsive type. In spite,
+however, of the turbulent element in their character of which we have
+seen something, such a judgment would, in the opinion of historians, be
+altogether erroneous. Far from their being utterly unredeemed villains,
+it appears, in fact, that apart from the one monstrous transgression
+which has made them infamous, they should be distinguished in the annals
+of crime as the least disreputable gang of conspirators who ever plotted
+a treason. On this point we have ample evidence from those who are by no
+means their friends. "Atrocious as their whole undertaking was," writes
+Mr. Gardiner,[92] "great as must have been the moral obliquity of their
+minds before they could have conceived such a project, there was at
+least nothing mean or selfish about them. They boldly risked their lives
+for what they honestly believed to be the cause of God and of their
+country. Theirs was a crime which it would never have entered into the
+heart of any man to commit who was not raised above the low aims of the
+ordinary criminal." Similarly Mr. Jardine, a still less friendly
+witness, tells us[93] that "several at least of the conspirators were
+men of mild and amiable manners, averse to tumults and bloodshed, and
+dwelling quietly amidst the humanities of domestic life," a description
+which he applies especially to Rokewood and Digby; while of Guy Faukes
+himself he says[94] that, according to the accounts which we hear of
+him, he is not to be regarded as a mercenary ruffian, ready for hire to
+do any deed of blood; but as a zealot, misled by misguided fanaticism,
+who was, however, by no means destitute either of piety or of humanity.
+Moreover, as Mr. Jardine farther remarks, the conspirators as a body
+were of the class which we should least expect to find engaged in
+desperate enterprises, being, as Sir E. Coke described them, "gentlemen
+of good houses, of excellent parts, and of very competent fortunes and
+estates," none of them, except perhaps Catesby, being in pecuniary
+difficulties, while several--notably Robert Winter, Rokewood, Digby,
+Tresham, and Grant--were men of large possessions. It has also been
+observed by a recent biographer of Sir Everard Digby,[95] that, for the
+furtherance of their projects after the explosion, the confederates were
+able to provide a sum equal at least to £75,000 of our money--a
+sufficient proof of their worldly position.
+
+That men of such a class should so lightly and easily have adopted a
+scheme so desperate and atrocious as that of "murdering a kingdom in its
+representatives," is undoubtedly not the least incomprehensible feature
+of this strange story. At the same time it must not be forgotten that
+there is another, and a very different account of these men, which comes
+to us on the authority of a Catholic priest living in England at the
+time,[96] who speaks of the conspirators as follows:
+
+"They were a few wicked and desperate wretches, whom many Protestants
+termed Papists, although the priests and the true Catholics knew them
+not to be such.... They were never frequenters of Catholic Sacraments
+with any priest, as I could ever learn; and, as all the Protestant
+Courts will witness, not one of them was a convicted or known Catholic
+or Recusant."[97]
+
+Similarly Cornwallis, writing from Madrid,[98] reported that the king
+and Estate of Spain were "much grieved that they being atheists and
+devils in their inward parts, should paint their outside with
+Catholicism."
+
+In view of evidence so contradictory, it is difficult, if not
+impossible, to form a confident judgment as to the real character of
+those whose history we are attempting to trace; but, leaving aside what
+is matter of doubt, the undisputed facts of their previous career
+appear to show unmistakably that they were just the men who would be
+ready to look to violence for a remedy of existing evils, and to whom it
+would not be difficult to suggest its adoption.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[34] When James came to the throne Cecil was but a knight. He was
+created Baron Cecil of Essendon, May 13th, 1603; Viscount Cranborne,
+August 20th, 1604; Earl of Salisbury, May 4th, 1605.
+
+[35] Robert, as the second son, did not succeed to his father's title,
+which devolved upon Thomas, the eldest, who was created Earl of Exeter
+on the same day on which Robert became Earl of Salisbury.
+
+[36] _Fragmenta Regalia_, 37. Ed. 1642.
+
+[37] He was but little above five feet in height, and, in the phrase of
+the time, a "Crouchback." King James, who was not a man of much delicacy
+in such matters, was fond of giving him nicknames in consequence. Cecil
+wrote to Sir Thomas Lake, October 24th, 1605: "I see nothing y^t I can
+doe, can procure me so much favor, as to be sure one whole day what
+title I shall have another. For from Essenden to Cranborne, from
+Cranborne to Salisbury, from Salisbury to Beagle, from Beagle to Thom
+Derry, from Thom Derry to Parret which I hate most, I have been so
+walked, as I think by y^t I come to Theobalds, I shall be called Tare or
+Sophie." (R.O. _Dom. James I._ xv. 105.)
+
+[38] _History_, i. 92.
+
+[39] In the same document James I. is spoken of as "the most judycious,
+learned, and rareste kinge, that ever this worlde produced." (R.O.
+_Dom. James I._ xxviii. 29.)
+
+[40] Digby to the King, S. P., _Spain_, Aug. 8. Gardiner, _History_, ii.
+216.
+
+[41] At the trial of Essex, Cecil exclaimed, "I pray God to consume me
+where I stand, if I hate not the Spaniard as much as any man living."
+(Bruce, _Introduction to Secret Correspondence of Sir R. Cecil_,
+xxxiii.)
+
+Of the Spanish pension Mr. Gardiner, after endeavouring to show that
+originally Cecil's acceptance of it may have been comparatively
+innocent, thus continues (_History of England_, i. 216): "But it is
+plain that, even if this is the explanation of his original intentions,
+such a comparatively innocent connection with Spain soon extended itself
+to something worse, and that he consented to furnish the ambassadors,
+from time to time, with information on the policy and intentions of the
+English Government.... Of the persistence with which he exacted payment
+there can be no doubt whatever. Five years later, when the opposition
+between the two governments became more decided, he asked for an
+increase of his payments, and demanded that they should be made in large
+sums as each piece of information was given."
+
+At the same time it appears highly probable that he was similarly in the
+pay of France. _Ibid._
+
+[42] Queen Elizabeth regarded as treasonable any discussion of the
+question of the succession.
+
+[43] Gardiner, i. 215.
+
+[44] _Chamberlain to Carleton_, July 9th, 1612, R.O.
+
+[45] "Tout ce que vous a dit le Comte de Salisbury touchant le mariage
+d'Espagne est rempli de deguisements et artifices à son accoutumée....
+Toutefois, je ne veux pas jurer qu'ils négocient plus sincerement et de
+meilleur foi avec lesdites Espagnols qu'avec nous. Ils corromproient par
+trop leur naturel, s'ils le faisoient, pour des gens qui ne leur
+scauroient guère de gré."--Le Fèvre de la Boderie, _Ambassade_, i. 170.
+
+[46] (Of the Earl of Northumberland.) "On tient le Comte de Salisbury
+pour principal auteur de sa persécution, comme celui qui veut ne laisser
+personne en pied qui puisse lui faire tête." De la Boderie. _Ibid._ 178.
+
+[47] R.O. _Dom. James I._ lxix. 56.
+
+[48] _Ibid._, May 27, 1612. Bishop Goodman, no enemy of Cecil, is
+inclined to believe that at the time of the secretary's death there was
+a warrant out for his arrest. _Court of King James_, i. 45.
+
+[49] The first of these epigrams, in Latin, concludes thus:
+
+ Sero, Recurve, moreris sed serio;
+ Sero, jaces (bis mortuus) sed serio:
+ Sero saluti publicæ, serio tuæ.
+
+The second is in English:
+
+ Whiles two RR's, both crouchbacks, stood at the helm,
+ The one spilt the blood royall, the other the realm.
+
+A marginal note explains that these were, "Richard Duke of Gloster, and
+Robert Earl of Salisburie;" the anagram, of which title is "A silie
+burs." He also styles the late minister a monkey (_cercopithecus_) and
+hobgoblin (_empusa_).
+
+[50] Osborne, _Traditional Memoirs_, p. 236 (ed. 1811).
+
+[51] _Court of King James_, i. 44.
+
+[52] _Traditional Memoirs_, 181.
+
+[53] This feeling was expressed in lampoons quoted by Osborne, e.g.:
+
+ "Here lies Hobinall, our pastor while here,
+ That once in a quarter our fleeces did sheare.
+ For oblation to Pan his custom was thus,
+ He first gave a trifle, then offer'd up us:
+ And through his false worship such power he did gaine,
+ As kept him o' th' mountain, and us on the plaine."
+
+Again, he is described as
+
+ "Little bossive Robin that was so great,
+ Who seemed as sent from ugly fate,
+ To spoyle the prince, and rob the state,
+ Owning a mind of dismall endes,
+ As trappes for foes, and tricks for friends."
+
+ (_Ibid._ 236.)
+
+Oldmixon (_History of Queen Elizabeth_, p. 620) says of the Earl of
+Essex, "'Twas not likely that Cecil, whose Soul was of a narrow Size,
+and had no Room for enlarged Sentiments of Ambition, Glory, and Public
+Spirit, should cease to undermine a Hero, in comparison with whom he was
+both in Body and Mind a Piece of Deformity, if there's nothing beautiful
+in Craft."
+
+[54] _Court and Character of King James_, § 10.
+
+[55] _Ambassade_, i. 58.
+
+[56] _Ibid._ 401.
+
+[57] Against Northumberland nothing was proved (_vide_ de la Boderie,
+_Ambassade_, i. 178), except that he had admitted Thomas Percy amongst
+the royal pensioners without exacting the usual oath. He in vain
+demanded an open trial, but was prosecuted in the Star Chamber, and
+there sentenced to a fine of £30,000 (equal to at least ten times that
+sum in our money), and to be imprisoned for life.
+
+Mr. Gardiner considers that, in regard both of Raleigh and of
+Northumberland, Cecil acted with great moderation. It must, however, be
+remembered that in his secret correspondence with King James, before the
+death of the queen, he had strenuously endeavoured to poison the mind of
+that monarch against these his rivals. Thus he wrote, December 4th, 1601
+(as usual through Lord Henry Howard): "You must remember that I gave you
+notice of the diabolical triplicity, that is, Cobham, Raleigh, and
+Northumberland, that met every day at Durham-house, where Raleigh lies,
+in consultation, which awaked all the best wits of the town ... to watch
+what chickens they could hatch out of these cockatrice eggs that were
+daily and nightly sitten on." (_Secret Correspondence of Sir Robert
+Cecil with James VI., King of Scotland_, Edinburgh, 1766, p. 29.) Coming
+after this, the speedy ruin of all these men appears highly suspicious.
+
+[58] Sir Walter Cope in his _Apology_ (Gutch, _Collectanea Curiosa_, i.
+No. 10) says: "When living, the world observed with all admiration and
+applause; no sooner dead, but it seeketh finally to suppress his
+excellent parts, and load his memory with all imputations of
+corruption."
+
+Among such charges are enumerated "His Falsehood in Friendship.--That he
+often made his friends fair promises, and underhand laid rubs to hinder
+their preferment.--The secret passage of things I know not.... Great
+Counsellors have their private and their publique ends...." etc.
+
+[59] Lord Castlemaine after mentioning the chief features of the
+Gunpowder Plot, goes on: "But let it not displease you, if we ask
+whether Ulysses be no better known?" (_Catholique Apology_, p. 30.)
+
+Francis Herring in his Latin poem, _Pietas Pontificia_ (published 1606),
+speaking of Monteagle (called "Morleius," from his father's title), who
+took the celebrated letter to Cecil, writes thus:
+
+ "Morleius Regis de consultoribus unum,
+ (Quem norat veteri nil quicquam cedere Ulyssi,
+ Juditio pollentem acri, ingenioque sagaci)
+ Seligit, atque illi Rem totam ex ordine pandit."
+
+[60] This is so evident that it appears unnecessary to occupy space with
+proofs in detail. De la Boderie remarks (_Ambassade_, i. 71) on the
+extraordinary rancour of the minister against Catholics, and especially
+against Jesuits, and that "he wishes to destroy them everywhere." Of
+this a remarkable confirmation is afforded by the instructions given to
+Sir Thomas Parry when he was sent as ambassador, "Leiger," to Paris, in
+1603, at the head of which stood these extraordinary articles:
+
+1. "To intimate to the French king the jealousy conceived in England
+upon the revocation of the Jesuits, against former edicts.
+
+2. "To inform the French king that the English were disgusted at the
+maintenance allowed to the French king's prelates and clergy, to priests
+and Jesuits that passed out of his dominions into England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, to do bad offices." (P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132, f. 314.)
+
+[61] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 5. Strype says of the time of
+Elizabeth: "The faction of the Catholics in England is great, and able,
+if the kingdom were divided into three parts, to make two of them."
+(_Annals_, iii. 313, quoted by Butler, _Historical Memoirs_, ii. 177.)
+
+At the execution of Father Oldcorne, 1606, a proof was given of their
+numbers which is said to have alarmed the king greatly. The Father
+having from the scaffold invited all Catholics to pray with him, almost
+all present uncovered.
+
+[62] Of this there can be no doubt, in spite of James's subsequent
+denial. Father Garnet wrote to Parsons (April 16th, 1603): "There hath
+happened a great alteration by the death of the Queen. Great fears were,
+but all are turned into greatest security, and a golden time we have of
+unexpected freedom abroade.... The Catholicks have great cause to hope
+for great respect, in that the nobility all almost labour for it, and
+have good promise thereof from his Majesty." (Stonyhurst MSS. _Anglia_,
+iii. 32.)
+
+Goodman says: "And certainly they [the Catholics] had very great
+promises from him." (_Court of King James_, i. 86.)
+
+[63] "The Penal Laws, a code as savage as any that can be conceived
+since the foundation of the world."--Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. (_To
+Lord Mayor Knill_, Nov. 9, 1892.)
+
+[64] Gardiner, i. 100.
+
+[65] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, 18.
+
+[66] _Ibid._ 20.
+
+[67] Gardiner, i. 166.
+
+[68] Green, _History of the English People_, iii. 62. Mr. Green adds:
+"Rumours of Catholic conversions spread a panic which showed itself in
+an Act of the Parliament of 1604 confirming the statutes of Elizabeth;
+and to this James gave his assent. He promised, indeed, that the statute
+should remain inoperative." In May, 1604, the Catholics boasted that
+they had been joined by 10,000 converts. (Gardiner, _Hist_. i. 202.)
+
+[69] _Catholique Apology_, 404.
+
+[70] Salisbury, in reward of his services on this occasion, received the
+Garter, May 20th, 1606, and was honoured on the occasion with an almost
+regal triumph.
+
+Of the proceedings subsequent to the Plot we are told: "In passing these
+laws for the security of the Protestant Religion, the Earl of Salisbury
+exerted himself with distinguished zeal and vigour, which gained him
+great love and honour from the kingdom, as appeared in some measure, in
+the universal attendance on him at his installation with the Order of
+the Garter, on the 20th of May, 1606, at Windsor." (Birch, _Historical
+View_, p. 256.)
+
+[71] This belief is so notorious that one instance must suffice as
+evidence for it. A paper of informations addressed to Cecil himself,
+April, 1604, declares that the Catholics hoped to see a good day yet,
+and that "his Majesty would suffer a kinde of Tolleracyon, for his
+inclynacyon is good, howsoever the Councell set out his speeches."
+(S.P.O. _Dom. James I._ vii. 86.)
+
+[72] Mr. Gardiner (_Hist._ i. 229, note) says that arrears were never
+demanded in the case of the fine of £20 per lunar month for
+non-attendance at the parish church. Father Gerard, however, a
+contemporary witness, distinctly states that they were. (_Narrative of
+the Gunpowder Plot_, ed. Morris, p. 62.)
+
+[73] _Court of King James_, i. 100.
+
+[74] _Narrative_, p. 46.
+
+[75] Stonyhurst MSS., _Anglia_, iii. 103.
+
+[76] Of the Prince of Wales it was prophesied:
+
+ "The eighth Henry did pull down Monks and their cells,
+ The ninth will pull down Bishops and their bells."
+
+[77] Concerning this letter see Appendix B, _Digby's Letter to
+Salisbury_.
+
+[78] R.O. _Dom. James I._ xvii. 10.
+
+[79] Hallam, _Constitutional Hist._ i. 392 (3rd ed.).
+
+[80] See Appendix C, _The Question of Succession_.
+
+[81] _Agriculture and Prices_, v. 5.
+
+[82] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 17.
+
+[83] Gardiner, _Hist._ i. 84.
+
+[84] Trial of Father Garnet (Cobbett's _State Trials_, ii. 243).
+
+[85] Camden, the historian, to Sir R. Cotton, March 15th, 1596. (Birch,
+_Original Letters_, 2nd series, iii. p. 179.) Various writers
+erroneously suppose this transaction to have occurred in March, 1603, on
+occasion of Elizabeth's last illness. The correct date, 1596, given by
+Sir Henry Ellis, is supplied by a statement contained in the letter,
+that this was her Majesty's "climacterick year," that is, her
+sixty-third, this number, as the multiple of the potent factors seven
+and nine, being held of prime importance in human life. Elizabeth was
+born in 1533.
+
+From Garnet's examination of March 14th, 1605-6 (_Dom. James I._ xix.
+44), we learn that Catesby was at large at the time of the queen's
+demise.
+
+For Cecil's description of the men, see Winwood's _Memorials_, ii. 172.
+
+[86] Catesby purchased his life for a fine of 4,000 marks, and Tresham
+of 3,000. Mr. Jessopp says that the former sum is equivalent at least to
+£30,000 at the present day. (_Dict. Nat. Biog., Catesby_.)
+
+[87] But see Appendix D, _The Spanish Treason_.
+
+[88] Father Gerard says of him that "he paid them [the pursuivants] so
+well for their labour not with crowns of gold, but with cracked crowns
+sometimes, and with dry blows instead of drink and other good cheer,
+that they durst not visit him any more unless they brought store of help
+with them." (_Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot_, p. 86.)
+
+[89] _Ibid._, p. 57.
+
+[90] _Catholique Apology_, p. 403.
+
+[91] _E.g._, by Mr. Talbot of Grafton, father-in-law of Robert Winter,
+who drove their envoys away with threats and reproaches (Jardine,
+_Gunpowder Plot_, p. 112), and by Sir Robert Digby, of Coleshill, cousin
+to Sir Everard, who assisted in taking prisoners. (R.O. _Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, 42.)
+
+[92] _History_, i. 263.
+
+[93] _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 151.
+
+[94] _Ibid._, p. 38.
+
+[95] _Life of a Conspirator, by one of his Descendants_, p. 150.
+
+[96] _English Protestants' Plea and Petition for English Priests and
+Papists._ The author of this book (published 1621) describes himself as
+a priest who has been for many years on the English mission. His title
+indicates that he draws his arguments from Protestant sources.
+
+[97] P. 56.
+
+[98] November 25th, 1605, _Stowe MSS._ 168, 61.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE OPINION OF CONTEMPORARIES AND HISTORIANS.
+
+
+WE have now for so long a period been accustomed to accept the official
+story regarding the Gunpowder Plot, that most readers will be surprised
+to hear that at the time of its occurrence, and for more than a century
+afterwards, there were, to say the least, many intelligent men who took
+for granted that in some way or other the actual conspirators were but
+the dupes and instruments of more crafty men than themselves, and in
+their mad enterprise unwittingly played the game of ministers of State.
+
+From the beginning the government itself anticipated this, as is
+evidenced by the careful and elaborate account of the whole
+affair drawn up on the 7th of November, 1605--two days after the
+"discovery"--seemingly for the benefit of the Privy Council.[99] This
+important document, which is in the handwriting of Levinus Munck,
+Cecil's secretary, with numerous and significant emendations from the
+hand of Cecil himself, speaks, amongst other things, of the need of
+circumspection, "considering how apt the world is nowadays to think all
+providence and intelligences to be but practices." The result did not
+falsify the expectation. Within five weeks we find a letter written from
+London to a correspondent abroad,[100] wherein it is said: "Those that
+have practical experience of the way in which things are done, hold it
+as certain that there has been foul play, and that some of the Council
+secretly spun the web to entangle these poor gentlemen, as did Secretary
+Walsingham in other cases," and it is clear that the writer has but
+recorded an opinion widely prevalent. To this the government again bear
+witness, for they found it advisable to issue an official version of the
+history, in the _True and Perfect Relation_, and the _Discourse of the
+Manner of the Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot_, the appearance of which
+was justified expressly on the ground that "there do pass from hand to
+hand divers uncertain, untrue, and incoherent reports and relations,"
+and that it is very important "for men to understand the birth and
+growth of the said abominable and detestable conspiracy." The accounts
+published with this object are, by the common consent of historians,
+flagrantly untruthful and untrustworthy.[101] We likewise find
+Secretary Cecil writing to instruct Sir E. Coke, the Attorney-General,
+as to his conduct of the case against the conspirators, in view of the
+"lewd" reports current in regard of the manner in which it had been
+discovered.[102] The same minister, in the curious political manifesto
+which he issued in connection with the affair,[103] again bears witness
+to the same effect, when he declares that the papists, after the manner
+of Nero, were throwing the blame of their crime upon others.
+
+Clearly, however, it was not to the papists alone that such an
+explanation commended itself. The Puritan Osborne[104] speaks of the
+manner in which the "discovery" was managed as "a neat device of the
+Treasurer's, he being very plentiful in such plots." Goodman, Anglican
+Bishop of Gloucester, another contemporary, is even more explicit. After
+describing the indignation of the Catholics when they found themselves
+deceived in their hopes at the hands of James, he goes on: "The great
+statesman had intelligence of all this, and because he would show his
+service to the State, he would first contrive and then discover a
+treason, and the more odious and hateful the treason were, his service
+would be the greater and the more acceptable."[105] Another notable
+witness is quoted by the Jesuit Father Martin Grene, in a letter to his
+brother Christopher, January 1st, 1665-6:[106] "I have heard strange
+things, which, if ever I can make out, will be very pertinent: for
+certain, the late Bishop of Armagh, Usher, was divers times heard to
+say, that if papists knew what he knew, the blame of the Gunpowder
+Treason would not lie on them." In like manner we find it frequently
+asserted on the authority of Lord Cobham and others,[107] that King
+James himself, when he had time to realize the truth of the matter, was
+in the habit of speaking of the Fifth of November as "Cecil's holiday."
+
+Such a belief must have been widely entertained, otherwise it could not
+have been handed on, as it was, for generations. It is not too much to
+say that historians for almost a century and a half, if they did not
+themselves favour the theory of the government's complicity, at least
+bore witness how widely that idea prevailed. Thus, to confine ourselves
+at present to Protestant writers, Sanderson,[108] acknowledging that the
+secretary was accused of having manipulated the transaction, says no
+word to indicate that he repudiates such a charge. Welwood[109] is of
+opinion that Cecil was aware of the Plot long before the "discovery,"
+and that the famous letter to Monteagle was "a contrivance of his own."
+Oldmixon writes[110] "notwithstanding the general joy, ... there were
+some who insinuated that the Plot was of the King's own making, or that
+he was privy to it from first to last." Carte[111] does not believe that
+James knew anything of it, but considers it "not improbable" that Cecil
+was better informed. Burnet[112] complains of the impudence of the
+papists of his day, who denied the conspiracy, and pretended it was an
+artifice of the minister's "to engage some desperate men into a plot,
+which he managed so that he could discover it when he pleased."
+Fuller[113] bears witness to the general belief, but considers it
+inconsistent with the well-known piety of King James. Bishop Kennet, in
+his Fifth of November sermon at St. Paul's, in 1715, talks in a similar
+strain. So extreme, indeed, does the incredulity and uncertainty appear
+to have been, that the Puritan Prynne[114] is inclined to suspect
+Bancroft, the Archbishop of Canterbury, of having been engaged in the
+conspiracy; while one of the furious zealots who followed the lead of
+Titus Oates, mournfully testified that there were those in his day who
+looked upon the Powder Treason "as upon a romantic story, or a politic
+invention, or a State trick," giving no more credence to it than to the
+histories of the "Grand Cyrus, or Guy of Warwick, or Amadis de
+Gaul,"--or, as we should now say, Jack the Giant Killer.
+
+The general scope and drift of such suspicions are well indicated by
+Bevil Higgons, "This impious design," he writes[115] of the Plot, "gave
+the greatest blow to the Catholic interest in England, by rendering that
+religion so odious to the people. The common opinion concerning the
+discovery of the Plot, by a letter to the Lord Mounteagle, has not been
+universally allowed to be the real truth of the matter, for some have
+affirmed that this design was first hammered in the forge of Cecil, who
+intended to have produced this plot in the time of Queen Elizabeth, but
+prevented by her death he resumed his project in this reign, with a
+design to have so enraged the nation as to have expelled all Roman
+Catholics, and confiscated their estates. To this end, by his secret
+emissaries, he enticed some hot-headed men of that persuasion, who,
+ignorant whence the design first came, heartily engaged in this
+execrable Powder Treason.... Though this account should not be true," he
+continues, "it is certain that the Court of England had notice of this
+Plot from France and Italy long before the pretended discovery; upon
+which Cecil ... framed that letter to the Lord Mounteagle, with a design
+to make the discovery seem the more miraculous, and at the same time
+magnify the judgment of the king, who by his deep penetration was to
+have the honour of unravelling so ambiguous and dark a riddle."
+
+It may be added that amongst modern historians who have given special
+attention to this period, several, though repudiating the notion that
+Cecil originated the Plot, are strongly of opinion that as to the
+important episode of the "discovery," the traditional story is a
+fabrication. Thus, Mr. Brewer[116] declares it to be quite certain that
+Cecil had previous knowledge of the design, and that the "discovery" was
+a fraud. Lodge[117] is of the same opinion, and so is the author of the
+_Annals of England_.[118] Jardine[119] inclines to the belief that the
+government contrived the letter to Monteagle in order to conceal the
+means by which their information had in reality been obtained. Mr.
+Gardiner, though dismissing the idea as "absurd," acknowledges that his
+contemporaries accused Cecil of inventing the whole Plot.[120]
+
+So much for the testimony of Protestants. As for those who had to suffer
+in consequence of the affair, there is no need to multiply testimonies.
+Lord Castlemaine tells us[121] that "the Catholics of England, who knew
+Cecil's ways of acting and their own innocence, suspected him from the
+beginning, as hundreds still alive can testify." Father Henry More,
+S.J., a contemporary, speaks to the same effect.[122] Father John
+Gerard, who was not only a contemporary, but one of those accused of
+complicity, intimates[123] his utter disbelief of the official narrative
+concerning the discovery, and his conviction that those who had the
+scanning of the redoubtable letter were "well able in shorter time and
+with fewer doubts to decipher a darker riddle and find out a greater
+secret than that matter was." One Floyde, a spy, testified in 1615[124]
+to having frequently heard various Jesuits say, that the government were
+aware of the Plot several months before they thought fit to "discover"
+it.
+
+The Catholic view is expressed with much point and force by an anonymous
+writer of the eighteenth century:[125] "I shall touch briefly upon a few
+particulars relating to this Plot, for the happy discovery whereof an
+anniversary holiday has now been kept for above a hundred years. Is it
+out of pure gratitude to God the nation is so particularly devout on
+this occasion? If so, it is highly commendable: for we ought to thank
+God for all things, and therefore I cannot deny but there is all the
+reason in the world to give him solemn thanks, for that the king and
+Parliament never were in any danger of being hurt by the Powder Plot....
+I am far from denying the Gunpowder Plot. Nay, I believe as firmly that
+Catesby, with twelve more popish associates, had a design to blow up K.
+James, as I believe that the father of that same king was effectually
+blown up by the Earls of Murray, Morton, Bothwell, and others of the
+Reformed Church of Scotland. However ... I humbly conceive I may say the
+king and Parliament were in no danger of being hurt by it, and my reason
+is because they had not less a man than the prime minister of state for
+their tutelar angel; a person deeply read in politics; who had inherited
+the double spirit of his predecessor Walsingham, knew all his tricks of
+legerdemain, and could as seasonably discover plots as contrive them....
+This much at least is certain, that the letter written to my Lord
+Mounteagle, by which the Plot was discovered, had not a fool, but a very
+wise sophister for its author: for it was so craftily worded, that
+though it was mysterious enough on the one hand to prevent a full
+evidence that it was written on purpose to discover the Plot, yet it was
+clear enough on the other to be understood with the help of a little
+consideration, as the event soon showed. Indeed, when it was brought to
+Secretary Cecil, he, poor gentleman, had not penetration enough to
+understand the meaning of it, and said it was certainly written by a
+madman. But there, I fear, he wronged himself. For the secretary was no
+madman. On the contrary, he had too much wit to explain it himself, and
+was too refined a politician to let slip so favourable an occasion of
+making his court to the king, who was to have the compliment made him of
+being the only Solomon wise enough to unfold this dark mystery. Which
+while his Majesty was doing with a great deal of ease, the secretary was
+all the while at his elbow admiring and applauding his wonderful
+sagacity.... So that, in all probability, the same man was the chief
+underhand contriver and discoverer of the Plot; and the greatest part of
+the bubbles concerned in it were trapanned into it by one who took sure
+care that none but themselves should be hurt by it.... But be that as it
+will, there is no doubt but that they who suffer themselves to be drawn
+into a plot like fools, deserve to be hanged for it like knaves."
+
+The opinion of Dodd, the historian, has already been indicated, which in
+another place he thus emphasizes and explains:[126] "Some persons in
+chief power suspecting the king would be very indulgent to Catholics,
+several stratagems were made use of to exasperate him against them, and
+cherishing the Gunpowder Plot is thought to be a masterpiece in this
+way."[127]
+
+It would not be difficult to continue similar citations, but enough has
+now been said to show that it is nothing new to charge the chief
+minister of James I. with having fostered the conspiracy for his own
+purposes, or even to have actually set it a-going. It appears perfectly
+clear that from the first there were not a few, and those not Catholics
+only, who entertained such a belief, and that the facts of the case are
+inadequately represented by historians, who imply, like Mr. Jardine,
+that such a theory was first broached long afterwards, and adopted by
+Catholics alone.[128]
+
+It is moreover apparent that if in recent times historians have
+forgotten that such a view was ever held, or consider it too
+preposterous for serious discussion, this is not because fuller
+knowledge of the details of the conspiracy have discredited it. The
+official version of the story has remained in possession of the field,
+and it has gradually been assumed that this must substantially be true.
+In consequence, as it seems, writers of history, approaching the subject
+with this conviction, have failed to remark many points suggested even
+by the documentary evidence at our disposal, and still more emphatically
+by the recorded facts, which cannot but throw grave doubt upon almost
+every particular of the traditional account, while making it impossible
+to believe that, as to what is most essential, the Plot was in reality
+what has for so long been supposed. That long before the "discovery" the
+Plot must have been, and in fact was, known to the government; that this
+knowledge was artfully dissimulated, in order to make political capital
+out of it; that for the same purpose the sensational circumstances of
+its discovery were deliberately arranged; and that there are grave
+reasons for suspecting the beginnings of the desperate enterprise, as
+well as its catastrophe, to have been dexterously manipulated for State
+purposes;--such are the conclusions, the evidence for which will now be
+considered.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[99] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 129. Printed in _Archæologia_, xii. 202*.
+
+[100] R.O. _Roman Transcripts_ (Bliss), No. 86, December 10th, 1605
+(Italian).
+
+[101] Mr. Jardine writes (_Criminal Trials_, ii. p. 235), "_The True and
+Perfect Relation_ ... is certainly not deserving of the character which
+its title imports. It is not _true_, because many occurrences on the
+trial are wilfully misrepresented; and it is not _perfect_, because the
+whole evidence, and many facts and circumstances which must have
+happened, are omitted, and incidents are inserted which could not by
+possibility have taken place on the occasion. It is obviously a false
+and imperfect relation of the proceedings; a tale artfully garbled and
+misrepresented, like many others of the same age, to serve a State
+purpose, and intended and calculated to mislead the judgment of the
+world upon the facts of the case." Of the _Discourse_ he speaks in
+similar terms. (_Ibid._, p. 4.)
+
+[102] R.O. _Dom. James I._ xix. 94. Printed by Jardine, _Criminal
+Trials_, ii. 120 (note).
+
+[103] _Answere to certaine Scandalous Papers, scattered abroad under
+colour of a Catholic Admonition._ (Published in January, 1605-6.)
+
+[104] _Traditional Memoirs_, 36. Of this writer Lord Castlemaine says,
+"He was born before this plot, and was also an inquisitive man, a
+frequenter of company, of a noted wit, of an excellent family, and as
+Protestant a one as any in the whole nation."
+
+[105] _Court of King James_ (1839), i. 102.
+
+[106] Stonyhurst MSS., _Anglia_, v. 67.
+
+[107] _E.g._, in the _Advocate of Conscience Liberty_ (1673), p. 225.
+
+[108] _History of Mary Queen of Scots and James I._, p. 334. Bishop
+Kennet, in his Fifth of November Sermon, 1715, boldly declares that
+Sanderson speaks not of Cecil the statesman, but of Cecil "a busy Romish
+priest" (and, he might have added, a paid government spy). The assertion
+is utterly and obviously false.
+
+[109] _Memoirs_, p. 22.
+
+[110] _History of England, Royal House of Stuart_, p. 27.
+
+[111] _General History of England_, iii. 757.
+
+[112] _History of His Own Times_, i. 11.
+
+[113] _Church History_, Book X. § 39.
+
+[114] _Antipathie of the English Lordly Prelacie, to the regall
+Monarchie and Civill Unity_, p. 151.
+
+[115] _A Short View of the English History_, p. 296.
+
+[116] Note to _Fuller's Church History_, x. § 39, and to the _Student's
+Hume_.
+
+[117] _Illustrations_, iii. 172.
+
+[118] Parker and Co. This author says of Cecil and his rival Raleigh,
+"Both were unprincipled men, but Cecil was probably the worst. He is
+suspected not only of having contrived the strange plot in which Raleigh
+was involved, but of being privy to the proceedings of Catesby and his
+associates, though he suffered them to remain unmolested, in order to
+secure the forfeiture of their estates" (p. 338).
+
+[119] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 68.
+
+[120] _History of England_, i. 254, note.
+
+[121] _Catholique Apology_, p. 412.
+
+[122] _Hist. Prov. Angl. S.J._, p. 310.
+
+[123] _Condition of Catholics under James I._, p. 100.
+
+[124] R.O. _Dom. James I._, lxxxi. 70, August 29th, 1615.
+
+[125] _A Plain and Rational Account of the Catholick Faith_, Rouen,
+1721, p. 197.
+
+[126] _Certamen utriusque Ecclesiæ_, James I.
+
+[127] The author of the _English Protestants' Plea_ (1621) says: "Old
+stratagems and tragedies of Queene Elizabeth's time must needs be
+renewed and playde againe, to bring not only the Catholikes of England,
+but their holy religion into obloquy" (p. 56).
+
+Peter Talbot, Bishop of Dublin, in the _Polititian's Catechisme_ (1658)
+writes: "That Cecil was the contriver, or at least the fomenter of [the
+Plot,] was testified by one of his own domestick Gentlemen, who
+advertised a certain Catholike, by name Master Buck, two months before,
+of a wicked designe his Master had against Catholikes" (p. 94).
+
+[128] A writer, signing himself "Architect," in an article describing
+the old palace of Westminster (_Gentleman's Magazine_, July, 1800, p.
+627), having occasion to mention the Gunpowder Plot, observes: "This
+Plot is now pretty well understood not to have been hatched by the
+Papists, but by an inveterate foe of the Catholicks of that day, the
+famous minister of James.... All well-informed persons at present laugh
+at the whole of this business."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TRADITIONAL STORY.
+
+
+THE history of the Gunpowder Plot prior to its discovery, as related
+with much circumstantiality by the government of the day, has, in all
+essential particulars, been accepted without demur by the great majority
+of modern writers. We have already seen that those who lived nearer to
+the period in question were less easily convinced; it remains to show
+that the internal evidence of the story itself is incompatible with its
+truthfulness.
+
+The point upon which everything turns is the secret, and therefore
+dangerous, character of the conspiracy, which, as we are told,
+completely eluded the vigilance of the authorities, and was on the very
+verge of success before even a breath of suspicion was aroused, being
+balked only by a lucky accident occurring at the eleventh hour, in a
+manner fitly described as miraculous.
+
+On the other hand, however, many plain and obvious considerations
+combine to show that such an account cannot be true. It is not easy to
+believe that much which is said to have been done by the conspirators
+ever occurred at all. It is clear that, if such things did occur, they
+can by no possibility have escaped observation. There is evidence that
+the government knew of the Plot long before they suddenly "discovered"
+it. Finally, the story of the said "discovery," and the manner in which
+it took place, is plainly not only untrue, but devised to conceal the
+truth; while the elaborate care expended upon it sufficiently indicates
+how important it was held that the truth should be concealed.
+
+There are, moreover, arguments, which appear to deserve consideration,
+suggesting the conclusion that the Plot was actually set on foot by the
+secret instigation of those who designed to make it serve their ends, as
+in fact it did. For our purpose, however, it is not necessary to insist
+greatly upon these. It will be enough to show that, whatever its origin,
+the conspiracy was, and must have been, known to those in power, who,
+playing with their infatuated dupes, allowed them to go on with their
+mad scheme, till the moment came to strike with full effect; thus
+impressing the nation with a profound sense of its marvellous
+deliverance, and winning its confidence for those to whose vigilance and
+sagacity alone that deliverance appeared due.
+
+That we may rightly follow the details of the story told to us, we must
+in the first place understand the topography of the scene of operations,
+which, with the aid of the illustrations given, will not be difficult.
+
+[Illustration: HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT IN THE TIME OF JAMES I.]
+
+[Illustration: INDEX. PARLIAMENT HOUSES IN THE TIME OF JAMES I.
+
+A. The House of Lords.
+
+B. Chamber under the House of Lords, called "Guy Faukes' Cellar."
+
+C. The Prince's Chamber.
+
+D. The Painted Chamber.
+
+E. The "White Hall" or Court of Requests.
+
+F. The House of Commons (formerly St. Stephen's Chapel).
+
+G. Westminster Hall.
+
+H. St. Stephen's Cloisters, converted into houses for the Tellers of the
+Exchequer.
+
+I. Garden of the Old Palace (afterwards called "Cotton Garden").
+
+J. House built on the site of the Chapel of "Our Lady of the Pew"
+(called later "Cotton House").
+
+K K K. Houses built upon ruins of the walls of the Old Palace.
+
+L. Vault under the Painted Chamber.
+
+M. Yard or Court into which a doorway opened from Guy Faukes' Cellar.
+
+N. Passage leading from the same Yard or Court into Parliament Place.
+
+O. Parliament Place.
+
+P. Parliament Stairs (formerly called "The Queen's Bridge").
+
+Q Q. The River Thames.
+
+R. Old Palace Yard.
+
+S. Westminster Abbey.
+
+T. St. Margaret's Church.
+
+U V W. Buildings of the Old Palace, called "Heaven" (or "Paradise"),
+"Hell," and "Purgatory."
+
+X. New Palace Yard.
+
+Y. Bell Tower of St. Stephen's.
+
+Z. The Speaker's Garden.]
+
+The old House of Lords[129] was a chamber occupying the first floor of
+a building which stood about fifty yards from the left bank of the
+Thames, to which it was parallel, the stream at this point running
+almost due north. Beneath the Peers' Chamber, on the ground floor, was a
+large room, which plays an important part in our history. This had
+originally served as the palace kitchen,[130] and though commonly
+described as a "cellar" or a "vault" was in reality neither, for it
+stood on the level of the ground outside, and had a flat ceiling, formed
+by the beams which supported the flooring of the Lords' apartment
+above.[131] It ran beneath the said Peers' Chamber from end to end, and
+measured 77 feet in length, by 24 feet 4 inches in width.
+
+At either end, the building abutted upon another running transversely to
+it; that on the north being the "Painted Chamber," probably erected by
+Edward the Confessor, and that on the south the "Prince's Chamber,"
+assigned by its architectural features to the reign of Henry III. The
+former served as a place of conference for Lords and Commons,[132] the
+latter as the robing-room of the Lords. The royal throne stood at the
+south end of the House, near the Prince's Chamber.
+
+[Illustration: GROUND PLAN OF THE SCENE OF ACTION.]
+
+Originally the Parliament Chamber and the "cellar" beneath it were
+lighted by large windows on both sides; subsequently, houses raised
+against it blocked these up, and the Lords were supplied with light by
+dormers constructed in the roof. The walls of their apartment were then
+hung with tapestry, representing the defeat of the Spanish Armada.
+Although precise information on the point is not easy to obtain, it
+would appear that this did not occur till a period later than that with
+which we are concerned.[133]
+
+Such was the position to be attacked. As a first step, the conspirators
+resolved to hire a house in the immediate neighbourhood, to serve them
+as a base of operations. Thomas Percy was selected to appear as the
+principal in this part of the business, for, being one of the king's
+pensioners, he had frequently to be in attendance at Court, and might
+naturally wish to have a lodging close at hand. The house chosen was
+one, or rather a part of one,[134] standing near the Prince's Chamber,
+and on the side towards the river.[135]
+
+In treating for the lease of this tenement Percy seems to have conducted
+himself in a manner altogether different from what we might have
+expected of one whose object required him, above all, to avoid
+attracting notice. He appears, in fact, to have made the greatest
+possible ado about the business. The apartments were already let to one
+Ferrers, who was unwilling to give them up, and Percy eventually
+succeeded in his purpose, after not only "long suit by himself," but
+also "great intreaty of Mr. Carleton, Mr. Epsley, and other gentlemen
+belonging to the Earl of Northumberland."[136] These gentlemen were
+never said to have been privy to the Conspiracy, and one of them, the
+well-known Dudley Carleton, afterwards Viscount Dorchester, was not only
+at this time secretary to Sir Thomas Parry, the Ambassador in France,
+but was "patronised" by Cecil himself.[137]
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD HOUSE OF LORDS, FROM THE EAST OR RIVER SIDE,
+SHOWING THE GARDEN.]
+
+Neither does the house appear to have been well suited to serve the
+purposes for which it was taken. Speed tells us,[138] and he is
+confirmed by Bishop Barlow of Lincoln,[139] that it was let out to
+tenants only when Parliament was not assembled, and during a session
+formed part of the premises at the disposal of the Lords, whom it served
+as a withdrawing room. As the Plot was, of necessity, to take effect
+during a session,[140] when the place would thus be in other hands, it
+is very hard to understand how it was intended that the final and all
+important operation should be conducted.
+
+The bargain for the house was concluded May 24th, 1604,[141] but the
+proposed operations were delayed till a much later date, by a
+circumstance which clearly shows the public nature of the premises, and
+that the lease obtained conferred no exclusive right of occupation. The
+question of a union with Scotland, for which King James was very
+anxious, was at the time being agitated, and commissioners having been
+appointed to discuss it, this very house was placed at their disposal
+for their meetings. Consequently the summer and autumn passed without
+any farther steps being taken by the conspirators.
+
+At last, in December, they were free to take in hand the extraordinary
+scheme they had matured. This was, starting from a cellar of Percy's
+house,[142] to dig thence an underground mine to the foundations of the
+Parliament House, and through them; and then to construct within,
+beneath the Peers' Chamber itself, a "concavity" large enough to contain
+the amount of powder requisite for their purpose. On December 11th,
+1604, they commenced operations,[143] and in a fortnight, that is by
+Christmas, they had tunnelled from their starting-point to the wall they
+had to breach; and that this first operation was of no small magnitude,
+especially for men who had never before handled pick or shovel,[144] is
+shown by the fact that what they contrived to do in so short a time was
+quoted as evidence of the extraordinary zeal they displayed in their
+nefarious enterprise.[145] Having rested a little, for the Christmas
+holidays, they began upon the wall, which presented an unexpected
+obstacle. They found that it was not only "very hard to beat through,"
+but, moreover, nine feet thick, though since, as we shall see, they
+never penetrated to the other side, it is not clear how they were able
+to measure it.[146] Up to this point but five persons had engaged in the
+work, Catesby, Percy, Thomas Winter, John Wright, and Faukes. In
+consequence however of the difficulties now experienced, Keyes was
+called in to their aid. He had already been initiated in the Plot, and
+appointed to take charge of the powder, which was being accumulated and
+stored in a house hired for the purpose across the Thames, at Lambeth.
+It was therefore necessary to bring over the powder with him, which
+amounted at this time to twenty barrels, and was placed either in
+Percy's lodging itself, or in an outhouse belonging to it. About the
+same time Christopher Wright was also initiated and took his share of
+the labour.[147]
+
+The gang thus composed laboured upon the wall from the beginning of
+January, 1604-5, to the middle of March,[148] by which time they had
+succeeded in getting only half way through. While the others worked,
+Faukes stood on sentry to warn them of any danger.
+
+Meanwhile, it must be asked how proceedings so remarkable could have
+escaped the notice, not only of the government, but of the entire
+neighbourhood. This, it must be remembered, was most populous. There
+were people living in the very building, a part of which sheltered the
+conspirators. Around, were thickly clustered the dwellings of the keeper
+of the Wardrobe, auditors and tellers of the Exchequer, and other such
+officials.[149] There were tradespeople and workmen constantly employed
+close to the spot where the work was going on; while the public
+character of the place makes it impossible to suppose that tenants such
+as Percy and his friends, who were little better than lodgers, could
+claim the exclusive use of anything beyond the rooms they rented--even
+when allowed the use of these--or could shut against the neighbours and
+visitors in general the precincts of so much frequented a spot.
+
+How, then, did they dispose of the mass of soil dug out in making a
+tunnel through which barrels and hogsheads were to be conveyed? No man
+who has had practical experience of the unexpected quantity of earth
+which comes out of the most insignificant excavation, will be likely to
+rest satisfied with the explanation officially given, that it was
+sufficiently concealed by being hidden beneath the turf in the little
+garden adjoining.[150] What, moreover, was done with the great stones
+that came out of the foundations? Of these there must have been on hand
+at least some sixty cubic feet, probably much more, and they, at any
+rate, can scarcely have been stowed away beneath the turf.
+
+What, above all, of the noise made during the space of a couple of
+months, in assaulting a wall "very hard to beat through"? It is a matter
+of common observation how sound travels in the ground, and every stroke
+of the pick upon the stone must have been distinctly heard for more than
+a hundred yards all around, constituting a public nuisance. Meanwhile,
+not only were there people living close by on every side, but men were
+constantly at work right over the heads of the diggers, and only a few
+feet from them: yet we are required to believe that neither these nor
+any others had any notion that anything unusual was going on.
+
+Neither is it easy to understand how these amateurs contrived to do so
+much without a catastrophe. To make a tunnel through soft earth is a
+very delicate operation, replete with unlooked-for difficulties. To
+shore up the roof and sides there must, moreover, have been required a
+large quantity of the "framed timber" of which Speed tells us, and the
+provision and importation of this must have been almost as hard to keep
+dark as the exportation of the earth and stones. A still more critical
+operation is that of meddling with the foundations of a
+house--especially of an old and heavy structure--which a professional
+craftsman would not venture upon except with extreme care, and the
+employment of many precautions of which these light-hearted adventurers
+knew nothing. Yet, recklessly breaking their way out of one building,
+and to a large extent into another, they appear to have occasioned
+neither crack nor settlement in either.
+
+We are by no means at the end of our difficulties. According to the tale
+told by Faukes,[151] all the seven miners "lay in Percy's house," never
+showing themselves while the work was in progress. This circumstance, to
+say nothing of the storage of powder barrels and timber, seems to imply
+that the premises were spacious and commodious. We learn, however, on
+the unimpeachable evidence of Mrs. Whynniard's servant,[152] that the
+house afforded accommodation only for one person at a time, so that when
+Percy came there to spend the night, Faukes, who passed for his man, had
+to lodge out. This suggests another question. Percy's pretext for laying
+in so much fuel was that he meant to bring up his wife to live there.
+But how could this be under such conditions?
+
+Still more serious is another problem. When the mining operations were
+commenced, in December, 1604, Parliament was appointed to meet on the
+7th of February following, by which time, as is evident, the
+preparations of the conspirators could not have been completed. While
+they were working, however, news came that the session was to be
+postponed till October. This information the conspirators appear to
+have received quite casually before Christmas, for it is said that on
+the strength of it, they thought they could afford to take a
+holiday.[153] Early in January they were again at work,[154] and they
+continued their operations thenceforth, without any circumstance
+intervening to interrupt or alarm them, of which we hear anything either
+from themselves or from subsequent writers. Nevertheless, it is quite
+certain that the Lords actually met on February 7th--that is while the
+mining operations were going on--and not only went through the ceremony
+of prorogation, but transacted some little business besides, Lord Denny
+being introduced and his writ of summons read.[155] It is equally
+incomprehensible that the miners should have known nothing of so
+startling an occurrence, or that knowing of it they should never have
+made the slightest mention thereof. It is even more difficult to explain
+how the Peers thus assembled, and their attendants, could have failed to
+remark the mine, then actually open, in premises belonging to
+themselves, or any suspicious features of earth, stones, timber, or
+barrels.
+
+The difficulties presented by the stubborn nature of the foundation-wall
+proved well-nigh insuperable, but, as is observed by Father
+Greenway,[156] one still more grave awaited the diggers had they
+succeeded in making their way through. The "concavity" to be excavated
+within, to contain the large number of powder barrels required for their
+purpose, would have involved engineering work of the most hazardous
+kind, and heavily laden as the floor above proved to be, it must,
+according to all rules of calculation, have collapsed, when thus
+undermined. But at this juncture, when the wall had been half pierced, a
+circumstance occurred, not less extraordinary than others we have
+considered, to change the whole plan of operations.
+
+All this time, ridiculous as is the supposition, the conspirators appear
+to have been ignorant of the existence of the "cellar," and to have
+fancied that they were working their way immediately beneath the Chamber
+of the Peers.[157] If such a circumstance be incredible, the
+consequences must be borne by the narrative of which it forms an
+essential feature. That it is incredible can hardly be questioned. The
+so-called "cellar," as we have seen, was a large and conspicuous room
+above ground. There are reasons for believing that it served habitually
+as a passage between the different parts of the palace. It appears
+certain that some of the conspirators, Percy in particular, as being one
+of his Majesty's pensioners, must have frequently been in the House of
+Lords itself, and therefore have known where it was; and clearly men of
+their position were able to attend there when they chose.[158]
+
+The manner in which they came at last to discover the "cellar" is thus
+related by Mr. Jardine:[159] "One morning, while working upon the wall,
+they suddenly heard a rushing noise in a cellar, nearly above their
+heads. At first they imagined that they had been discovered; but Fawkes
+being despatched to reconnoitre, found that one Bright, to whom the
+cellar belonged, was selling off his coals[160] in order to remove, and
+that the noise proceeded from this cause. Fawkes carefully surveyed the
+place, which proved to be a large vault, situated immediately below the
+House of Lords, and extremely convenient for the purpose they had in
+view.... Finding that the cellar would shortly become vacant, the
+conspirators agreed that it should be hired in Percy's name, under the
+pretext that he wanted it for his own coals and wood. This was
+accordingly done, and immediate possession was obtained."[161]
+
+[Illustration: CELLAR UNDER HOUSE OF LORDS.]
+
+It is obvious that Mr. Bright's men must on this, as presumably upon
+many previous occasions, have been at work among the coals, while the
+miners were hammering at the foundations beneath them, and yet have been
+as little aware of what was going on as were the others of the existence
+of the "cellar." It must, farther, be noted that the hiring of this
+receptacle was, in fact, by no means so easy a matter as the accounts
+ordinarily given would lead us to suppose. Faukes, in the narrative on
+which the whole history of this episode has been based, is made to say
+that he found that the coals were a-selling, and the cellar was to be
+let, whereupon Percy went and hired it. Mrs. Whynniard, however, tells
+us that the cellar was not to let, and that Bright had not the disposal
+of the lease, but one Skinner, and that Percy "laboured very earnestly"
+before he succeeded in obtaining it.
+
+[Illustration: VAULT, EAST END OF PAINTED CHAMBER, ERRONEOUSLY STYLED
+"GUY FAUKES' CELLAR."]
+
+But, whatever the circumstances and manner of the transaction, it
+appears that at Lady-day, 1605, this chamber came into the hands of
+those who were to make it so famous; whereupon, we are told, they
+resolved to abandon the mine, and use this ready-made cavity for their
+purposes. To it, accordingly, they transferred their powder, the
+barrels, by subsequent additions, being increased to thirty-six, and the
+amount to nine or ten thousand pounds.[162] The casks were covered with
+firewood, 500 faggots and 3,000 billets being brought in by hired
+porters and piled up by Faukes, to whose charge, in his assumed
+character of Percy's servant, the cellar was committed. It is stated in
+Winter's long declaration on this subject,[163] that the barrels were
+thus completely hidden, "because we might have the house free, to suffer
+anyone to enter that would," and we find it mentioned by various writers
+subsequently, that free ingress was actually allowed to the public. Thus
+we read[164] of "the deep cunning [of the conspirators] in throwing
+open the vault, as if there had been nothing to conceal;" while another
+writer[165] tells us, "The place was hired by Percy; 36 barrels of
+gunpowder were lodged in it; the whole covered up with billets and
+faggots; the doors of the cellar boldly flung open, and everybody
+admitted, as though it contained nothing dangerous." On the top of the
+barrels were likewise placed "great bars of iron and massy stones," in
+order "to make the breach the greater."
+
+[Illustration: ARCHES FROM THE "CELLAR" UNDER THE HOUSE OF LORDS.]
+
+We may here pause to review the extraordinary story to which we have
+been listening. A group of men, known for as dangerous characters as any
+in England, men, in Cecil's own words,[166] "spent in their fortunes,"
+"hunger-starved for innovations," "turbulent spirits," and "fit for all
+alterations," take a house within the precincts of a royal palace, and
+close to the Upper House of Parliament, dig a mine, hammer away for over
+two months at the wall, acquire and bring in four tons of gunpowder,
+storing it in a large and conspicuous chamber immediately beneath that
+of the Peers, and covering it with an amount of fuel sufficient for a
+royal establishment--and meanwhile those responsible for the government
+of the country have not even the faintest suspicion of any possible
+danger. "Never," it is said,[167] "was treason more secret, or ruin more
+apparently inevitable," while the Secretary of State himself
+declared[168] that such ruin was averted only by the direct
+interposition of Heaven, in a manner nothing short of miraculous.
+
+It must be remembered that the government thus credited with childlike
+and culpable simplicity, was probably the most suspicious and
+inquisitive that ever held power in this country, for its tenure whereof
+it trusted mainly to the elaborate efficiency of its intelligence
+department. Of a former secretary, Walsingham, Parsons wrote that he
+"spent infinite upon spyery,"[169] and there can be no doubt that his
+successor, now in office, had studied his methods to good purpose. "He,"
+according to a panegyrist,[170] "was his craft's master in foreign
+intelligence and for domestic affairs," who could tell at any moment
+what ships there were in every port of Spain, their burdens, their
+equipment, and their destination. We are told[171] that he could
+discover the most secret business transacted in the Papal Court before
+it was known to the Catholics in England. He could intercept letters
+written from Paris to Brussels, or from Rome to Naples.[172] What was
+his activity at home is sufficiently evidenced by the reports furnished
+by his numerous agents concerning everything done throughout the
+country, in particular by Recusants; whereof we shall see more, in
+connection with this particular affair. That those so remarkably
+wide-awake in regard of all else should have been blind and deaf to what
+was passing at their own doors appears altogether incredible.
+
+More especially do difficulties connect themselves with the gunpowder
+itself. Of this, according to the lowest figure given us, there were
+over four tons.[173] How, we may ask, could half a dozen men, "notorious
+Recusants," and bearing, moreover, such a character as we have heard,
+without attracting any notice, and no question being asked, possess
+themselves of such a quantity of so dangerous a material?[174] How large
+was the amount may be estimated from the fact that it was more than a
+quarter of what, in 1607, was delivered from the royal store, for all
+purposes, and was equal to what was thought sufficient for Dover Castle,
+while there was no more in the four fortresses of Arcliffe, Walmer,
+Deal, and Camber together.[175]
+
+The twenty barrels first procured were first, as we have seen, stored
+beyond the Thames, at Lambeth, whence they had to be ferried across the
+river, hauled up the much frequented Parliament Stairs, carried down
+Parliament Place, as busy a quarter as any in the city of Westminster,
+and into the building adjoining the Parliament House, or the "cellar"
+beneath the same. All this, we are to suppose, without attracting
+attention or remark.[176]
+
+The conspirators, while making these material preparations, were
+likewise busy in settling their plan of action when the intended blow
+should have been struck. It was by no means their intention to attempt a
+revolution. Their quarrel was purely personal with King James, his
+Council, and his Parliament, and, these being removed, they desired to
+continue the succession in its legitimate course, and to seat on the
+throne the nearest heir who might be available for the purpose; placing
+the new sovereign, however, under such tutelage as should insure the
+inauguration of a right course of policy. The details of the scheme were
+of as lunatic a character as the rest of the business. The confederates
+would have wished to possess themselves of Prince Henry, the king's
+eldest son; but as he would probably accompany his father to the
+opening of Parliament, and so perish, their desire was to get hold of
+his brother, the Duke of York, afterwards Charles I., then but five
+years old. It was, however, possible that he too might go to Parliament,
+and otherwise it might not improbably be impossible to get possession of
+him: in which case they were prepared to be satisfied with the Princess
+Elizabeth,[177] or even with her infant sister Mary, for whom, as being
+English born, a special claim might be urged.
+
+Such was the project in general. When we come to details, we are
+confronted, as might be anticipated, with statements impossible to
+reconcile. We are told,[178] that Percy undertook to seize and carry off
+Duke Charles; and again,[179] that, despairing of being able to lay
+hands upon him, they resolved "to serve themselves with the Lady
+Elizabeth," and that Percy was one of those who made arrangements for
+seizing her;[180] and again, that having learnt that Prince Henry was
+not to go to the House, they determined to surprise him, "and leave the
+young Duke alone;"[181] and once more, that they never entered into any
+consultation or formed any project whatever as to the succession.[182]
+
+Still more serious are the contradictions on another point. We are told,
+on the one hand, that a proclamation was drawn up for the inauguration
+of the new sovereign--whoever this was[183]--and, on the other, that the
+associates were resolved not to avow the explosion to be their work
+until they should see how the country took it, or till they had gathered
+a sufficient force,[184] and accordingly that they had no more than a
+project of a proclamation to be issued in due season. But, again, it is
+said[185] that Catesby on his way out of town, after the event, was to
+proclaim the new monarch at Charing Cross, though it is equally hard to
+understand, either how he was to know which of the plans had succeeded,
+and who that monarch was to be,--whether a king or a queen,--or what
+effect such proclamation by an obscure individual like himself was
+expected to produce; or how this, or indeed any item in the programme
+was compatible with the incognito of the actors in the great tragedy.
+
+Amid this hopeless tangle one point alone is perfectly clear. Whatever
+was the scheme, it was absolutely insane, and could by no possibility
+have succeeded. As Mr. Gardiner says:[186] "With the advantage of having
+an infant sovereign in their hands, with a little money and a few
+horses, these sanguine dreamers fancied that they would have the whole
+of England at their feet."
+
+Such is in outline the authorized version of the history concerning what
+Father John Gerard styles "this preposterous Plot of Powder;" and
+preposterous it undoubtedly appears to be in more senses than he
+intended. It is, in the first place, almost impossible to believe that
+the important and dramatic episode of the mine ever, in fact, occurred.
+We have seen something of the difficulties against accepting this part
+of the story, which the circumstantial evidence suggests. When, on the
+other hand, we ask upon what testimony it rests, it is a surprise to
+find that for so prominent and striking an incident we are wholly
+dependent upon two documents, published by the government, a confession
+of Thomas Winter and another of Faukes, both of which present features
+rendering them in the highest degree suspicious. Amongst the many
+confessions and declarations made by the conspirators in general, and
+these individuals in particular, these two alone describe the mining
+operations.[187]
+
+[Illustration: CELL IN STAIRCASE TURRET, S.E. CORNER, PAINTED CHAMBER,
+OFTEN CALLED "GUY FAUKES' CELL."]
+
+On the other hand, it is somewhat startling to find no less a person
+than the Earl of Salisbury himself ignorant or oblivious of so
+remarkable a circumstance. In Thomas Winter's lodging was found the
+agreement between Percy and Ferrers for the lease of the house, which
+was taken, as has been said, in May, 1604. This is still preserved, and
+has been endorsed by Cecil, "The bargaine between Percy and Ferrers for
+the bloody sellar...." But this contract had nothing to do with the
+"bloody sellar," which was not rented till ten months later. Again,
+writing November 9th, 1605, to Cornwallis and Edmondes, Cecil says:
+"This Percy had about a year and a half ago hired a part of Vyniard's
+house in the old Palace, from whence he had access into this vault to
+lay his wood and coal, and as it seemeth now [had] taken this place of
+purpose to work some mischief in a fit time." When this was written the
+premises had been for four days in the hands of the government. It is
+clearly impossible that the remains of the mine, had they existed,
+should not have been found, and equally so that Cecil should not have
+alluded to the overwhelming evidence they afforded as to the intention
+of Percy and his associates to "work some mischief," but should, again,
+have connected the tenancy of the house only with the "cellar."
+
+It will, moreover, be found by investigators that when exceptional
+stress is laid on any point by Sir E. Coke, the Attorney General, a
+_prima facie_ case against the genuine nature of the evidence in regard
+of that point is thereby established. In his speech on the trial of the
+conspirators we find him declaring that, "If the cellar had not been
+hired, the mine work could hardly, or not at all, have been discovered,
+for the mine was neither found nor suspected until the danger was past,
+and the capital offenders apprehended, and by themselves, upon
+examination, confessed." That is to say, the government could not,
+though provided with information that there was a powder-mine under the
+Parliament House, have discovered this extraordinary piece of
+engineering; and moreover, after its abandonment, the traces of the
+excavation were so artfully hidden as to elude observation till the
+prisoners drew attention to them. Such assertions cannot possibly be
+true; but they might serve to meet the objection that no one had seen
+the mine.
+
+We likewise find that in his examination of November 5th, Faukes is made
+to say: "He confesseth that about Christmas last [1604], he brought in
+the nighttime Gunpowder _to the cellar under the upper house of
+Parliament_," that is some three months before the cellar was hired.
+Moreover, the words italicised have been added as an interlineation,
+apparently by Cecil himself. Evidently when this was done the mine was
+still undiscovered.
+
+Yet more remarkable is the fact that it would appear to have remained
+undiscovered ever afterwards, and that no marks seem to have been left
+upon the wall which had been so roughly handled. It is certainly
+impossible to find any record that such traces were observed when the
+building was demolished, though they could scarcely have failed to
+attract attention and interest. On this subject we have the important
+evidence of Mr. William Capon, who carefully examined every detail
+connected with the old palace, and evidently had the opportunity of
+studying the foundations of the House of Lords when, in 1823, that
+building was removed.[188] He does, indeed, mention what he conceives
+to be the traces of the conspirators' work, of which he gives the
+following description:
+
+"Adjoining the south end of the Cellar, or more properly the ancient
+Kitchen, to the west, was a small room separated only by a stone
+doorway, with a pointed head, and with very substantial masonry joined
+to the older walls.... At the North side [of this] there had been an
+opening, a doorway of very solid thick stonemasonry, through which was a
+way seemingly forced through by great violence.... In 1799 it was
+asserted that this was always understood to have been the place where
+the conspirators broke into the vault which adjoined that called Guy
+Vaux's cellar."[189]
+
+But against such a supposition there are three fatal objections. (1)
+This places the conspirators on the wrong side of the house, for they
+most certainly worked from the east, or river side, not from the
+west.[190] (2) It makes the mine above ground instead of below. (3) The
+conspirators never broke into the cellar at all, but hired it in the
+ordinary way of business.
+
+Such considerations as the above may well make us sceptical in regard to
+the mine, and if this element of the story, upon which so much stress
+has always been laid, prove to be untrustworthy, it must needs follow
+that grave suspicion will be cast upon the rest.
+
+There are, likewise, various problems in connection with the "cellar,"
+especially as concerns the means of ingress to it, and its consequent
+privacy or publicity.
+
+(_a_) Faukes says (November 6th, 1605) that about the middle of Lent of
+that year Percy caused "a new dore" to be made into it, "that he might
+have a neerer way out of his own house into the cellar."
+
+This seems to imply that Percy took the cellar for his firewood when
+there was no convenient communication between it and his house. Moreover
+it is not very easy to understand how a tenant under such conditions as
+his was allowed at discretion to knock doors through the walls of a
+royal palace. Neither did the landlady say anything of this door-making,
+when detailing what she knew about Percy's proceedings.
+
+(_b_) In some notes by Sir E. Coke,[191] it is said: "The powder was
+first brought into Percy's house, and lay there in a low room new built,
+and could not have been conveyed into the cellar by the old door but
+that all the street must have seen it; and therefore he caused a new
+door out of his house into the cellar to be made, where before there had
+been a grate of iron."
+
+This, it must be confessed, looks very like an afterthought to explain
+away a difficulty, but failing to do so. When the door is said to have
+been made, the powder was already on the premises, having been brought
+there in sight of the whole street and the river. It could hardly, in so
+small a tenement, escape the observation of the workmen,[192] while the
+operations of these latter in breaking through the wall would have
+served yet farther to attract the attention of the neighbourhood.
+
+(_c_) We are told by Faukes and others, that either he or Percy always
+kept the key, and that marks were made to indicate whether anyone had
+entered the place in their absence.
+
+(_d_) On the other hand, to say nothing of Winter's declaration that the
+confederates so arranged as to leave the cellar free for all to enter
+who would, Lord Salisbury informed Sir Thomas Parry[193] that the
+captors of Faukes entered through "another door," which clearly did not
+require to be opened by him; while as to the ordinary door, whichever
+this was, the "King's Book" itself plainly intimates, in the account of
+the chamberlain's visit, that Whynniard, the landlord, was able to open
+it when he chose.
+
+The "other door" spoken of by Cecil, a most important feature of the
+chamber, is nowhere else mentioned.[194]
+
+It appears certain that the conspirators really had a plot in hand, that
+they fancied themselves to be about to strike a great blow, and that by
+means of gunpowder; but what was the precise nature of their plans and
+preparations it is not so easy to determine. Farther discussion of these
+particulars must be deferred to a later chapter. Meanwhile, according to
+the accepted history, when they had stored their powder there was
+nothing more to do but to await the assembling of the intended
+victims. Parliament stood prorogued till October 3rd, and was afterwards
+further adjourned till the fateful 5th of November. That they might not
+excite suspicion, the confederates separated, most of them retiring to
+their country seats, and Faukes going over to Flanders.[195] In his
+absence Percy kept the key of the cellar, and, according to Faukes,[196]
+laid in more powder and wood while he himself was absent.
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. II.]
+
+It is not easy to understand what became of the cellar during this long
+interval, and apparently it was left in great measure, with its
+compromising contents, to take care of itself, for Percy, amongst other
+places, went with Catesby to Bath to take the waters.[197] If the
+premises were of so public a nature as the testimony of Winter and
+others would imply, it appears impossible that they should have remained
+all this time sealed up, or that these astute and crafty plotters should
+with a light heart have ignored the probability that they would be
+visited and inspected. As Father Greenway observes,[198] it can hardly
+be supposed that the landlord[199] had not a duplicate key, while Cecil
+himself, in his letter to Sir Thomas Parry, plainly indicates that
+access to the cellar could freely be procured independently of the
+conspirators. We can only say that the conduct of the confederates in
+this particular appears to have been quite in keeping with their method
+of conspiring secretly as we have already seen it, and undoubtedly one
+more difficulty is thus opposed to the supposition that their enterprise
+was chiefly dangerous on account of the clandestine and dexterous manner
+in which it was conducted.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[129] The name "old House of Lords" is somewhat ambiguous, being
+variously applicable to three different buildings:
+
+(i.) That here described, which continued to be used till the Irish
+Union, A.D. 1800.
+
+(ii.) The "Court of Requests," or "White Hall," used from 1800 till the
+fire of 1834.
+
+(iii.) The "Painted Chamber," which, having been repaired after the said
+fire, became the place of assembly for the Lords, as did the Court of
+Requests for the Commons.
+
+The original House of Lords was demolished in 1823 by Sir John Soane,
+who on its site erected his Royal Gallery. (See Brayley and Britton,
+_History of the Palace of Westminster_.)
+
+[130] The authority for this is the Earl of Northampton, who at Father
+Garnet's trial mentioned that it was so stated in ancient records.
+Remains of a buttery hatch in the south wall confirmed his assertion.
+
+The foundations of the building were believed to date from the time of
+Edward the Confessor, and the style of architecture of the
+superstructure assigned it to the early part of the thirteenth century,
+as likewise the "Prince's Chamber."
+
+[131] Brayley and Britton, _History of the Palace of Westminster_, p.
+421; J. T. Smith, _Antiquities of Westminster_, p. 39 (where
+illustrations will be found); _Gentleman's Magazine_, July, 1800, p.
+626.
+
+[132] It was here that the death warrant of Charles I. was signed.
+
+[133] An old print (which states that it is taken from "a painted print
+in the Cottonian library,") representing the two Houses assembled in
+presence of Queen Elizabeth, has windows on both sides. The same plate,
+with the figure of the sovereign alone changed, was made to do duty
+likewise for a Parliament of James I. By Hollar's time (1640-77) the
+windows had been blocked up and the tapestry hung.
+
+[134] Cecil wrote to Cornwallis, Edmondes, and others, November 9th,
+1605, "This Piercey had a bout a year and a half a goe hyred a parte of
+Vyniards house in the old Palace," which appears to be Mr. Hepworth
+Dixon's sole authority for styling the tenement "Vinegar House."
+
+[135] See Appendix E, _Site of Percy's house_.
+
+[136] Evidence of Mrs. Whynniard, November 7th, 1605. Epsley is
+evidently the same person as Hoppisley, who was examined on the 23rd of
+the same month.
+
+[137] Birch, _Historical View_, p. 227.
+
+[138] _Historie_, p. 1231.
+
+[139] _Gunpowder Treason, Harleian Miscellany_, iii. 121.
+
+[140] At his first examination, November 5th 1605, Faukes declared that
+he had not been sure the king would come to the Parliament House on that
+day, and that his purpose was to have blown it up whenever his Majesty
+was there.
+
+[141] The agreement between Percy and Ferrers is in the Record Office
+(_Gunpowder Plot Book_, 1.) and is endorsed by Cecil, "The bargaine ...
+for the bloody sellar." Upon this there will be more to remark later.
+
+[142] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 42.
+
+[143] The 11th of December, O. S., was at that period the shortest day,
+which circumstance suggested to Sir E. Coke, on the trial of the
+conspirators, one of his characteristic facetiæ; he bade his hearers
+note "That it was in the entring of the Sun into the Tropick of
+Capricorn, when they began their Mine; noting that by Mining they should
+descend, and by Hanging, ascend."
+
+[144] "Gentlemen not accustomed to labour or to be pioneers."--Goodman,
+_Court of King James_, p. 103.
+
+[145] "The Moles that first underwent these underminings were all
+grounded Schollers of the Romish Schoole, and such earnest Labourers in
+their Vault of Villany, that by Christmas Eve they had brought the worke
+under an entry, unto the Wall of the Parliament House, underpropping
+still as they went the Earth with their framed Timber."--Speed,
+_Historie_, p. 1232 (pub. 1611).
+
+[146] In Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_ these foundations are stated to
+have been three ells thick, _i.e._, eleven and a quarter feet. _Harleian
+Miscellany_, iii. 122.
+
+[147] See Appendix F, _The enrolment of the Conspirators_, for the
+discrepancies as to dates. T. Winter (November 23rd, 1605) says that the
+powder was laid "in Mr. Percy's house;" Faukes, "in a low Room new
+builded."
+
+[148] There is, as usual, hopeless contradiction between the two
+witnesses upon whom, as will be seen, we wholly depend for this portion
+of the story. Faukes (November 17th, 1605) makes the mining operations
+terminate at Candlemas. T. Winter (November 23rd) says that they went on
+to "near Easter" (March 31st). The date of hiring the "cellar," was
+about Lady Day (March 25th).
+
+[149] The buildings of the dissolved College of St. Stephen, comprising
+those around the House of Lords, were granted by Edward VI. to Sir Ralph
+Lane. They reverted to the crown under Elizabeth, and were appropriated
+as residences for the auditors and tellers of the Exchequer. The
+locality became so populous that in 1606 it was forbidden to erect more
+houses.
+
+[150] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 48.
+
+[151] November 17th, 1605.
+
+[152] November 7th, 1605.
+
+[153] Winter says: "... We heard that the Parliament should be anew
+adjourned until after Michaelmas; upon which tidings we broke off both
+discourse and working until after Christmas" (November 23rd, 1605).
+
+Lingard writes, "When a fortnight had thus been devoted to uninterrupted
+labour, Faukes informed his associates that the Parliament was prorogued
+from the 7th of February to the 3rd of October. They immediately
+separated to spend the Christmas holidays at their respective
+homes."--_History_, vii. 47 (ed. 1883).
+
+[154] Faukes, as has been said, makes the work upon the wall terminate
+at Candlemas. Winter (_ut sup._) says that they brought over the powder
+at Candlemas, that is, after they had been some time engaged upon the
+wall, and found the need of the assistance of Keyes.
+
+[155] _Lord's Journals_ "A^o 1604(5) 2 Jac.--Memorandum quod hodierno
+die, septimo die Februarii, A^o Regis ñri Jacobi, _viz._ Angliae (etc.)
+2^{ndo}, & Scotiae 38^o, in quem diem prorogatum fuerat hoc praesens
+parliamentum, convenere Proceres tam Spirituales quam Temporales, quorum
+nomina subscribuntur."
+
+Then follow twenty-nine names, including the Archbishop of Canterbury,
+Lords Ellesmere (_Chancellor_), Dorset (_Treasurer_), Nottingham
+(_Admiral_), Suffolk (_Chamberlain_), Northumberland, Cranborne (Cecil),
+Northampton, etc. It is noted "Lords Montagu, Petre, and Gerard [all
+three Catholics] were present, though they were none of the
+Commissioners."
+
+[156] _Narrative_ (Stonyhurst MSS.), fol. 44 b.
+
+[157] This absurd supposition is obviously implied by Faukes (November
+17th, 1605), and T. Winter (November 23rd), in the only two accounts
+furnished by any of the conspirators wherein the episode of the mine is
+mentioned. In Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_ (_Harleian Miscellany_, iii.
+123) it is expressly stated that the confederates "came to the knowledge
+of the vault" only on the occasion now detailed. Tierney says (Dodd's
+_Church History_, iv. 45, note): "At this moment an accidental noise ...
+first acquainted them with the existence of the cellar."
+
+[158] On the 3rd of October following, Thomas Winter was sent to be
+present at the ceremony of prorogation, and to watch the demeanour of
+the assembled peers.
+
+[159] _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 55. This account is based almost entirely on
+that of Faukes, November 17th, 1605.
+
+[160] In his Italian version of Father Gerard's history, Father Greenway
+interpolates the following note: "Questi non erano carboni di legno, ma
+una sorte di pietra negra, la quale come carbone abrugia et fa un fuogo
+bellissimo et ottimo" (fol. 44 b).
+
+[161]
+ "These Pioneers through Piercies chamber brought
+ Th' exhausted earth, great baskets full of clay;
+ Thereby t' have made a mighty concave vau't,
+ And of the house the ground worke tooke away:
+ But then at last an obstacle they finde,
+ Which to remove proud Piercy casts in 's mind.
+ A thick stone wall their passage then did let;
+ Whereby they cou'd not finish their intent.
+ Then forthwith Piercy did a sellar get,
+ Under that sacred house for yearly rent:
+ Feigning to fill 't with Char coal, Wood, & Beere,
+ From all suspect themselves to cloake & cleere."
+
+ JOHN VICARS, _Mischeefes Mysterie_.
+
+This remarkable poem, published 1617, is a much expanded translation of
+_Pietas Pontificia_ (in Latin hexameter verse) by Francis Herring, which
+appeared in 1606.
+
+[162] On this point we are furnished with more than the usual amount of
+variety as to details. Cecil, writing to the ambassadors (Cornwallis,
+Edmondes, etc.), says there were "two hodgsheads and some 30 small
+barrels." The King's _Discourse_ mentions 36 barrels. Barclay
+(_Conspiratio Anglicana_) says there were over 9,000 lb. of powder, in
+32 barrels, and that one of extra size had been placed under the throne,
+for treason could not without dread assail Majesty even when unarmed.
+The indictment of the conspirators named 30 barrels and 4 hogsheads. Sir
+E. Coke always said 36 barrels. Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_ makes the
+extraordinary statement, frequently reproduced, that "to the 20 Barrels
+of Powder laid in at first, they added in July 20 more, and at last made
+up the number Thirty-six." Faukes (November 5th) said that of the powder
+"some was put in hoggesheads, some in Barrels, and some in firkins."
+Faukes also says that the powder was conveyed to the place in hampers.
+John Chamberlain, writing to Dudley Carleton, November 7th, 1605, says
+it was carried in satchels. Barlow (_ut sup._) quotes the amount as
+9,000 or 10,000 lb.
+
+[163] November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[164] _The Gunpowder Plot_, by L., 1805. It seems highly probable that
+the "cellar" was used as a public passage.
+
+[165] Hugh F. Martyndale, _A Familiar Analysis of the Calendar of the
+Church of England_ (November 5th). London, Effingham Wilson.
+
+[166] _Letter to Cornwallis and Edmondes_, November 9th, 1605.
+
+[167] H. F. Martyndale, _ut sup._
+
+[168] Letter to the Ambassadors, _ut sup._
+
+[169] _An Advertisement written to a Secretarie_, etc. (1592), p. 13.
+
+[170] Sir R. Naunton, _Fragmenta Regalia (Harleian Miscellany_, ii.
+106).
+
+[171] Blount to Parsons (Stonyhurst MSS.), _Anglia_, vi. 64.
+
+[172] Such letters are found amongst the State Papers.
+
+[173] The amount, it would seem, cannot have been less than this. A
+barrel of gunpowder, containing four firkins, weighed 400 lb., and had
+the casks in the cellar all been barrels, in the strict sense of the
+word, the amount would therefore have exceeded six tons. Some of these
+casks, we are told, were small, but some were hogsheads. The twenty
+barrels first laid in are described as "whole barrels." (Faukes, January
+20th, 1605-6.)
+
+[174] An interesting illustration of this point is furnished by a
+strange piece of evidence furnished by W. Andrew, servant to Sir E.
+Digby. Sir Everard's office was to organize the rising in the Midlands,
+after the catastrophe, but he apparently forgot to supply himself with
+powder till the very eve of the appointed day. Andrew averred that on
+the night of November 4th, his master secretly asked him to procure some
+powder in the neighbouring town, whereupon he asked, "How much? A pound,
+or half a pound?" Sir Everard said 200 or 300 lb. Deponent purchased one
+pound. (Tanner MSS. lxxv. f. 205 b.)
+
+One Matthew Batty mentioned Lord Monteagle as having bought gunpowder.
+(_Ibid._ v. 40.)
+
+In the same collection is a copy of some notes by Sir E. Coke (f. 185
+b), in which the price of the powder discovered is put down as £200,
+_i.e._ some £2,000 of our money.
+
+[175] Gunpowder was measured by the _last_ = 2,400 lb. (Tomline's _Law
+Dictionary_.) In 1607 there were delivered out of the store 14 lasts and
+some cwts. In 1608 the amount in various strong places is entered as:
+"_Dover Castle_, 4 lasts; _Arcliffe Bullwark_, 1 last; _Walmer_, 1 last,
+8 cwt.; _Deal Castle_, 1 last; _Sandown Castle_, 2 lasts, etc.;
+_Sandgate_, 1 last; _Camber_, 1 last."
+
+[176] The position and character of the "cellar" admit of no doubt, as
+appears from the testimony of Smith's _Antiquities of Westminster_,
+Brayley and Britton's _Ancient Palace of Westminster_, and Capon's notes
+on the same, _Vetusta Monumenta_, v. They are, however, inconsistent
+with some circumstances alleged by the government. Thus, Sir Everard
+Digby's complicity with "the worst part" of the treason, which on
+several occasions he denied, is held to be established by a confession
+of Faukes, which cannot now be found among the State Papers, but which
+is mentioned in Sir E. Coke's speech upon Digby's arraignment, and is
+printed in Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_, p. 68. In Sir E. Coke's version
+it runs thus: "Fawkes, then present at the bar, had confessed, that some
+time before that session, the said Fawkes being with Digby at his house
+in the country, about which time there had fallen much wet, Digby taking
+Fawkes aside after supper, told him he was much afraid that the powder
+in the cellar was grown damp, and that some new must be provided, lest
+that should not take fire."
+
+Seeing, however, that the powder stood above ground, within a most
+substantial building, and could be reached by the rain only if this
+should first flood the Chamber of the Peers, it does not seem as if the
+idea of such a danger should have suggested itself.
+
+Another interesting point in connection with the "cellar" is that the
+House of Lords having subsequently been removed to the Court of
+Requests, and afterwards to the Painted Chamber, "Guy Faukes' Cellar" on
+each occasion accompanied the migration. From Leigh's _New Picture of
+London_ we find that in 1824-5, when the Court of Requests was in use,
+and the old cellar had completely disappeared, Guy's Cellar was still
+shown; while a plate given in Knight's _Old England_, and elsewhere,
+represents a vault under the Painted Chamber, not used as the House of
+Lords till after 1832. Such a cellar seems to have been considered a
+necessary appurtenance of the House.
+
+[177] Afterwards the Electress Palatine.
+
+[178] Gardiner, _Hist._ i. 245; Lingard, vii. 59; T. Winter, November
+23rd, 1605.
+
+[179] Faukes, November 17th, 1605.
+
+[180] Harry Morgan, _Examination_ (R.O.), November 12th, 1605.
+
+[181] T. Winter, November 23rd and 25th, 1605. As the information about
+Prince Henry was alleged to have been communicated by Lord Monteagle,
+the passage has been mutilated in the published version to conceal this
+circumstance.
+
+[182] Faukes, November 5th, 1605.
+
+[183] Sir E. Digby, Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_, App. 249.
+
+[184] Faukes, November 17th, 1605.
+
+[185] Digby, _ut sup._
+
+[186] _History_, i. 239.
+
+[187] There is also an allusion to the same in the confession of Keyes,
+November 30th, 1605; but this document also is of a highly suspicious
+character. Of the seven miners, none but these three were taken alive;
+Catesby, Percy, and the two Wrights being killed in the field. Strangely
+enough, though Keyes may be cited as a witness on this subject, on which
+his evidence is of such singular importance, the government, for some
+purpose of its own, tampered with the confession of Faukes wherein he is
+mentioned as one of the excavators, substituting Robert Winter's name
+for his, and placing Keyes amongst those "that wrought not in the myne."
+See Jardine's remarks on this point, _Criminal Trials_, ii. 6.
+
+[188] His detailed notes and plans are given in _Vetusta Monumenta_,
+vol. v.
+
+[189] Page 4.
+
+[190] See Appendix E, _Site of Percy's house_.
+
+[191] Tanner MSS. lxxv. § 185, b.
+
+[192] Faukes, November 6th, uses the same expression, "a low room new
+builded," which seems to imply that this receptacle had been constructed
+since Percy came into possession of the house.
+
+[193] November 6th, 1605. More will be seen of the important document
+containing this information.
+
+[194] According to Smith's plan (_sup._ p. 59) there were four entrances
+to the cellar, none of which can have been Percy's "new dore."
+
+[195] We are told that Faukes was selected to take charge of the house,
+and perform other duties which would bring him into notice, because
+being unknown in London he was not likely to excite remark. In his
+declaration, November 8th, however, he gives as his reason for going
+abroad, "lest, being a dangerous man, he should be known and suspected."
+It is obvious that in the meantime the cellar must either have been left
+in charge of others better known, and therefore more likely to excite
+suspicion, or have been left unprotected.
+
+[196] November 17th, 1605.
+
+[197] Thomas Winter, November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[198] F. 66.
+
+[199] This, as we have heard, was Mr. Whynniard, who unfortunately died
+very suddenly on the morning of November 5th, on hearing of the
+"discovery," evidence of great importance as to the hiring of the house
+and "cellar" being thus lost. "As for the keeper of the parliament
+house," says Goodman, "who let out the lodgings to Percy, it is said
+that as soon as ever he heard of the news what Percy intended, he
+instantly fell into a fright and died; so that it could not be certainly
+known who procured him the house, or by whose means."--_Court of King
+James_, i. 107.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE GOVERNMENT INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT.
+
+
+HAVING followed the history of the plotters and their doings, to the
+point when everything was ready for action, we have now to inquire what,
+in the meantime, those were about for whose destruction such notable
+preparations were making, and whether in truth they were, as we are
+assured, wrapped in a sense of false security, and altogether
+unconscious of the signs and tokens that should have awakened their
+suspicion and alarm.
+
+When, by the aid of such evidence as remains to us, we turn to examine
+the facts of the case, we discover in them, it must be confessed, no
+symptoms whatever of supineness or lethargy. It appears, on the
+contrary, that throughout the period when the government are supposed to
+have been living in a fool's paradise, and tranquilly assuming that all
+was well, they were in reality busily at work through their emissaries
+and informers, prying into all the doings of the recusant Catholics,
+receiving frequent intimation of all that was undertaken, or even
+projected, and, apparently, regulating the main features of a
+treasonable conspiracy, which can have been no other than the Powder
+Plot itself, determining, in particular, what individuals should be
+implicated therein.
+
+In April, 1604, at the very time when we hear of the Plot as being
+hatched, a letter was addressed to Sir Thomas Challoner, an official
+frequently mixed up with business of this kind, by one Henry
+Wright,[200] reporting the proceedings of a subordinate agent, by name
+Davies, whom he styles a "discoverer,"[201] then engaged in working a
+Catholic treason, with the special object of incriminating priests.
+Davies has offered to "set," or mark down,[202] over threescore of
+these, but Wright has told him that so many are not required, and that
+he will satisfy his employers if he implicate twenty, provided they be
+"most principal Jesuits and seminary priests," and therewithal has given
+him thirteen or fourteen names that will serve the required purpose.
+Davies replies, "that by God's grace he will absolutely do it ere
+long."[203]
+
+That the treason in question was none other than the Gunpowder Plot
+there can be no question, unless indeed we are to say that the
+authorities were engaged in fabricating a bogus conspiracy for which
+there was no foundation whatever in fact. It was not the way of
+statesmen of the period, when on the track of sedition, to relinquish
+the pursuit till they had sifted it to the bottom, and at this juncture,
+especially, every shred of evidence regarding Catholics and their
+conduct was threshed out to the uttermost. In consequence, we are able
+to say with certainty, that besides the enterprise of Catesby and his
+associates, there was no other conspiracy of any kind on foot. We have,
+moreover, already seen that the very same point thus by anticipation
+represented as all important, is that which after the "discovery" every
+nerve was strained to establish, namely, the complicity of the Catholic
+clergy. If we had no more than this internal evidence, it would
+abundantly suffice to assure us that the conspiracy thus sedulously
+watched was the same as that miraculously "discovered" a year and a half
+later.
+
+But we are not left to such inferences alone. In March, 1606, we find
+Wright applying to the minister for a reward on account of his services
+"in discovering villainous practices," thus indicating that by this time
+those which he had been tracking had been brought to light. More
+explicit still is a memorial presented to the king, at a later date, on
+his behalf. This is entitled--"Touching Wright and his services
+performed _in the damnable plot of the Powder treason_." King James is
+reminded that Chief Justice Popham and Sir Thomas Challoner had a hand
+in the discovery of the Powder, and this by means of information
+supplied by Wright, "for two years space almost" before his Majesty
+interpreted the famous letter to Lord Monteagle, "like an angel of God."
+This information Popham and Challoner had from time to time communicated
+to his Majesty, "whose hand Wright hath in testimony of his services in
+the matter."[204]
+
+In the same month of April, 1604, was supplied another piece of
+information, singularly interesting and important,[205] in which were
+detailed the particulars of a design amongst the Catholics at home and
+abroad. Much, in fact the bulk, of the information given, is seen, in
+the light of our present knowledge, to be purely fictitious, affording a
+good example of the "sophistications" which, as Cecil himself
+complained, his agents were wont to mingle with their intelligence. The
+design in question was represented as being of the most serious and
+secret nature, the papists thinking that it "must now be so handled and
+carried as the great cause may lose no reputation, or if any suspicion
+should grow in the state, or any come in question therefore, the main
+point might never come to light;" the said "main point" being of course
+the complicity of the Catholic clergy.
+
+What invests this document with singular importance is the fact that we
+hear of it again. In April, 1606, it was quoted for the benefit of
+Parliament by the Attorney General, Sir E. Coke, and explicitly as
+having reference to the Gunpowder Plot, forming part of the evidence
+adduced by him to secure the attainder of persons accused of being
+partakers in that treason.[206] It thus affords a proof, on the
+authority of the government itself, that eighteen months before the
+conspiracy was "discovered," intelligence regarding it had been received
+and was being attended to.
+
+[Illustration: A VIEW OF THE HOUSE OF PEERS, 1755.]
+
+This is, however, by no means the only information of which we find
+traces. Amongst the Cecil papers at Hatfield is a letter dated December
+20th, 1605, addressed to the Earl of Salisbury by one Thomas Coe, who
+claims to have previously forwarded to his Majesty "the primary
+intelligence of these late dangerous treasons," upon which communication
+the historian Lodge observes,[207] "It should seem then that the famous
+letter transmitted to James by Lord Monteagle, for the right
+construction of which that Prince's penetration hath been so highly
+extolled by some historians, was not the only previous intelligence
+communicated to him of the Gunpowder Treason."
+
+Meanwhile the officers of the government, in all parts, appear to have
+been no less alert than was their wont. On the 9th of January, 1604-5,
+for instance, Sir Thomas Parry writes from Paris,[208] inclosing a note
+from an informer at Dieppe, concerning an English Catholic returning
+from Italy and Spain with letters for Fathers Garnet and Oldcorne, and a
+cipher of three lines for a lawyer at Douay, and although the messenger
+has contrived to give him the slip, he is able to send particulars
+concerning his personal appearance, and the locality in London where he
+is likely to be found. On the 25th of the same month, Cecil replies to
+Parry[209] concerning priests and their doings, and makes the valuable
+admission that their proceedings are always known to him by means of
+false brethren, though, he adds, these informers always add to their
+intelligence "sophistications" of their own, a fact which must not be
+lost sight of in studying the reports of such folk. We hear
+particularly of informations supplied by the priests Bagshawe and Cecil,
+by Captain Turner, Charles Paget, and sundry others.
+
+At the beginning of October, 1605, we make the acquaintance of another
+notable informer. On the first of the month, William Willaston, then
+engaged on a commission in France in connection with a proposed
+commercial treaty, writes to Cecil from Paris[210] concerning a Catholic
+design attributed chiefly to priests and Jesuits, who have assurance
+that their friends in England, who are many and of good sort, intend "to
+kindle a fire in many corners of our land, and a rebellion in Ireland,"
+and that these matters be almost grown to a head, "some of their fingers
+itching to be set to work." Willaston adds, "there is a particular
+irreconcilable desperate malice against your Honour's person, which is
+principally the cause I make bold to write unto your Lordship. You have
+yet the papists in your hands, and are masters; if you let them increase
+and grow so insolent, assuredly it will come to pass as to the King of
+Israel, who having overthrown Benhadab ..." and so on.
+
+On October 14th, Willaston again writes from Rouen[211] "about some
+matters pretended by our Romish Catholics." The party, he says, "who"
+has given light into this business "is one George Southwaick, well-known
+to many of your Lordship's followers." This Southwaick, he holds to be
+"very honest;" he is going to England with sundry priests and others,
+and upon landing will at once communicate with the authorities and have
+his comrades arrested. "Southwaick himself," adds Willaston, "must be
+taken as well as the others, for he desireth not to be known to have
+given any information against the rest. If it please your Lordship to
+take order for his imprisonment apart, that conference privately may be
+had with him, until such time as shall be thought fit to deliver him, he
+can give you good directions for many matters, and may stand your honour
+in stead for such purposes."
+
+There follows a notable suggestion: "If your Lordship would be pleased
+to set some man to win the Nuncio of the Pope his secretary in Paris,
+you should receive very direct and sound instructions from him." The
+writer goes on to speak of an intended rebellion in England, and the
+kindling of a fire there, and dutifully concludes, "God grant they touch
+not the person of the King nor of his children."
+
+On the 27th of October, nine days before the "discovery," Southwaick
+himself, now in England, writes to Cecil,[212] urging that the impending
+arrest of priests and others should be deferred, and that for better
+management of "the business, and for the better and more substantial
+manifestation thereof," he ventures to suggest that "more scope of time
+would make the service of more worth." Moreover, he gives warning of
+preparations for trouble in the shires, in connection with "their plot,"
+and finally promises, "your Honour shall not only have knowledge of all
+such as are any way intercepted in the same, but also knowledge of the
+end of their whole purpose, and withal be certain of their meeting here
+in London, where I do not doubt to apprehend forty priests, with many
+great of name, at mass, in good speed of their great intent."
+
+On the morning of the 5th of November itself, evidently before receiving
+news that the final blow had been struck, Southwaick writes to Levinus
+Munck, Cecil's private secretary.[213] He excuses himself for recent
+silence on the ground that he could not without prejudice to "the
+business" have communicated with his employers. "The parties," he
+declares, "have had, ever since I saw you, such obscure meetings, such
+mutable purposes, such uncertain resolutions, as hath made me ride both
+day and night, as well in foul weather as fair, omitting no
+opportunities, lest I should not effect what I have by the weight of my
+credit and the engagement of my duty and reputation propounded to my
+honourable Lord." He farther begs that nothing may be done that might
+disclose his true character to his intended victims, and concludes by
+declaring that, if he be not much mistaken, he is about "a singular
+service."
+
+If such letters proved nothing more, they would abundantly serve to
+discredit the idea that a government which conducted its operations in
+such a fashion could be hoodwinked by such clumsy contrivances as those
+of the cellar and the mine.
+
+Five days later,[214] Southwaick again writes to Munck, inclosing a note
+of the priests who have had meetings in Paris, or have been written to
+in England. The Ambassador (in Paris) will, he says, bear witness that,
+although unable to particularize, he had given notice two months since
+that there was a plot brewing. He adds a significant hint, the like of
+which we have already seen: "Should I chance to be apprehended, I will
+rest myself upon my honourable Lord."[215]
+
+Meanwhile the English ambassadors abroad were no less active and
+vigilant than the informers at home, and while clearly aware that there
+was some danger on foot, never doubted that the king's government would
+not be caught napping.
+
+On the 9th of October, Sir Thomas Edmondes wrote to Cecil from
+Brussels[216] to warn him of suspicious symptoms in the Low Countries;
+and on the following day Cecil wrote to Edmondes[217] expressing
+apprehensions of trouble from the Jesuits abroad. On the same day,
+October 10th, Sir Thomas Parry wrote from Paris to the secretary,[218]
+of a petition which the Catholics were preparing against the meeting of
+Parliament, "and some further designs upon refusal;" and in another
+letter informed Edmondes:[219] "somewhat is at present in hand amongst
+these desperate hypocrites, which I trust God shall divert, by the
+vigilant care of his Majesty's faithful servants and friends abroad, and
+prudence of his council at home."
+
+That such confidence was not misplaced is shown by Cecil's assurance to
+Sir Thomas Parry,[220] mentioned above, that the proceedings of the
+priests were never unknown to Government.
+
+Amongst the papers at Hatfield is a curious note, anonymous and
+undated, giving information of a plot involving murder and treason,
+which, like the letter to Monteagle, simulates rather too obviously the
+workmanship of an illiterate person, and artfully insinuates that the
+design in question is undertaken in the name of religion, and chiefly
+favoured by the priests.[221]
+
+Another remarkable document is preserved in the same collection. This is
+a letter written to Sir Everard Digby, June 11th, 1605, and treating of
+an otter hunt to be undertaken when the hay shall be cut. It has,
+however, been endorsed by Salisbury, "Letter written to Sir Everard
+Digby--Powder Treason."[222] Not only is it hard to see how the terms
+of the document lend themselves to such an interpretation, but the date
+at which it was written was fully three months prior to Digby's
+initiation in the conspiracy. The idea is certainly suggested that, far
+from being passive and indolent, the authorities were sedulously seeking
+pretexts to entangle as many as possible of those "great of name,"
+concerning whom we have already heard from one of their informers. This
+much, at any rate, seems clear. Those at the centre of this complex web
+of espionage, to whom were addressed all these informations and
+admonitions, cannot have been, as they protested somewhat overmuch, in a
+state of careless inactivity, depending for security only upon the
+protection of the Almighty, "who," as the secretary afterwards piously
+declared, "blessed us in our slumber [and] will not forsake us now that
+we are awake."[223]
+
+The slumber would at least appear not to have been dreamless. On the one
+hand, the secretary was evidently much exercised by a threatened
+_rapprochement_ between his royal master and Pope Clement VIII., who,
+through a Scotch Catholic gentleman, Sir James Lindsay, had sent a
+friendly message to King James, which had elicited a courteous and
+almost cordial reply.[224] The significance of this Cecil strenuously
+endeavoured, in a letter to the Duke of Lenox,[225] to explain away, and
+in February, 1604-5, we find him assuring the Archbishop of York with an
+earnestness somewhat suspicious,[226] "I love not to procure or yield
+any toleration; a matter which I well know no creature living durst
+propound to our religious Sovereign." For himself, he thus declares: "I
+will be much less than I am, or rather nothing at all, before I shall
+become an instrument of such a miserable change." Nevertheless, on the
+17th of April following, he was fain to acknowledge, in writing to
+Parry,[227] that the news of Pope Clement's death had much eased him in
+his mind.
+
+It would, however, appear that the spectre of possible toleration still
+haunted him, and that he felt it necessary to commit the king to a
+course of severity. In a minute of September 12th, 1605, addressed to
+the same ambassador, which has been corrected and amended with an amount
+of care sufficiently testifying to the importance of the subject,[228]
+after speaking of "the plots and business of the priests," and the
+tendency of Englishmen going abroad "in this time of peace" to become
+Catholics, he thus continues: "Only this is it wherein my own heart
+receiveth comfort, that we live under a most religious and understanding
+Prince, who sticketh not to publish, as well in his own particular, as
+in the form of his government, how contrary that religion is to his
+resolution, and how far he will be from ever gracing [it]." He goes on
+to declare that nothing will so avail to make his Majesty withdraw his
+countenance from any man as such "falling away."
+
+About the same time as this was written, we are told by a writer, almost
+a contemporary,[229] that a dependent of Cecil's warned a Catholic
+gentleman, by name Buck, of a "wicked design" which his master had in
+hand against the papists.
+
+On the 17th of October, more than a week before the first hint of danger
+is said to have been breathed, we find the minister writing to Sir
+Thomas Edmondes, at Brussels,[230] in terms which certainly appear to
+couple together the growing danger of conversions to Catholicism, of
+which we have heard above, and the remedy soon to be supplied by the new
+policy which the discovery of the Plot so effectively established. He
+speaks of the "insolencies" of the priests and Jesuits, who are doing
+much injury by infecting with their poison "every youth that cometh
+amongst them;" ominously adding, "which liberty must, for one cause or
+another, be retrenched."
+
+There can be no doubt that the issue of the Gunpowder Plot was eminently
+calculated to work such an effect; and even more would seem to have
+been anticipated from it than was actually realized, for the secretary,
+we are told, promised King James that in consequence of it not a single
+Jesuit should remain in England.
+
+In the accounts supplied to us as to the manner of the "discovery," we
+obtain much interesting information from the utterances of the
+government itself. In studying these we cannot fail to notice an evident
+effort to reconcile two conflicting interests. On the one hand, that the
+king and the nation should be properly impressed with a sense of their
+marvellous deliverance, it was essential to represent the catastrophe as
+having been imminent, which could not be unless the preparations for it
+had been altogether unsuspected; and it was likewise desirable to
+magnify the divine sagacity of the monarch, which had been the
+instrument of Providence to avert a disaster otherwise inevitable. On
+the other hand, however, it should not be made to appear that those to
+whose keeping the public safety was intrusted had shown themselves
+culpably negligent or incompetent; and it had therefore to be insinuated
+that, after all, they were not without "sufficient advertisement" of
+danger, and even of danger specifically connected with the actual
+conspirators, and directed against the Parliament. But, again, lest such
+information should appear suspiciously accurate, the actual plotters had
+to be merged in a larger body of their co-religionists, and their design
+to be represented in vague and general terms. At the time, no doubt,
+this was effective enough. Now however that we know, by the light of
+subsequent investigations, who exactly were engaged, and what was in
+hand, it is possible to estimate these declarations at their true
+value.[231]
+
+Except with the aid of such an explanation as this, it seems impossible
+to understand the endless inconsistencies and contradictions of the
+official narrative. This we have in four forms, all coming to us on the
+highest authority, but addressed to different audiences, and hopelessly
+at variance upon almost every point. One is that given to the world as
+the "King's Book,"[232] containing, as Mr. Jardine tells us, the version
+which it was desired that the general public should accept. A second was
+furnished by Cecil himself to the ambassadors at Madrid and Brussels,
+and the Lord Deputy in Ireland,[233] and a third to the ambassador at
+Paris.[234] We have likewise the minute of November 7th, already
+mentioned as perhaps intended for the information of the Privy Council,
+which, although it has seemingly served as the basis of the story told
+in the "King's Book," contradicts that story in various not unimportant
+particulars.
+
+We shall afterwards have to examine in some detail the divergencies of
+these several narratives: at present we are concerned only with the
+intimation which they afford of a previous knowledge of the Plot on the
+part of the government. In the "King's Book"--which was not only to be
+disseminated broadcast at home, but to be translated and spread abroad,
+and, moreover, to be suited to the taste of its supposed author--the
+preternatural acuteness of the monarch is extolled in terms of most
+preposterous flattery, and his secretary is represented as altogether
+incredulous of danger, and unwilling to be convinced even by his royal
+master's wonderful interpretation of the mysterious warning.
+Nevertheless, not only is mention parenthetically introduced of the
+minister's "customable and watchful care of the king and State, boiling
+within him," of his laying up these things in his heart, "like the
+Blessed Virgin Mary," and being unable to rest till he had followed the
+matter farther,--but it is dexterously intimated that, for all his
+hardness of belief, he was sufficiently well informed before the warning
+came to hand, and that "this accident did put him in mind of divers
+advertisements he had received from beyond the seas, wherewith he had
+acquainted as well the king himself, as divers of his Privy Councillors,
+concerning some business the Papists were in, both at home and abroad,
+making combination amongst them for some combination against this
+Parliament time," their object being to approach the king with a
+petition for toleration, "which should be delivered in some such order,
+and so well backed, as the king should be loth to refuse their
+requests; like the sturdy beggars craving alms with one open hand, but
+carrying a stone in the other, in case of refusal."
+
+As prepared for the Privy Council, the account, though substantially the
+same, was somewhat more explicit. The secretary was fully aware, so the
+Lords were told, "that some practices might be doubted," and he "had,
+any time these three months, acquainted the King, and some of his
+Majesty's inward Counsellors, that the priests and laymen abroad and at
+home were full of the papists of this kingdom, seeking still to lay some
+_plot_ for procuring at this Parliament exercise of their religion."
+
+In his letter to the ambassadors Cecil was able to speak more plainly,
+for this document was not to meet the eye of James. Accordingly, he not
+only acknowledges that on seeing the Monteagle letter he at once divined
+the truth, and understood all about the powder, and moreover reverses
+the parts played by his Majesty and himself--making the former
+incredulous in spite of what he himself could urge in support of his
+opinion--but he goes on to give his previous information a far more
+definite complexion: "Not but that I had sufficient advertisement that
+most of these that now are fled [_i.e._ the conspirators]--being all
+notorious Recusants--with many others of that kind, had a practice in
+hand for some stir this Parliament." He, moreover, describes the
+plotters, in terms already cited, as "gentlemen spent in their fortunes
+and fit for all alterations."
+
+In view of all this it is quite impossible to believe the account given
+of themselves by those who were responsible for the public safety, and
+to suppose that they were not only so neglectful of their duty, but so
+incredibly foolish, and so unlike themselves, as to permit a gross and
+palpable peril to approach unnoticed. If, on the other hand, as appears
+to be certain, the information with which they were supplied were
+copious and minute, erring by excess far more than by defect, if,
+instead of lethargy and carelessness, we find in their conduct, at every
+stage of the proceedings, evidence of the extremest vigilance and of
+constant activity, and if they held it of prime importance to disguise
+the facts, and were willing to incur the charge of having been asleep at
+their posts, rather than let it be thought that they knew what they did,
+it can scarcely be doubted that the history of the Gunpowder Plot given
+to the world was in its essential features what they wished it to
+be.[235]
+
+A practical illustration of the methods freely employed by statesmen of
+the period will serve to throw fuller light upon this portion of our
+inquiry. In the service of the government was one Thomas Phelippes,[236]
+by trade a "decipherer," who was employed to "make English" of
+intercepted letters written in cipher. His services had been largely
+used in connection with Mary, Queen of Scots, some of whose letters he
+thus interpreted, having it in his power, as Mr. Tytler remarks, to
+garble or falsify them at pleasure.[237] Moreover, to serve the purposes
+of his masters, as he himself acknowledges,[238] he had upon occasion
+forged one side of a correspondence, in order to induce the person
+addressed to commit himself in reply.[239] At the time of the Gunpowder
+Plot, however, Phelippes had himself fallen under suspicion, on account
+of a correspondence with Hugh Owen, of whom we shall hear elsewhere.
+Accordingly, an attempt was made to hoist him with his own petard, and
+another agent, named Barnes, was employed by Cecil to write a letter, as
+coming from Phelippes (who was then in England) and carry it to Owen in
+Flanders in order to draw him out. At Dover, however, Barnes was
+arrested, being mistaken for another man for whom a watch was being
+kept. Thereupon, his papers being seized and sent to the Earl of
+Northampton, who appears not to have been in the secret of this matter,
+Cecil was obliged to arrest Phelippes at once, as though the letter were
+genuine, instead of waiting, as he had intended, in order to worm out
+more.
+
+The story of this complex and crooked business is frankly told by Cecil
+himself in a letter to Edmondes, English ambassador at Brussels, which,
+after the above abstract, will be sufficiently intelligible.[240]
+
+"As for Barnes, he is now returning again into Flanders, with many vows
+and promises to continue to do good service. As he was at Dover with my
+pass, carrying a letter from Philipps to Owen (of Barnes own
+handwriting, wherewith I was before acquainted), he was suddenly stayed
+by order from the Lord Warden, upon suspicion that he was one Acton, a
+traitor of the late conspiracy.... Whereupon, his papers and letters
+being sent to my Lord of Northampton, I thought fit not to defer any
+longer the calling of Philipps into question; which till then I had
+forborne, hoping by Barnes his means to have discovered some further
+matter than before I could do."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[200] He appears to have been no relation of John and Christopher
+Wright, the conspirators.
+
+[201] Davies was employed in other affairs of a similar nature. See
+_Dom. James I._, xix. 83, I (P.R.O.).
+
+[202] Cf. a "setter dog."
+
+[203] See the full text of Wright's letter, Appendix G.
+
+[204] See the text of the memorial, Appendix G.
+
+[205] Copy in the P.R.O. _Dom. James I._ vii. 86, and xx. 52. The
+informer's name is given in the latter, viz., Ralph Ratcliffe.
+
+[206] It was likewise cited in the interrogatories prepared for the
+Jesuit Thomas Strange (Brit. Mus. _MSS. Add._ 6178, 74) in November,
+1605, and in this case also as treating of the Gunpowder Plot and no
+other.
+
+[207] _Illustrations_, iii. 301.
+
+[208] P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.
+
+[209] _Ibid._
+
+[210] P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132.
+
+[211] _Ibid._ f. 273 b.
+
+[212] Hatfield MSS. 112, n. 141.
+
+[213] P.R.O. _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 16.
+
+[214] November 10th, 1605, _Dom. James I._ xvi. 44.
+
+[215] At a later period (July 20th, 1606) we find that Southwaick ("or
+Southwell") had lost favour and was warned by Salisbury to leave the
+country. "I hold him," says the Earl, "to be a very impostor." (_To
+Edmondes_, Phillipps MS. f. 165.)
+
+[216] Stowe MSS., 168, 39.
+
+[217] _Ibid._ 40.
+
+[218] _Ibid._ 42.
+
+[219] Birch, _Historical View_, p. 234.
+
+[220] P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132, January 25th, 1604-5.
+
+[221] "Who so evar finds this box of letars let him carry hit to the
+Kings magesty: my mastar litel thinks I knows of this, but yn ridinge
+wth him that browt the letar to my mastar to a Katholyk gentlemans hows
+anward of his way ynto lin konsher [Lincolnshire], he told me al his
+purpos, and what he ment to do; and he beinge a prest absolved me and
+mad me swar nevar to revel hit to ane man. I confes myself a Katholyk,
+and do hate the protystans relygon with my hart, and yit I detest to
+consent ethar to murdar or treson. I have blotyd out sartyn nams in the
+letars becas I wold not have ethar my mastar or ane of his frends trobyl
+aboute this; for by his menes I was mad a goud Katholyk, and I wod to
+God the King war a good Katholyk: that is all the harm I wish him; and
+let him tak hed what petysons or suplycasons he take of ane man; and I
+hop this box will be found by som that will giv hit to the King, hit may
+do him good one day. I men not to com to my mastar any moe, but wil
+return unto my contry from whens I cam. As for my nam and contry I
+consel that; and God make the King a goud Katholyk; and let Ser Robart
+Sesil and my lord Cohef Gustyse lok to them selvse." (Printed in
+Appendix to _Third Report of Historical MSS. Commission_, p. 148.)
+
+[222] It is signed "G.D.," and was possibly written by a relation of Sir
+Everard's.
+
+[223] To Sir H. Bruncard, March 3rd, 1605-6. P.R.O. _Ireland_, vol.
+218.
+
+[224] "Instructions to my trusty servant Sir James Lindsay, for answer
+to the lettre and Commission brought by him from the Pope unto me."
+A^o 1604. (P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.)
+
+In these notes the king explains that the things of greatest import
+cannot be written, but have been imparted "by tongue" to the envoy, to
+be delivered to his holiness. Moreover he thus charges Lindsay: "You
+shall assure him that I shall never be forgetful of the continual proof
+I have had of his courtesy and long inclination towards me, and
+especially by this his so courteous and unexpected message, which I
+shall be careful to requite thankfully by all civil courtesies that
+shall be in my power, the particulars whereof I remit likewise to your
+declaration." Besides this, he protests that he will ever inviolably
+observe two points: first, never to dissemble what he thinks, especially
+in matters of conscience; secondly, never to reject reason when he hears
+it urged on the other side.
+
+[225] P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.
+
+[226] Lodge, _Illustrations_, iii. 262.
+
+[227] P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.
+
+[228] _Ibid._
+
+[229] _The Politician's Catechism_, 1658.
+
+[230] Birch, _Historical View_, p. 234.
+
+[231] "If the Priestes and Catholickes, so many thousands in England
+would have entertayned it, no man can be so malicious and simple to
+thinke but there would have been a greater assembly than fourscore [in
+the Midlands] to take such an action in hand, and the Council could not
+be so winking eyed, but they would have found forth some one or other
+culpable, which they could never do, though some of them, most powerable
+in it, tendered and racked forth their hatred against us to the
+uttermost limites they could extend." _English Protestants' plea_, p.
+60.
+
+[232] _Discourse of the manner of the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot._
+Printed in the Collected Works of King James, by Bishop Mountague, by
+Bishop Barlow, in _Gunpowder Treason_, and in Cobbett's _State Trials_,
+as an appendix to that of the conspirators.
+
+[233] _I.e._, Cornwallis, Edmondes, and Chichester. The despatch to
+Cornwallis is printed in Winwood's _Memorials_, ii. 170.
+
+[234] Sir Thoms Parry, P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132.
+
+[235] Mr. Hepworth Dixon observes (_Her Majesty's Tower_, i. 352,
+seventh edition) that a man must have been in no common measure ignorant
+of Cecil and Northampton who could dream that such a design could escape
+the greatest masters of intrigue alive, and that abundant evidence makes
+it clear that the Council were informed of the Plot in almost every
+stage, and that their agents dogged the footsteps of those whom they
+suspected, taking note of all their proceedings. "It was no part of
+Cecil's policy," adds Mr. Dixon, "to step in before the dramatic time."
+
+[236] Often called Phelipps, or Philipps.
+
+[237] _History of Scotland_, iii. 376, note (ed. Eadie). It was on one
+of these letters which had been in the hands of Phelippes that Mary was
+convicted.
+
+[238] _Dom. James I._ xx. 51. April, 1606.
+
+[239] In the fragment cited above, Phelippes says that Queen Elizabeth
+and the Earl of Essex largely availed themselves of this device of his,
+and that "My Lord of Salisbury had himself made some use of it in the
+Queen's time."
+
+[240] February 12th, 1605-6. (Stowe MSS. 168.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE "DISCOVERY."
+
+
+WHEN the conspirators first undertook their enterprise, Parliament was
+appointed to meet on February 7th, 1604-5, but, as has been seen, it was
+subsequently prorogued till October 3rd, and then again till Tuesday,
+November 5th. On occasion of the October prorogation, the confederates
+employed Thomas Winter to attend the ceremony in order to learn from the
+demeanour of the assembled Peers whether any suspicion of their design
+had suggested this unexpected adjournment. He returned to report that no
+symptom could be discerned of alarm or uneasiness, and that the presence
+of the volcano underfoot was evidently unsuspected. Thus reassured, his
+associates awaited with confidence the advent of the fatal Fifth.
+
+In the interval occurred the event which forms the official link
+connecting the secret and the public history of the Plot, namely, the
+receipt of the letter of warning by Lord Monteagle. That the document is
+of supreme importance in our history cannot be denied, for the
+government account clearly stands or falls with the assertion that this
+was in reality the means whereby the impending catastrophe was averted.
+That it was so, the official story proclaimed from the first with a
+vehemence in itself suspicious, and the famous letter was exhibited to
+the world with a persistence and solicitude not easy to explain; being
+printed in the "King's Book," and in every other account of the affair;
+while transcribed copies were sent to the ambassadors at foreign courts
+and other public personages.[241] Had a warning really been given, in
+such a case, to save the life of a kinsman or friend, the circumstance,
+however fortunate, would scarcely have been wonderful, nor can we think
+that the document would thus have been multiplied for inspection. If, on
+the other hand, it had been carefully contrived for its purpose, it
+would not be unnatural for those who knew where the weak point lay, to
+wish the world to be convinced that there really had been a letter. It
+is, moreover, not easy to understand the importance attributed to
+Monteagle's service in connection with it. To have handed to the
+authorities such a message, evidently of an alarming nature, though he
+himself did not professedly understand it, does not appear to have
+entitled him to the extraordinary consideration which he in fact
+received. The Attorney General was specially instructed, at the trial,
+to extol his lordship's conduct.[242] Wherever, in the confession of the
+conspirators, his name was mentioned, it was erased, or pasted over with
+paper, or the whole passage was omitted before publication of the
+document. All this is easy to understand if he were the instrument
+employed for a critical and delicate transaction, depending for success
+upon his discretion and reticence. On any other supposition it seems
+inexplicable.
+
+[Illustration: MONTEAGLE AND LETTER.
+
+ The gallant _Eagle_, soaring vp on high:
+ Beares in his beake, _Treasons_ discouery.
+ MOVNT, noble EAGLE, with thy happy prey,
+ And thy rich _Prize_ to th' _King_ with speed conuay.]
+
+Moreover, Monteagle's services received most substantial acknowledgment
+in the form of a grant of £700 a year,[243] equivalent, at least, to
+ten times that amount in money of the present day.[244] There still
+exists[245] the draft preamble of the grant making this award, which has
+been altered and emended with an amount of care which sufficiently
+testifies to the importance of the matter. In this it is said of the
+letter that by the knowledge thereof "we had the first _and only_ means
+to discover that most wicked and barbarous plot"--the words italicised
+being added as an interlineation by Cecil himself. Nevertheless, it
+appears certain that this is not, and cannot be, the truth; indeed,
+historians of all shades equally discountenance the idea. Mr.
+Jardine[246] considers it "hardly credible that the letter was really
+the means by which the plot was discovered," and inclines to the
+belief[247] that the whole story concerning it "was merely a device of
+the government ... to conceal the means by which their information had
+been derived." Similarly Mr. J.S. Brewer[248] holds it as certain that
+this part, at least, of the story is a fiction designed to conceal the
+truth. Mr. Gardiner, who is less inclined than others to give up the
+received story, thinks that, to say the least of it, it is highly
+probable that Monteagle expected the letter before it came.[249]
+
+For a right understanding of the point it is necessary to consider the
+character of the man who plays so important a part in this episode. Lord
+Monteagle, the eldest son of Lord Morley, ennobled under a title derived
+through his mother, was, in Mr. Jardine's opinion,[250] "a person
+precisely adapted for an instrument on such an occasion;" and the
+description appears even more applicable than was intended. He had been
+implicated in all the doings of the turbulent section of the English
+Catholics[251] for several years, having taken part in the rising of
+Essex, and in the Spanish negotiations, whatever they were, conducted
+through the instrumentality of Thomas Winter. With Catesby, and others
+of the conspirators, he was on terms of the closest and most intimate
+friendship, and Tresham was his brother-in-law. A letter of his to
+Catesby is still preserved, which, in the opinion of some, affords
+evidence of his having been actually engaged in the Powder Plot
+itself;[252] and Mr. Jardine, though dissenting from the view that the
+letter proves so much, judges it not at all impossible or improbable
+that he was in fact privy to the conspiracy. It is likewise certain that
+up to the last moment Monteagle was on familiar terms with the plotters,
+to whom, a few days before the final catastrophe, he imparted an
+important piece of information.[253]
+
+At the same time it is evident that Monteagle was in high favour at
+Court, as is sufficiently evidenced by the fact that he was appointed to
+be one of the commissioners for the prorogation of October 3rd, a most
+unusual distinction for one in his position, as also by the pains taken
+by the government on behalf of his brother, who had shortly before got
+himself into trouble in France.[254] A still more remarkable
+circumstance has been strangely overlooked by historians.[255] Monteagle
+always passed for a Catholic, turbulent indeed and prone to violence,
+but attached, even fanatically, to his creed, like his friend Catesby
+and the rest. There remains, however, an undated letter of his to the
+king,[256] in which he expresses his determination to become a
+Protestant; and while in fulsome language extolling his Majesty's zeal
+for his spiritual welfare, speaks with bitterness and contempt of the
+faith which, nevertheless, he continued to profess to the end of his
+life, and that without exciting suspicion of his deceit among the
+Catholics. Not only must this shake our confidence in the genuine
+nature of any transaction in which such a man played a prominent part,
+it must likewise suggest a doubt whether others may not in like manner
+have passed themselves off for what they were not, without arousing
+suspicion.
+
+The precise facts as to the actual receipt of the famous letter are
+involved, like every other particular of this history, in the obscurity
+begotten of contradictory evidence. In the published account,[257] it is
+stated with great precision that it was received by Monteagle on
+Saturday, October 26th, being but ten days before the Parliament. In his
+letter to the ambassadors abroad,[258] Cecil dates its receipt "about
+eight days before the Parliament should have begun." In the account
+furnished for the benefit of the King of France,[259] the same authority
+declares that it came to hand "some four or five days before." A doubt
+is thus unquestionably suggested as to whether the circumstances of its
+coming to Monteagle's hands are those traditionally described: for our
+present purpose, however, it will perhaps be sufficient to follow the
+story as formally told by authority in the king's own book.
+
+On Saturday, October 26th, ten days before the assembly of Parliament,
+Monteagle suddenly, and without previous notice, ordered a supper to be
+prepared at his house at Hoxton "where he had not supped or lain of a
+twelvemonth and more before that time."[260] While he was at table one
+of his pages brought him a letter which had been given to him by a man
+in the street, whose features he could not distinguish, with injunctions
+to place it in his master's own hands. It is undoubtedly a singular
+circumstance, which did not escape notice at the time, that the bearer
+of this missive should have thus been able to find Monteagle at a spot
+which he was not accustomed to frequent, and the obvious inference was
+drawn, that the arrival of the letter was expected. On this point,
+indeed, there is somewhat more than inference to go upon, for in
+Fulman's MS. collection at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, among some
+interesting notes concerning the Plot, of which we shall see more,
+occurs the statement that "the Lord Monteagle knew there was a letter to
+be sent to him before it came."[261]
+
+Monteagle opened the letter, and, glancing at it, perceived that it bore
+neither date nor signature, whereupon he handed it to a gentleman of his
+household, named Ward, to read aloud, an apparently unnatural and
+imprudent proceeding not easy to explain, but, at least, inconsistent
+with the conduct of one receiving an obviously important communication
+in such mysterious circumstances. The famous epistle must be given in
+its native form.
+
+ _My lord out of the love i beare to some of youere frends i have a
+ caer of youer preseruacion therfor i would advyse yowe as yowe
+ tender youer lyf to devys some excuse to shift of youer attendance
+ at this parleament for god and man hath concurred to punishe the
+ wickednes of this tyme and think not slightlye of this advertisment
+ but retyre youre self into youre contri wheare yowe may expect the
+ event in safti for thowghe theare be no apparence of anni stir yet i
+ saye they shall receyve a terrible blowe this parleament and yet
+ they shall not seie who hurts them this cowncel is not to be
+ contemned because it maye do yowe good and can do yowe no harme for
+ the dangere is passed as soon as yowe have burnt the letter and i
+ hope god will give yowe the grace to mak good use of it to whose
+ holy proteccion i comend yowe_
+
+ (Addressed) _to the ryht honorable the lord mo[=u]teagle_
+
+Monteagle, though he saw little or nothing in this strange effusion,
+resolved at once to communicate with the king's ministers, his Majesty
+being at the time engaged at Royston in his favourite pastime of the
+chase, and accordingly proceeding at once to town, he placed the
+mysterious document in the hands of the Earl of Salisbury.[262]
+
+As to what thereafter followed and the manner in which from this clue
+the discovery was actually accomplished, it is impossible to say more
+than this, that the accounts handed down cannot by any possibility be
+true, inasmuch as on every single point they are utterly and hopelessly
+at variance. We can do no more than set down the particulars as supplied
+to us on the very highest authority.
+
+
+A.--_The account published in the "King's Book."_
+
+1. The letter was received ten days before the meeting of Parliament,
+_i.e._, on October 26th.
+
+2. The Earl of Salisbury judged it to be the effusion of a lunatic, but
+thought it well, nevertheless, to communicate it to the king.
+
+3. This was done five days afterwards, November 1st, when, in spite of
+his minister's incredulity, James insisted that the letter could intend
+nothing but the blowing up of the Parliament with gunpowder, and that a
+search must be made, which, however, should be postponed till the last
+moment.
+
+4. Accordingly, on the afternoon of Monday, November 4th, the Lord
+Chamberlain going on a tour of inspection, visited the "cellar" and
+found there "great store of billets, faggots, and coals," and moreover,
+"casting his eye aside, perceived a fellow standing in a corner ...
+Guido Fawkes the owner of that hand which should have acted that
+monstrous tragedy." Coming back, the chamberlain reported that the
+provision of fuel appeared extraordinary, and that as to the man, "he
+looked like a very tall and desperate fellow."
+
+5. Thereupon the king insisted that a thorough scrutiny must be made,
+and that "those billets and coals should be searched to the bottom, it
+being most suspicious that they were laid there only for covering of the
+powder." For this purpose Sir Thomas Knyvet, a magistrate, was
+despatched with a suitable retinue.
+
+6. Before his entrance to the house, Knyvet found Faukes "standing
+without the doors, his boots and clothes on," and straightway
+apprehended him. Then, going into the cellar, he removed the firewood
+and at once discovered the barrels.
+
+
+B.--_The Account sent by Salisbury to the Ambassadors abroad, and the
+Deputy in Ireland, November 9th, 1605._
+
+1. The letter was received about _eight_ days before the Parliament.
+
+2. Upon perusal thereof, Salisbury and Suffolk, the chamberlain, "both
+conceived that it could not be more proper than the time of Parliament,
+nor by any other way to be attempted than with powder, while the King
+was sitting in that Assembly." With this interpretation other Lords of
+the Council agreed; but they thought it well not to impart the matter to
+the king till three or four days before the session.
+
+3. His Majesty was "hard of belief" that any such thing was intended,
+but his advisers overruled him and insisted on a search, not however
+till the last moment.
+
+[Illustration: ARREST OF GUY FAUKES.]
+
+4. About 3 o'clock on the afternoon of Monday, November 4th, the Lord
+Chamberlain, Suffolk, visited the cellar, and found in it only firewood
+and not Faukes.
+
+5. The lords however insisting, in spite of the king, that the matter
+should be probed to the bottom, Knyvet was despatched with orders to
+"_remove all the wood, and so to see the plain ground underneath_."
+
+6. Knyvet, about midnight, "going unlooked for into the vault, found
+that fellow Johnson [_i.e._, Faukes] _newly come out of the vault_," and
+seized him. Then, having removed the wood, he perceived the barrels.
+
+
+C.--_The Account furnished by Salisbury for the information of the King
+of France, November 6th, 1605. (Original draft, in the P.R.O.)_
+
+1. The letter was received _some four or five days_ before the
+Parliament.
+
+2. This being shown to the king and the lords, "their lordships found
+not good ... to give much credit to it, nor yet so to contemn it as to
+do nothing at all."
+
+3. It was accordingly determined, the night before, "to make search
+about that place and to appoint a watch in the old Palace, to observe
+what persons might resort thereabouts."
+
+4. Sir T. Knyvet, being appointed to the charge thereof, _going by
+chance, about midnight, into the vault, by another door, found Faukes
+within_. Thereupon he caused some few faggots to be removed, and so
+discovered some of the barrels, "_merely, as it were, by God's
+direction, having no other cause but a general jealousy_."[263]
+
+Never, assuredly, was a true story so hard to tell. Contradictions like
+these, upon every single point of the narrative, are just such as are
+wont to betray the author of a fiction when compelled to be
+circumstantial.
+
+To say nothing of the curious discrepancies as to the date of the
+warning, it is clearly impossible to determine the locality of Guy's
+arrest. The account officially published in the "King's Book" says that
+this took place in the street. The letter to the ambassadors assigns it
+to the cellar and afterwards to the street; that to Parry, to the cellar
+only. Faukes himself, in his confession of November 5th, says that he
+was apprehended neither in the street nor in the cellar, but in his own
+room in the adjoining house. Chamberlain writes to Carleton, November
+7th, that it was in the cellar. Howes, in his continuation of Stowe's
+_Annals_, describes two arrests of Faukes, one in the street, the other
+upstairs in his own chamber. This point, though seemingly somewhat
+trivial, has been invested with much importance. According to the
+time-honoured story, the baffled desperado roundly declared that had he
+been within reach of the powder when his captors appeared, he would
+have applied a match and involved them in his own destruction. This
+circumstance is strongly insisted on not only in the "King's Book," but
+also in his Majesty's speech to Parliament on November 9th, which
+declared, "and in that also was there a wonderful providence of God,
+that when the party himself was taken he was but new come out of his
+house from working, having his fire-work for kindling ready in his
+pocket, wherewith, as he confesseth, if he been taken immediately
+before, he was resolved to have blown up himself with his takers." We
+learn, however, from Cecil's earliest version of the history, that
+Faukes was apprehended in the very situation most suitable for such a
+purpose, "in the place itself, as he was busy to prepare his things for
+execution," while Chamberlain adds that he was actually engaged in
+"making his trains."
+
+Far more serious, to say nothing of the episode of the chamberlain's
+visit, are the divergencies of the several versions as to the very
+substance of the story. We are told that King James was the first to
+understand and interpret the letter which had baffled the sagacity of
+his Privy Council; that the Lords of the Council had fully interpreted
+it several days before the king saw it; that the said lords would not
+credit the king's interpretation; that the king would not believe their
+interpretation; and that neither the one nor the other ever interpreted
+it at all; that his Majesty insisted on a search being made in spite of
+the reluctance of his ministers; that they insisted on the search in
+spite of the reluctance of their royal master; and that no such search
+was ever proposed by either; that Knyvet was despatched expressly to
+look for gunpowder, with instructions to rummage the firewood to the
+bottom, leaving no cover in which a barrel might lie hid; and that
+having no instructions to do anything of the kind, nor any reason to
+suspect the existence of any barrels, he discovered them only by a piece
+of luck, so purely fortuitous as to be clearly providential. On this
+last point especially the contradictions are absolutely irreconcilable.
+
+It is abundantly evident that those who with elaborate care produced
+these various versions were not supremely solicitous about the truth of
+the matter, and varied the tale according to the requirements of
+circumstances. As Mr. Jardine acknowledges,[264] the great object of the
+official accounts was to obtain credence for what the government wished
+to be believed, or, as Father Gerard puts it,[265] these accounts were
+composed "with desire that men should all conceive this to be the manner
+how the treason came to light." If from time to time the details were
+altogether transformed, it was clearly not through any abstract love of
+historical accuracy, but rather that there were difficulties to meet and
+doubts to satisfy, which had to be dealt with in order to produce the
+desired effect.
+
+That, from the beginning, there was whispered disbelief, which it was
+held all-important to silence, is sufficiently attested by Cecil
+himself, when, on the very morrow of the discovery, he sent to Parry his
+first draft of the history. "Thus much," he wrote, "I have thought
+necessary to impart unto you in haste, to the end that you may deliver
+as much to the French king, for prevention of false bruits, which I
+know, as the nature of fame is, will be _increased_,[266] perverted, and
+disguised according to the disposition of men."
+
+It does not appear why the appearance of erroneous versions of so
+striking an event should have been thus confidently anticipated if the
+facts were undeniably established; while, on the other hand, it is not a
+little remarkable that the narrative thus expressly designed to
+establish the truth, should have been forthwith abandoned and
+contradicted by its author in every single particular.
+
+Important information upon the same point is furnished by Cecil in
+another letter, written in the following January.[267] He undertakes to
+explain to his correspondent how it came to pass that a circumstance of
+supreme importance, of which the government were fully cognizant,[268]
+was not mentioned in the official account. This he does as follows: "And
+although in his Majesty's book there is not any mention made of them
+[the Jesuits], and of many things else which came to the knowledge of
+the State, yet is it but a frivolous inference that thereby [they] seek
+to serve their turn, considering the purpose of his Majesty was not to
+deliver unto the world all that was confessed concerning this action,
+_but so much only of the manner and form of it, and the means of the
+discovery_, as might make it apparent, both how wickedly it was
+conceived by those devilish instruments, and _how graciously it pleased
+God to deal with us in such an extraordinary discovery thereof_."
+
+Turning to the details of the story which survive the struggle for
+existence in the conflict of testimony, if any can be said to do so,
+there is abundant matter deserving attention, albeit we may at once
+dismiss the time-honoured legend concerning the sagacity of the British
+Solomon, and his marvellous interpretation of the riddling phrases which
+baffled the perspicacity of all besides himself.[269]
+
+More important is Cecil's admission that the presence of the powder
+under the Parliament House was at least suspected for several days
+before anything was done to interfere with the proceedings of those who
+had put it there. The reasons alleged for so extraordinary a course are
+manifestly absurd. It was resolved, he told the ambassadors, "that, till
+the night before, nothing should be done to interrupt any purpose of
+theirs that had any such devilish practice, but rather to suffer them to
+go on to the end of their day." In like manner he informed the Privy
+Council[270] that it was determined to make no earlier search, that
+"such as had such practice in hand might not be scared before they had
+let the matter run on to a full ripeness for discovery." It certainly
+appears that, at least, it would have been well before the eleventh hour
+to institute observations as to who might be coming and going about the
+cellar. On the other hand, can it be imagined that any minister in his
+right senses would have allowed the existence of a danger so appalling
+to continue so long, and have suffered a desperado like Faukes to have
+gone on knocking about with his flint and steel and lantern in a powder
+magazine beneath the House of Parliament? Accidents are proverbially
+always possible, and in the circumstances described to us there would
+have been much more than a mere possibility, for the action said to have
+been taken by the authorities, in sending the chamberlain to "peruse"
+the vault, seems to have been expressly intended to give the alarm; and
+had the conspirators been scared it would evidently have been their
+safest plan to have precipitated the catastrophe, that in the confusion
+it would cause they might escape. How terrible such a catastrophe would
+have been is indicated by Father Greenway:[271] "Over and above the
+grievous loss involved in the destruction of these ancient and noble
+buildings, of the archives and national records, the king himself might
+have been in peril, and other royal edifices, though situate at a
+distance, and undoubtedly many would have perished who had come up to
+attend the Parliament." Moreover, the loss of life in so thickly
+populated a spot must have been frightful, and especially amongst the
+official classes.
+
+Father Greenway expresses his utter disbelief in the incident of the
+chamberlain's visit:[272] "To speak my own mind," he writes, "I do not
+see in this portion of the story any sort of probability." He adds
+another remark of great importance. If the Lord Chamberlain,--and, we
+may add, Sir T. Knyvet,--could get into the cellar without the
+assistance of Faukes, to say nothing of the "other door" which makes its
+appearance in Cecil's first version, there is an end of the secret and
+hidden nature of the place, and some one else must have had a key. How,
+then, about the months during which the powder had been lying in it;
+during much of which time it had been, apparently, left to take care of
+itself? Did no man ever enter and inspect it before?
+
+But questions far more fundamental inevitably suggest themselves. If,
+during ten, or even during five days, a minister so astute and vigilant
+was willing to risk the danger of an explosion, it certainly does not
+appear that he was much afraid of the powder, or thought there was any
+harm in it. We have already remarked on the strangeness of the
+circumstance that the plotters were able so easily to procure it. It may
+be observed that they appear themselves to have been disappointed with
+its quality, for we are told[273] that late in the summer they added to
+their store "as suspecting the former to be dank." Still more
+remarkable, however, was the conduct of the government. Immediately upon
+the "discovery" they instituted the most minute and searching inquiries
+as to every other particular connected with the conspirators. We find
+copious evidence taken about their haunts, their lodgings, and their
+associates: of the boatmen who conveyed them hither and thither, the
+porters who carried billets, and the carpenters who worked for them:
+inquiries were diligently instituted as to where were purchased the iron
+bars laid on top of the barrels, which appear to have been considered
+especially dangerous; we hear of sword-hilts engraved for some of the
+company, of three beaver hats bought by another, and of the sixpence
+given to the boy who brought them home. But concerning the gunpowder no
+question appears ever to have been asked, whence it came, or who
+furnished it. Yet this would appear to be a point at least as important
+as the rest, and if it was left in absolute obscurity, the inference is
+undoubtedly suggested that it was not wished to have questions raised.
+It may be added that no mention is discoverable of the augmentation of
+the royal stores by so notable a contribution as this would have
+furnished.
+
+Neither can it escape observation that whereas the powder was discovered
+only on the morning[274] of November 5th, the peers met as usual in
+their chamber that very day.[275] It cannot be supposed either that four
+tons of powder could have been so soon removed, or that the most
+valuable persons in the State would have been suffered to expose
+themselves to the risk of assembling in so perilous a situation.[276]
+
+However this may be, from the moment of the "discovery" the discovered
+gunpowder disappears from history.[277]
+
+[Illustration: DISCOVERY OF GUNPOWDER PLOT, AND COINS OF JAMES I.
+
+_Coins_ in King James I. Reign; _with the Discovery of the_ Gun Powder
+Plot.]
+
+There is another point which must be noticed. It might naturally be
+supposed that after so narrow an escape, and in accordance with their
+loud protestations of alarm at the proximity of a shocking calamity from
+which they had been so providentially delivered, the official
+authorities would have carefully guarded against the possibility of the
+like happening again. Their acts, however, were quite inconsistent with
+their words, for they did nothing of the kind. For more than seventy
+years afterwards the famous "cellar" continued to be leased in the same
+easy-going fashion to any who chose to hire it, and continued to be the
+receptacle of all manner of rubbish and lumber, eminently suited to
+mask another battery. Not till the days of the mendacious Titus Oates,
+and under the influence of the panic he had engendered, did the Peers
+bethink themselves that a project such as that of Guy Faukes might
+really be a danger, and command that the "cellar" should be
+searched.[278] This was done, in November, 1678, by no less personages
+than Sir Christopher Wren and Sir Jonas Moore, who reported that the
+vaults and cellars under and near the House of Lords were in such a
+condition that there could be no assurance of safety. It was accordingly
+ordered that they should be cleared of all timber, firewood, coals, and
+other materials, and that passages should be made through them all, to
+the end that they might easily be examined. At this time, and not
+before, was instituted the traditional searching of the cellars on the
+eve of Parliament.[279]
+
+What then, it will be asked, really did occur? What was done by the
+conspirators? and what by those who discovered them?
+
+Truth to tell, it is difficult, or rather impossible, to answer such
+questions. That there was a plot of some kind cannot, of course, be
+doubted; that it was of such a nature as we have been accustomed to
+believe, can be affirmed only if we are willing to ignore difficulties
+which are by no means slight. There is, doubtless, a mass of evidence in
+support of the traditional story upon these points, but while its value
+has yet to be discussed, there are other considerations, hitherto
+overlooked, which are in conflict with it.
+
+Something has been said of the amazing contradictions which a very
+slight examination of the official story reveals at every turn, and much
+more might be added under the same head.[280]
+
+[Illustration: "GUY FAUKES' LANTERN."]
+
+On the other hand it is clear that even as to the material facts there
+was not at the time that unanimity which might have been expected. We
+have seen how anxious was the Secretary of State that the French court
+should at once be rightly informed as to all particulars. We learn,
+however, from Mr. Dudley Carleton, then attached to the embassy at
+Paris,[281] that in spite of Cecil's promptitude he was anticipated by a
+version of the affair sent over from the French embassy in London,
+giving an utterly different complexion to it. According to this, the
+design had been, "That the council being set, and some lords besides in
+the chamber, a barrel of gunpowder should be fired underneath them, and
+the greater part, if not all, blown up." According to this informant,
+therefore, it was not the Parliament House but the Council Chamber which
+was to have been assailed, there is no mention of the king, and we have
+one barrel of powder instead of thirty-six. It is not easy to understand
+how in such a matter a mistake like this could have been made, for it is
+the inevitable tendency of men to begin by exaggerating, and not by
+minimizing, a sudden and startling peril.[282]
+
+Moreover, even this modest version of the affair was not suffered to
+pass unchallenged. Three days later Carleton again wrote:[283] "The fire
+which was said to have burnt our king and council, and hath been so hot
+these two days past in every man's mouth, proves but _ignis fatuus_, or
+a flash of some foolish fellow's brain to abuse the world; for it is now
+as confidently reported there was no such matter, nor anything near it
+more than a barrel of powder found near the court."
+
+It must here be observed that the scepticism thus early manifested
+appears never to have been exorcised from the minds of French writers,
+many of whom, of all shades of thought, continue, down to our day, to
+assume that the real plotters were the king's government.[284]
+
+Neither can we overlook sundry difficulties, again suggested by the
+facts of the case, which make it hard to understand how the plans of the
+plotters can in reality have been as they are represented.
+
+We have already observed on the nature of the house occupied in Percy's
+name. If this were, as Speed tells us, and as there is no reason to
+doubt, at the service of the Peers during a session, for a
+withdrawing-room, and if the session was to begin on November 5th, how
+could Faukes hope not only to remain in possession, but to carry on his
+strange proceedings unobserved, amid the crowd of lacqueys and officials
+with whom the opening of Parliament by the Sovereign must needs have
+flooded the premises? How was he, unobserved, to get into the fatal
+"cellar"?
+
+This difficulty is emphasized by another. We learn, on the unimpeachable
+testimony of Mrs. Whynniard, the landlady, that Faukes not only paid the
+last instalment of rent on Sunday, November 3rd, but on the following
+day, the day immediately preceding the intended explosion, had
+carpenters and other workfolk in the house "for mending and repairing
+thereof."[285] To say nothing of the wonderful honesty of paying rent
+under the circumstances, what was the sense of putting a house in repair
+upon Monday, which on Tuesday was to be blown to atoms? And how could
+the practised eyes of such workmen fail to detect some trace of the
+extraordinary and unskilled operations of which the house is said to
+have been the theatre? If, indeed, the truth is that on the Tuesday the
+premises were to be handed over for official use, it is easy to
+understand why it was thought necessary to set them in order, but on no
+other supposition does this appear comprehensible.
+
+Problems, not easy to solve, connect themselves, likewise, with the
+actual execution of the conspirators' plan. If it would have been hard
+for Guy Faukes to get into the "cellar," how was he ever to get out of
+it again? We are so accustomed to the idea of darkness and obscurity in
+connection with him and his business, as perhaps to forget that his
+project was to have been executed in the very middle of the day, about
+noon or shortly afterwards. The king was to come in state with retinue
+and guards, and attended by a large concourse of spectators, who, as is
+usual on such occasions, would throng every nook and corner whence could
+be obtained a glimpse of the building in which the royal speech was
+being delivered.[286] It cannot be doubted, in particular, that the open
+spaces adjacent to the House itself would be strictly guarded, and the
+populace not suffered to approach too near the sacred precincts, more
+especially when, as we have seen, so many suspicions were abroad of
+danger to his sacred Majesty, and to the Parliament.
+
+On a sudden a door immediately beneath the spot where the flower of the
+nation were assembled, would be unlocked and opened, and there would
+issue there-from a man, "looking like a very tall and desperate fellow,"
+booted and spurred and equipped for travel. He was to have but a quarter
+of an hour to save himself from the ruin he had prepared.[287] What
+possible chance was there that he would have been allowed to pass?
+
+As to his further plans, we have the most extravagant and contradictory
+accounts, some obviously fabulous.[288] According to the least
+incredible, a vessel was lying below London Bridge ready at once to
+proceed to sea and carry him to Flanders; while a boat, awaiting him at
+the Parliament stairs, was to convey him to the ship.[289] If this were
+so, it is not clear why he equipped himself with his spurs, which,
+however, are authenticated by as good evidence as any other feature of
+the story. It would also appear that, here again, the plan proposed was
+altogether impracticable, for at the time of his projected flight the
+tide would have been flowing,[290] and it is well known that to attempt
+to pass Old London Bridge against it would have been like trying to row
+up a waterfall. Neither does it seem probable that the vessel would have
+been able to get out of the Thames for several hours, before which time
+all egress would doubtless have been stopped.
+
+Such considerations must at least avail to make us pause before we can
+unhesitatingly accept the traditional history, even in those broad
+outlines which appear to be best established. The main point is,
+however, independent of their truth. Though all be as has been affirmed
+concerning the "cellar" and its contents, and the plan of operations
+agreed upon by the traitors, the question remains as to the real nature
+of the "discovery." We have seen, on the one hand, that the official
+narrative bristles with contradictions, and, whatever be the truth, with
+falsehoods. On the other hand, the said narrative was avowedly prepared
+with the object of obtaining credence for the picturesque but
+unveracious assertion that the plotters' design was detected "very
+miraculously, even some twelve hours before the matter should have been
+put in execution." On the Earl of Salisbury's own admission, it had been
+divined almost as many days previously, and it was laid open at the last
+moment only because he deliberately chose to wait till the last moment
+before doing anything. No doubt a dramatic feature was thus added to the
+business, and one eminently calculated to impress the public mind: but
+they who insist so loudly on the miraculousness of an event which they
+alone have invested with the character of a miracle, must be content to
+have it believed that they knew still more than in an unguarded moment
+they acknowledged, and arranged other things concerning the Plot than
+its ultimate disclosure.[291]
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[241] Copies were sent by Cecil to Cornwallis at Madrid, Parry at Paris,
+Edmondes at Brussels, and Chichester at Dublin. Also by Chamberlain to
+Dudley Carleton.
+
+[242] "Lastly, and this you must not omit, you must deliver, in
+commendation of my Lord Mounteagle, words to show how sincerely he
+dealt, and how fortunately it proved that he was the instrument of so
+great a blessing, ... because it is so lewdly given out that he was once
+of this plot of powder, and afterwards betrayed it all to me."--Cecil to
+Coke. (Draft in the R.O., printed by Jardine, _Criminal Trials_, ii.
+120.)
+
+[243] £500 as an annuity for life, and £200 per annum to him and his
+heirs for ever in fee farm rents.
+
+[244] See Thorold Rogers, _Agriculture and Prices_, v. 631, and Jessopp,
+_One Generation of a Norfolk House_, p. 285.
+
+[245] R.O. _Dom. James I._ xx. 56.
+
+[246] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 65.
+
+[247] _Ibid._ 68.
+
+[248] Note on Fuller's _Church History_, x. § 39, and _on The Student's
+Hume_.
+
+[249] _History_, i. 251.
+
+[250] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 69.
+
+[251] On March 13th, 1600-1, Monteagle wrote to Cecil from the Tower,
+"My conscience tells me that I am no way gilty of these Imputations, and
+that mearely the blindness of Ignorance lead me into these infamous
+errors." (Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6177).
+
+[252] The letter is printed in _Archæologia_, xxviii. 422, by Mr. Bruce,
+who argues from it Monteagle's complicity with the Plot. Mr. Jardine's
+reply is found _ibid._ xxix. 80.
+
+[253] According to T. Winter's famous declaration, Monteagle, within ten
+days before the meeting of Parliament, told Catesby and the others that
+the Prince of Wales was not going to attend the opening ceremony,
+wherefore they resolved to "leave the Duke alone," and make arrangements
+to secure the elder brother.
+
+The original of Winter's declaration, dated November 25th, which is at
+Hatfield, contains these and other particulars, which are altogether
+omitted in a "copy" of the same in the Record Office, dated, remarkably
+enough, on November the 23rd. It is from the latter that the version in
+the "King's Book" was printed.
+
+[254] De Beaumont to Villeroy, September 17th, 1605.
+
+[255] Mr. Gardiner alludes to it, _History_, i. 254 (note), but
+apparently attaches no importance to it.
+
+[256] Brit. Museum, Add. MSS. 19402 fol. 143. See the letter in full,
+Appendix H.
+
+[257] _Discourse of the Manner of the Discovery_ (the "King's Book").
+
+[258] Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 170, etc. (November 9th). In the entry
+book of the Earl of Salisbury's letters (Phillipps' MSS. 6297, f. 39)
+this is described as "being the same that was sent to all his Majestie's
+Embassadors and Ministers abroade." To Parry, however, quite a different
+account was furnished.
+
+[259] Cecil to Sir T. Parry, P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132 (November
+6th).
+
+[260] Gerard, _Narrative_, p. 101.
+
+[261] Vol. ii. 15. The partisans of the government at the time appear to
+have solved the difficulty by invoking the direct guidance of Heaven:
+
+ "For thus the Lord in's all-protecting grace,
+ Ten days before the Parliament began,
+ Ordained that one of that most trayterous race
+ Did meet the Lord Mounteagles Serving-man,
+ Who about Seven a clocke at night was sent
+ Upon some errand, and as thus he went,
+ Crossing the street a fellow to him came,
+ A man to him unknowen, of personage tall,
+ In's hand a Letter, and he gave the same
+ Unto this Serving-man, and therewithall
+ Did strictly charge him to take speciall heede
+ To give it into's Masters hand with speede."
+
+ _Mischeefes Mystery_ (1617).
+
+[262] Here again evidence was found of the direct guidance of Heaven:
+
+ "And thus with loyall heart away he goes,
+ Thereto resolved whatever should betide,
+ To th' Court he went this matter to disclose,
+ To th' Earle of Salsb'ryes chamber soone he hide,
+ Whither heavens finger doubtless him directed,
+ As the best meanes to have this fact detected."
+
+ _Mischeefes Mystery._
+
+[263] In the account forwarded to the ambassadors, there is a curious
+contradiction. In the general sketch of the discovery with which it
+opens, it is said that Faukes was captured "in the place itself," with
+his lantern, "making his preparations." Afterwards, in the detailed
+narrative of the proceedings, that he was taken outside. The fact is,
+that the first portion of this letter is taken bodily from that of
+November 6th to Parry, wherein the arrest of Faukes in the vault was a
+principal point. Between the 6th and the 9th this part of the story had
+been altered, but it does not seem to have been noticed that a remnant
+of the earlier version still existed in the introductory portion.
+
+It will be remarked that the account of November 6th makes no mention of
+the visit of the chamberlain to the vault, nor that of November 9th to
+the presence of Faukes at the time of this visit. The minute of November
+7th says that Faukes admitted the chamberlain to the vault.
+
+[264] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 3-5.
+
+[265] _Narrative_, p. 100.
+
+[266] This word is cancelled in the original draft.
+
+[267] To Sir T. Edmondes, January 22nd, 1605-6.--Stowe MSS., 168, 73, f.
+301.
+
+[268] _Viz._, the complicity of the Jesuits, "not only as being casually
+acquainted with the Plot," but as having been "principall comforters, to
+instruct the consciences of some of these wicked Traytors, in the
+lawfulnesse of the Act and meritoriousnesse of the same."
+
+On this it is enough to remark that when Father Garnet, the chief of the
+said Jesuits, came afterwards to be tried, no attempt whatever was made
+to prove any such thing. Cecil therefore wrote thus, and made so grave
+an assertion, without having any evidence in his hands to justify it.
+
+[269] That King James alone solved the enigma was put forth as an
+article of faith. In the preamble to the Act for the solemnization of
+the 5th of November, Parliament declared that the treason "would have
+turned to utter ruin of this whole kingdom, had it not pleased Almighty
+God, by inspiring the king's most excellent Majesty with a divine
+Spirit, to discover some dark phrases of a letter...." In like manner,
+the monarch himself, in his speech to the Houses, of November 9th,
+informed them: "I did upon the instant interpret and apprehend some dark
+phrases therein, contrary to the ordinary grammar construction of them,
+and in another sort, than I am sure any divine or lawyer in any
+university would have taken them."
+
+This "dark phrase" was the sentence--"For the danger is past as soon as
+you have burnt the letter," which the royal sage interpreted to mean "as
+quickly," and that by these words "should be closely understood the
+suddenty and quickness of the danger, which should be as quickly
+performed and at an end as that paper should be of blazing up in the
+fire."
+
+Of this famous interpretation Mr. Gardiner says that it is "certainly
+absurd;" while Mr. Jardine is of opinion that the words in question
+"must appear to every common understanding mere nonsense."
+
+When it was proposed in the House of Commons (January 31st, 1605-6,) to
+pass a vote of thanks to Lord Monteagle for his share in the
+"discovery," one Mr. Fuller objected that this would be to detract from
+the honour of his Majesty, for "the true discoverer was the king."
+
+The reader will perhaps be reminded of Sir Walter Scott's inimitable
+picture of the king's satisfaction in this notable achievement.
+
+"Do I not ken the smell of pouther, think ye? Who else nosed out the
+Fifth of November, save our royal selves? Cecil, and Suffolk, and all of
+them, were at fault, like sae mony mongrel tikes, when I puzzled it out;
+and trow ye that I cannot smell pouther? Why, 'sblood, man, Joannes
+Barclaius thought my ingine was in some manner inspiration, and terms
+his history of the plot, _Series patefacti divinitus parricidii_; and
+Spondanus, in like manner, saith of us, _Divinitus evasit_."--_Fortunes of
+Nigel_, c. xxvii.
+
+[270] _Relation_ ..., November 7th, 1605 (P.R.O.).
+
+[271] _Narrative_, f. 68 b.--Stonyhurst MSS.
+
+[272] F. 66. It will be remembered that this episode is not mentioned by
+Cecil in his version of November 6th. Bishop Goodman's opinion is that
+this and other points of the story were contrived for stage effect: "The
+King must have the honour to interpret that it was by gunpowder; and the
+very night before the parliament began it was to be discovered, to make
+the matter the more odious, and the deliverance the more miraculous. No
+less than the lord chamberlain must search for it and discover it, and
+Faux with his dark lantern must be apprehended." (_Court of King James_,
+p. 105.)
+
+[273] T. Winter, November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[274] There is, of course, abundant contradiction upon this point, as
+all others, but the balance of evidence appears to point to 2 a.m. or
+thereabouts.
+
+[275] The customary hour for the meeting of the Houses was 9 a.m., or
+even earlier. (_Journals of Parliament._)
+
+[276] The list of those present is given in the _Lords' Journals_; it is
+headed by the Lord Chancellor (Ellesmere), and includes the Archbishop
+of Canterbury, fourteen bishops, and thirty-one peers, of whom Lord
+Monteagle was one. In 1598, as Mr. Atkinson tells us in his preface to
+the lately published volume of the _Calendar of Irish State Papers_, the
+cellars of the Dublin Law Courts were used as a powder magazine. The
+English Privy Council, startled to hear of this remarkable arrangement,
+pointed out that it might probably further diminish the number of loyal
+subjects in that kingdom, but were quaintly reassured by the Irish Lords
+Justices, who explained that, in view of the troublous state of the
+times, the sittings of the courts had been discontinued, and were not
+likely to be resumed for the present.
+
+[277] The only allusion to it I have been able to find occurs in the
+_Politician's Catechism_ (1658), p. 95: "Yet the barells, wherein the
+powder was, are kept as reliques, and were often shown to the king and
+his posterity, that they might not entertain the least thought of
+clemency towards the Catholique Religion. There is not an ignorant
+Minister or Tub-preacher, who doth not (when all other matter fails)
+remit his auditors to the Gunpowder Treason, and describe those tubs
+very pathetically, the only reliques thought fit by them to be kept in
+memory."
+
+[278] _Journals of the House of Lords_, November 1st and 2nd, 1678.
+
+[279] _Ibid._, November 2nd, 1678.
+
+[280] I have already remarked upon Faukes' statement that he was
+arrested in quite a different place from any mentioned in the government
+accounts. It should be added, that as to the person who arrested him,
+there is a somewhat similar discrepancy of evidence. The honour is
+universally assigned by the official accounts to Sir T. Knyvet, who in
+the following year was created a peer, which shows that he undoubtedly
+rendered some valuable service on the occasion. An epitaph, however, in
+St. Anne's Church, Aldersgate (printed in Maitland's _History of
+London_, p. 1065, 3rd ed.), declares that it was Peter Heiwood, of
+Heywood, Lancashire, "who apprehended Guy Faux, with his dark Lanthorn;
+and for his zealous Prosecution of Papists, as Justice of Peace, was
+stabbed, in Westminster Hall, by John James, a Dominican Friar, A.D.
+1640." No trace of this assassination can be found, nor does the name of
+John James occur in the Dominican records. It is, however, a curious
+coincidence that the "Guy Faukes' Lantern," exhibited in the Ashmolean
+Museum at Oxford, bears the inscription: "_Laterna ilia ipsa quâ usus
+est, et cum qua deprehensus Guido Faux in cryptâ subterraneâ, ubi domo_
+[sic] _Parliamenti difflandae operam dabat. Ex dono Robti. Heywood nuper
+Academiae Procuratoris, Ap. 4^o, 1641._" See the epitaph in full,
+Appendix I.
+
+[281] To J. Chamberlain, 10th-20th November, 1605. P.R.O. _France_, b.
+132, f. 335 b.
+
+[282] The Council appears at this time to have met in the Painted
+Chamber, and, without at all wishing to lay too much stress upon this
+point, I cannot but remark that the supposition that this was the
+original scene assigned to the operations of Faukes would solve various
+difficulties:
+
+1. Beneath the Painted Chamber was a vaulted cellar, answering to the
+description we have so frequently heard, whereas under the House of
+Lords was neither a cellar nor a vault.
+
+2. This crypt beneath the Painted Chamber has been constantly shown as
+"Guy Faukes' Cellar."
+
+3. In prints of the period, Faukes is usually represented as going to
+blow up this chamber, never the House of Lords.
+
+[283] To Chamberlain, November 13th (O.S.), 1605. P.R.O.
+
+[284] Thus M. Bouillet, in the latest edition of his _Dictionnaire
+d'histoire et géographie_, speaks as follows: "Le ministre cupide et
+orgueilleux, Cécil, semble avoir été l'âme du complot, et l'avoir
+découvert lui même au moment propice, après avoir présenté à l'esprit
+faible de Jacques I. les dangers auxquels il était en but de la part des
+Catholiques."
+
+Gazeau and Prampain (_Hist. Mod._, tome i.) speak of the conspiracy as
+"cette plaisanterie;" and say of the conspirators, "Dans une cave, ils
+avaient déposé 36 barils contenant (ou soi-disant tels) de la poudre."
+
+[285] P.R.O. _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 39 (November 7).
+
+[286] In Herring's _Pietas Pontificia_ (1606) the king is described as
+coming to the House:
+
+ "Magna cum Pompa, stipatorumque Caterva,
+ Palmatisque, Togis, Gemmis, auroque refulgent:
+ Ingens fit Populi concursus, compita complens,
+ Turbis se adglomerant densis, spectantque Triumphum."
+
+[287] Faukes himself says--examination of November 16th--that the
+touchwood would have burnt a quarter of an hour.
+
+[288] See Appendix K, _Myths of the Powder Plot_.
+
+[289] In connection with this appears an interesting example of the
+natural philosophy of the time, it being said that Faukes selected this
+mode of escape, hoping that water, being a non-conductor, would save him
+from the effects of the explosion.
+
+[290] I am informed on high authority that on the day in question it was
+high water at London Bridge between five and six p.m. In his _Memorials
+of the Tower of London_ (p. 136) Lord de Ros says that the vessel
+destined to convey him to Flanders was to be in waiting for Faukes at
+the river side close by, and that in it he was to drop down the river
+with the ebb tide. It would, of course, have been impossible for any
+sea-going craft to make its way up to Westminster; nor would the ebb
+tide run to order.
+
+[291] It is frequently said that the testimony of Bishop Goodman, who
+has been so often cited, is discredited by the fact that he probably
+died a Catholic, for he was attended on his death-bed by the Dominican
+Father, Francis à S. Clara (Christopher Davenport), chaplain to Queen
+Henrietta Maria, a learned man who indulged in the dream of corporate
+reunion between England and Rome, maintaining that the Anglican articles
+were in accordance with Catholic doctrine.
+
+In his will Goodman professed that as he lived, so he died, most
+constant in all the articles of the Christian Faith, and in all the
+doctrine of God's holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, "whereof," he
+says, "I do acknowledge the Church of Rome to be the Mother Church. And
+I do verily believe that no other church hath any salvation in it, but
+only so far as it concurs with the faith of the Church of Rome." On
+this, Mr. Brewer, his editor, observes that a sound Protestant might
+profess as much, the question being what meaning is to be given to the
+terms employed. Moreover, the same writer continues, Goodman cannot have
+imagined that his life had been a constant profession of Roman doctrine,
+inasmuch as he advanced steadily from one preferment to another in the
+Church of England, and strongly maintaining her doctrines formally
+denounced those of Rome. What is certain, however, is this, that in the
+very work from which his evidence is quoted he speaks in such a manner
+as to show that whatever were his religious opinions, he was a firm
+believer in the Royal Supremacy and a lover of King James, whom he thus
+describes: "Truly I did never know any man of so great an apprehension,
+of so great love and affection,--a man so truly just, so free from all
+cruelty and pride, such a lover of the church, and one that had done so
+much good for the church." (_Court of King James_, i. 91.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+PERCY, CATESBY, AND TRESHAM.
+
+
+ON occasion of a notorious trial in the Star Chamber, in the year
+1604,[292] Bancroft, the Archbishop of Canterbury, made the significant
+observation[293] that nothing was to be discovered concerning the
+Catholics "but by putting some Judas amongst them." That amongst the
+Powder Plot conspirators there was some one who played such a part, who
+perhaps even acted as a decoy-duck to lure the others to destruction,
+has always been suspected, but with sundry differences of opinion as to
+which of the band it was. Francis Tresham has most commonly been
+supposed at least to have sent the warning letter to Monteagle, which
+proved fatal to himself and his comrades: some writers have conjectured
+that he did a good deal more.[294] Monteagle himself, as we have seen,
+has been supposed by others to have been in the Plot and to have
+betrayed it. It would appear, however, that neither of these has so
+strong a claim to this equivocal distinction as one whose name has been
+scarcely mentioned hitherto in such a connection.
+
+The part played in the conspiracy by Thomas Percy is undoubtedly very
+singular, and the more so when we learn something of the history and
+character of the man. Till within some three years previously[295] he
+had been a Protestant, and, moreover, unusually wild and dissolute.
+After his conversion, he acquired the character of a zealous, if
+turbulent, Catholic, and is so described, not only by Father Gerard and
+Father Greenway, but by himself. In a letter written so late as November
+2nd, 1605,[296] he represents that he has to leave Yorkshire, being
+threatened by the Archbishop with arrest, "as the chief pillar of
+papistry in that county."
+
+It unfortunately appears that all the time this zealous convert was a
+bigamist, having one wife living in the capital and another in the
+provinces. When his name was published in connection with the Plot, the
+magistrates of London arrested the one, and those of Warwickshire the
+other, alike reporting to the secretary what they had done, as may be
+seen in the State Paper Office.[297]
+
+Gravely suspicious as such a fact must appear in connection with one
+professing exceptional religious fervour, it by no means stands alone.
+Father Greenway, in describing the character of Percy,[298] dwells much
+on his sensitiveness to the suspicion of having played false to his
+fellow Catholics in his dealings with King James in Scotland, coupled
+with protestations of his determination to do something to show that he
+as well as they had been deceived by that monarch. We find evidence that
+as a fact some Catholics distrusted him, as in the examination of one
+Cary, who, being interrogated concerning the Powder Plot, protested that
+"Percy was no Papist but a Puritan."[299] There is likewise in the
+king's own book a strange and obscure reference to Percy as the possible
+author of the letter to Monteagle, one of the chief grounds for
+suspecting him being "his backwardness in religion." It would moreover
+appear that he was not a man who always impressed those favourably who
+had to do with him, for Chamberlain reminds his friend Carleton that the
+latter had ever considered him "a subtle, flattering, dangerous
+knave."[300]
+
+[Illustration: THOMAS PERCY.]
+
+We have seen something of the extraordinary manner in which Percy
+transacted the business of hiring the house and "cellar," wholly unlike
+what we should expect from one whose main object was to escape
+observation, and that he brought to bear the influence of sundry
+Protestant gentlemen, amongst them Dudley Carleton himself,[301] in
+order to obtain the desired lease. We know, moreover, that various
+unfortunate accidents prevented the history of these negotiations from
+ever being fully told.
+
+Yet more remarkable is a piece of information supplied by Bishop
+Goodman, his authority being the eminent lawyer Sir Francis Moore, who,
+says he, "is beyond all exception."[302] Moore, having occasion during
+the period when the Plot was in progress to be out on business late at
+night, and going homeward to the Middle Temple at two in the morning,
+"several times he met Mr. Percy coming out of the great statesman's
+house, and wondered what his business should be there." Such wonder was
+certainly not unnatural, and must be shared by us. That a man who was
+ostensibly the life and soul of a conspiracy directed against the king's
+chief minister, even more than against the sovereign himself, should
+resort for conference with his intended victim at an hour when he was
+most likely to escape observation, is assuredly not the least
+extraordinary feature in this strange and tangled tale.
+
+Not less suspicious is another circumstance. Immediately before the
+fatal Fifth of November, Percy had been away in the north, and he
+returned to London only on the evening of Saturday, the 2nd. Of this
+return, Cecil, writing a week later,[303] made a great mystery, as
+though the traitor's movements had been of a most stealthy and secret
+character, and declared that the fact had been discovered from Faukes
+only with infinite difficulty, and after many denials. It happens,
+however, that amongst the State Papers is preserved a pass dated October
+25th, issued by the Commissioners of the North, for Thomas Percy,
+posting to Court upon the king's especial service, and charging all
+mayors, sheriffs, and postmasters to provide him with three good horses
+all along the road.[304] It is manifestly absurd to speak of secrecy or
+stealth in connection with such a journey, or to pretend that the Chief
+Secretary of State could have any difficulty in tracing the movements of
+a man who travelled in this fashion; and protestations of ignorance
+serve only to show that to seem ignorant was thought desirable.
+
+Considerations like these, it will hardly be denied, countenance the
+notion that Percy was, in King James's own phrase, a tame duck employed
+to catch wild ones. Against such a supposition, however, a grave
+objection at once presents itself. Percy was amongst the very first
+victims of the enterprise, being one of the four who were killed at
+Holbeche when the conspirators were brought to bay.
+
+This, unquestionably, must at first sight appear to be fatal to the
+theory of his complicity, and the importance of such a fact should not
+be extenuated. At the same time, on further scrutiny, the argument which
+it supplies loses much of its force.
+
+It must, in the first place, be remembered, that according to the belief
+then current, it was no uncommon thing, as Lord Castlemaine expresses
+it[305] the game being secured, to hang the spaniel which caught it,
+that its master's art might not appear, and, to cite no other instance,
+we have the example of Dr. Parry, who, as Mr. Brewer acknowledges,[306]
+was involved in the ruin of those whom he had been engaged to lure to
+destruction.
+
+There are, moreover, various remarkable circumstances in regard to the
+case of Percy in particular. It was observed at the time as strange and
+suspicious that any of the rebels should have been slain at all, for
+they were almost defenceless, having no fire-arms; they did not succeed
+in killing a single one of their assailants, and might all have been
+captured without difficulty. Nevertheless, the attacking party were not
+only allowed to shoot, but selected just the wrong men as their mark,
+precisely those who, being chiefly implicated in the beginnings of the
+Plot, could have afforded the most valuable information,[307] for
+besides Percy, were shot down Catesby and the two Wrights,[308] all
+deeply implicated from the first. So unaccountable did such a course
+appear as at once to suggest sinister interpretations--especially as
+regarded the case of Percy and Catesby, who were always held to be the
+ringleaders of the band. As Goodman tells us,[309] "Some will not stick
+to report that the great statesman sending to apprehend these traitors
+gave special charge and direction for Percy and Catesby, 'Let me never
+see them alive;' who it may be would have revealed some evil counsel
+given." A similar suspicion seems to be insinuated by Sir Edward Hoby,
+writing to Edmondes, the Ambassador at Brussels[310]: "Percy is dead:
+who it is thought by some particular men could have said more than any
+other."
+
+More suspicious still appears the fact that the king's government
+thought it necessary to explain how it had come to pass that Percy was
+not secured alive, and to protest that they had been anxious above all
+for his capture, but had been frustrated by the inconsiderate zeal of
+their subordinates. In the "King's Book" we read as follows: "Although
+divers of the King's Proclamations were posted down after those Traitors
+with all speed possible, declaring the odiousness of that bloody
+attempt, and the necessity to have Percy preserved alive, if it had been
+possible, ... yet the far distance of the way (which was above an
+hundred miles), together with the extreme deepness thereof, joined also
+with the shortness of the day, was the cause that the hearty and loving
+affection of the King's good subjects in those parts prevented the speed
+of his Proclamations."
+
+Such an explanation cannot be deemed satisfactory. The distance to be
+covered was about 112 miles, and there were three days to do it, for not
+till November 8th were the fugitives surrounded. They in their flight
+had the same difficulties to contend with, as are here enumerated, yet
+they accomplished their journey in a single day, and they had not, like
+the king's couriers, fresh horses ready for them at every post.
+
+But we have positive evidence upon this point. Father Greenway, who was
+at the time in the Midlands, close to the scene of action, incidentally
+mentions, without any reference to our present question,[311] that while
+the rebels were in the field, messengers came post haste continually,
+one after the other, from the capital, all bearing proclamations
+mentioning Percy by name.
+
+It must also be observed that though the couriers, we are told, could
+not in three days get from London to Holbeche to hinder Percy's death,
+they contrived to ride in one from Holbeche to London with news that he
+was dead.[312]
+
+Another circumstance not easy to explain is, that the man who killed
+Percy and Catesby,[313] John Streete by name, received for his service
+the handsome pension of two shillings a day for life, equal at least to
+a pound of our present money.[314] This is certainly a large reward for
+having done the very thing that the government most desired to avoid,
+and for an action, moreover, involving no sort of personal risk, killing
+two practically unarmed men from behind a tree.[315] If, however, he had
+silenced a dangerous witness, it is easy to understand the munificence
+of his recompense.
+
+Against Catesby, likewise, there are serious indictments, and it seems
+impossible to believe him to have been, as commonly represented, a man,
+however blinded by fanaticism, yet honest in his bad enterprise, who
+would not stoop to fraud or untruth. It is abundantly evident that on
+many occasions he deliberately deceived his associates, and those whom
+he called his spiritual guides, making promises which he did not mean to
+keep, and giving assurances which he knew to be false.[316] It will be
+sufficient to quote one or two examples quite sufficient to stamp him as
+a man utterly unscrupulous about the means employed to gain his ends.
+
+On the 5th of November, when, after the failure of the enterprise, he
+arrived at Dunchurch, in Warwickshire, Catesby, in order to induce Sir
+Everard Digby to commit himself to the hopeless campaign now to be
+undertaken, assured him,[317] that though the powder was discovered, yet
+the king and Salisbury were killed; all were in "a pother;" the
+Catholics were sure to rise in a body, one family alone, the Littletons,
+would bring in one thousand men the next day; and so on,--all this
+being absolutely untrue. That he had previously employed similar means
+on a large scale to inveigle his friends into his atrocious and
+senseless scheme, there is much evidence, strongest of all that of
+Father Garnet;[318] "I doubt not that Mr. Catesby hath feigned many such
+things for to induce others."
+
+Worst of all, we learn from another intercepted letter of Garnet's,
+Catesby had for his own purposes circulated an atrocious slander against
+Garnet himself, although passing as his devoted disciple and friend:
+"Master Catesby," he wrote,[319] "did me much wrong, and hath confessed
+that he told them he asked me a question in Q. Elizabeth's time of the
+powder action,[320] and that I said it was lawful. All which is most
+untrue. He did it to draw in others."
+
+In view of this, and much else of a similar kind, it is difficult to
+read Father Gerard's _Narrative_, and more particularly Father
+Greenway's additions thereto, without a growing feeling that if Catesby
+sought counsel it was with no intention of being guided by it, and that
+his sole desire was to get hold of something which might serve his own
+purposes.
+
+We have already seen that a great deal of mystery attaches to Francis
+Tresham, who is generally supposed to have written the letter to
+Monteagle, and was clearly suspected by some of having done a great deal
+more; for the author of the _Politician's Catechism_ speaks of him as
+having access to Cecil's house even at midnight, along with another
+whose name is not given, these two being therefore supposed to have been
+the secretary's instruments in all this business. What is certain is,
+that Tresham did not fly like the rest when the "discovery" had taken
+place, not only remaining in London, and showing himself openly in the
+streets, but actually presenting himself to the council, and offering
+them his services. Moreover, though his name was known to the
+government, at least on November 7th, as one of the accomplices, it was
+for several days omitted from their published proclamations, and not
+till the 12th was he taken into custody. Being confined in the Tower, he
+was shortly attacked by a painful malady, and on December 23rd he died,
+as was officially announced, of a "strangury," as Salisbury assures
+Cornwallis "by a natural sickness, such as he hath been a long time
+subject to."[321] Throughout his sickness he himself and his friends
+loudly declared that should he survive it "they feared not the course of
+justice."[322] Such confidence, as Mr. Jardine remarks, could be
+grounded only on his possession of knowledge which the authorities would
+not venture to reveal, and it is not surprising that his death should
+have been attributed, by the enemies of the government, to poison. It is
+no doubt an argument against such a supposition that during his illness
+Tresham was allowed to be attended by his wife and a confidential
+servant. On the other hand, not only does Bishop Goodman inform us[323]
+that "Butler, the great physician of Cambridge," declared him to have
+been poisoned; but the author of _Mischeefes Mystery_, a violent
+government partisan, contradicts the notion of a natural death, by
+asserting that "Tresham murthered himself in the Tower."
+
+It thus appears, once again, that the more its details are scrutinized,
+the less does the traditional history of the Plot commend itself to our
+acceptance. It is hard to believe that within the ranks of the
+conspirators themselves, there was no treachery, no one who, lending
+himself to work the ruin of his associates, unwittingly wrought his own.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The evidence hitherto considered may fitly conclude with the testimony
+of a witness living near the time in question, who had evidently been at
+pains to make inquiries amongst those most likely to give information.
+This is an anonymous correspondent of Anthony à Wood, whose notes are
+preserved in Fulman's collection in the library of Corpus Christi
+College, Oxford. These remarkable notes have been seen by Fulman, who
+inserted in the margin various questions and objections, to which the
+writer always supplied precise and definite replies. In the following
+version this supplementary information is incorporated in the body of
+his statement, being distinguished by italics. The writer, who explains
+that his full materials are in the country, speaks thus:[324]
+
+"I should be glad to understand what your friend driveth at about the
+Fifth of November. It was, without all peradventure, a State Plot. I
+have collected many pregnant circumstances concerning it.
+
+"'Tis certain that the last Earl of Salisbury[325] confessed to William
+Lenthal[326] it was his father's contrivance, which Lenthal soon after
+told one Mr. Webb (_John Webb, Esq._), a person of quality, and his
+kinsman, yet alive.
+
+"Sir Henry Wotton says 'twas usual with Cecil to create plots, that he
+might have the honour of the discovery, or to such effect.
+
+"The Lord Mounteagle knew there was a letter to be sent to him before it
+came. (_Known by Edmund Church, Esq., his confidant._)
+
+"Sir Everard Digby's sons were both knighted soon after, and Sir Kenelm
+would often say it was a State design, to disengage the king of his
+promise to the Pope and the King of Spain, to indulge the Catholics if
+ever he came to be king here; and somewhat to his purpose was found in
+the Lord Wimbledon's papers after his death.[327]
+
+"Mr. Vowell, who was executed in the Rump time, did also affirm it
+so.[328]
+
+"Catesby's man (_George Bartlet_),[329] on his death-bed, confessed his
+master went to Salisbury House several nights before the discovery, and
+was always brought privately in at a back door."
+
+Then, in answer to an objection of Fulman's, is added: "Catesby, 'tis
+like, did not mean to betray his friends or his own life--he was drawn
+in and made believe strange things. All good men condemn him and the
+rest as most desperate wretches; yet most believed the original
+contrivance of the Plot was not theirs."
+
+Whatever else may be thought of the above statements, they at least
+serve to contradict Mr. Jardine's assertion,[330] that the notion of
+Cecil's complicity,--which he terms a strange suggestion, scarce worthy
+of notice,--was first heard of long after the transaction, and was
+adopted exclusively by Catholics. Clearly it was not unknown to
+Protestants who were contemporaries, or personally acquainted with
+contemporaries, of the event. Yet the document here cited was known to
+Mr. Jardine, who mentions one of its statements, that relating to Lord
+Monteagle, but says nothing of its more serious allegations.
+
+It must also be remarked that we find some traces in the evidence which
+remains of certain mysterious conspirators of great importance,
+concerning whom no investigation whatever appears to have been made,
+they being at once permitted to drop into the profoundest obscurity, in
+a manner quite contrary to the habitual practice of the authorities.
+
+One such instance is afforded by the testimony of a mariner, Henry
+Paris, of Barking,[331] that Guy Faukes, _alias_ Johnson, hired a boat
+of him, "wherein was carried over to Gravelines a man supposed of great
+import: he went disguised, and would not suffer any one man to go with
+him but this Vaux, nor to return with him. This Paris did attend for him
+back at Gravelines six weeks. If cause require there are several proofs
+of this matter." None of these, however, seem to have been sought.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[292] That of Mr. Pound.
+
+[293] Jardine, _Criminal Trials_, ii. 38, n.
+
+[294] _E.g._, the author of the _Politician's Catechism_.
+
+[295] "About the time of my Lord Essex his enterprise he became
+Catholic" (_i.e._ 1601). Father Gerard, _Narrative_, p. 58.
+
+[296] P.R.O. _Gunpowder Plot Book_, n. 4.
+
+[297] Justice Grange, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, to Salisbury, November
+5th, 1605. Justices of Warwickshire, to the same, November 12th.
+
+[298] MS., f. 31-32.
+
+[299] Tanner MSS., _ut sup._, f. 167.
+
+[300] P.R.O. _Dom. James I._, November 7th, 1605.
+
+[301] The case of Carleton is not without mystery. At the time of the
+discovery he was at Paris, as secretary to the English ambassador, but
+about the middle of the month was ordered home in hot haste and placed
+"in restraint." On February 28th, 1605-6, he wrote to his friend
+Chamberlain that he was airing himself on the Chilterns to get rid of
+the scent of powder, asking his correspondent to consult a patron as to
+his best means of promotion (_Dom. James I._ xviii. 125). Far from being
+injured by any suspicion that he might seem to have incurred, he
+subsequently rose rapidly in favour, was intrusted with most important
+diplomatic missions, and was finally created Viscount Dorchester.
+
+[302] _Court of King James_, i. 105.
+
+[303] To the ambassadors, November 9th.
+
+[304] _Dom. James I._ xv. 106.
+
+[305] _Catholique Apology_, p. 415.
+
+[306] Goodman's _Court of King James_, i. 121, note.
+
+[307] See Goodman's remarks on this subject (_Court of King James_, i.
+106). The author of the _Politician's Catechism_ writes: "It is very
+certaine that Percy and Catesby might have been taken alive, when they
+were killed, but Cecil knew full well that these two unfortunate
+Gentlemen would have related the story lesse to his owne advantage, than
+himself caused it to be published: therefore they were dispatched when
+they might have been made prisoners, having no other weapons, offensive
+or defensive, but their swords."
+
+[308] About the death of the Wrights there are extraordinary
+contradictions. In the "original" of his famous confession T. Winter
+says: "The next shot was the elder Wright, stone dead; after him the
+younger Mr. Wright." In _Mischeefes Mystery_ we read that Percy and
+Catesby were killed "with a gunne," the two Wrights "with Halberts." The
+day after the attack, November 9th, Sir Edward Leigh wrote to the
+Council, that the Wrights were not slain, as reputed, but wounded. Not
+till the 13th was their death certified by Sir Richard Walsh.
+
+[309] _Court of King James_, i. 106.
+
+[310] Nichols, _Progresses of King James I._, i. 588.
+
+[311] MS., f. 70, b.
+
+[312] Cecil writing to the ambassadors, November 9th, mentions in a
+postscript the fate of the rebels.
+
+[313] They were slain by two balls from the same musket.
+
+[314] Warrant, P.R.O.
+
+[315] Father Gerard mentions this circumstance (_Narrative_, p. 110).
+
+[316] This point is well developed in the recent _Life of a
+Conspirator_, pp. 120-126.
+
+[317] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 97.
+
+[318] _Dom. James I._, March 4th, 1605-6.
+
+[319] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 242.
+
+[320] The strange story of a powder-plot under Elizabeth is variously
+told. According to one of the mysterious confessions attributed to
+Faukes, which have disappeared from the State Papers, Owen told him in
+Flanders that one Thomas Morgan had proposed to blow up her majesty
+(Abbot, _Antilogia_, 137). The _Memorial to Protestants_ by Bishop
+Kennet (1713) says that the man's name was Moody, who wanted the French
+ambassador to subsidise him. The idea was to place a 20 lb. bag of
+powder under the queen's bed, and explode it in the middle of the night,
+but how this was to be managed is not explained.
+
+[321] Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 189.
+
+[322] Wood to Salisbury, December 23rd, 1605.
+
+[323] _Court of King James_, i. 107.
+
+[324] _Collection_, vol. ii. 15.
+
+[325] William, second earl (born 1591, died 1668), son of the minister
+of James I.
+
+[326] Speaker of the Long Parliament.
+
+[327] Edward Cecil, Viscount Wimbledon, third son of Thomas, first Earl
+of Exeter (the elder brother of Robert Cecil, first Earl of Salisbury),
+died 1638.
+
+[328] Peter Vowell, a Protestant, executed with Colonel John Gerard for
+an alleged plot against Cromwell, July 10th, 1654.
+
+[329] "George Bartlett, Mr. Catesby's servant," appears amongst the
+suspected persons whose names were sent up to Cecil by the justices of
+Warwickshire, November 12th, 1605. (_Gunpowder Plot Book_, 134.)
+
+[330] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 188.
+
+[331] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 130.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE GOVERNMENT'S CASE.
+
+
+WE have hitherto confined our attention to sources of information other
+than those with which the authors of the official narrative have
+supplied us, and upon which they based the same. It remains to inquire
+how far the evidence presented by them can avail to substantiate the
+traditional history, and to rebut the various arguments against its
+authenticity which have been adduced.
+
+For brevity and clearness' sake it will be advisable to divide this
+investigation under several heads.
+
+
+i. _The Trial of the Conspirators._
+
+On the threshold of our inquiry we are met by a most singular and
+startling fact. As to what passed on the trial of the conspirators, what
+evidence was produced against them, how it was supported,--nay, even how
+the tale of their enterprise was told--we have no information upon which
+any reliance can be placed. One version alone has come down to us of the
+proceedings upon this occasion--that published "by authority"--and of
+this we can be sure only that it is utterly untrustworthy. It was issued
+under the title of the _True and Perfect Relation_, but, as Mr. Jardine
+has already told us, is certainly not deserving of the character which
+its title imports. "It is not true, because many occurrences on the
+trial are wilfully misrepresented; and it is not _perfect_, because the
+whole evidence, and many facts and circumstances which must have
+happened, are omitted, and incidents are inserted which could not by
+possibility have taken place on the occasion. It is obviously a false
+and imperfect relation of the proceedings; a tale artfully garbled and
+misrepresented ... to serve a State purpose, and intended and calculated
+to mislead the judgment of the world upon the facts of the case."[332]
+Again the same author remarks,[333] "that every line of the published
+trial was rigidly weighed and considered, not with reference to its
+accuracy, but its effect on the minds of those who might read it, is
+manifest."
+
+Moreover, the narrative thus obviously dishonest, was admittedly issued
+in contradiction of divers others already passing "from hand to hand,"
+which were at variance with itself in points of importance, and which it
+stigmatized as "uncertain, untrue, and incoherent;" it justified its
+appearance on the ground that it was supremely important for the public
+to be rightly informed in such a case:[334] and so successful were the
+efforts made to secure for it a monopoly, that no single document has
+come down to us by which its statements might be checked. In
+consequence, to quote Mr. Jardine once more,[335] there is no trial
+since the time of Henry VIII. in regard of which we are so ignorant as
+to what actually occurred.[336]
+
+The employment of methods such as these would in any circumstances
+forfeit all credit on behalf of the story thus presented. In the present
+instance the presumption raised against it is even stronger than it
+would commonly be. If the Gunpowder Plot were in reality what was
+represented, why was it deemed necessary, in Cecil's own phrase, to
+pervert and disguise its history in order to produce the desired effect?
+A project so singular and diabolical in its atrocity, prepared for on so
+large a scale, and so nearly successful, should, it would appear, have
+needed no fictitious adjuncts to enhance its enormity; and for the
+conviction of miscreants caught red-handed in such an enterprise no
+evidence should have been so effectual as that furnished by the facts of
+the case, which of their nature should have been patent and
+unquestionable. When we find, on the contrary, a web of falsehood and
+mystery woven with elaborate care over the whole history of the
+transaction, it is not unnatural to infer that to have told the simple
+truth would not have suited the purpose of those who had the telling of
+the tale; and it is obviously necessary that the evidence whereby their
+story was supported should be rigorously sifted.
+
+What has been said, though in great measure true of the trial of Father
+Garnet, at the end of March, is especially applicable to that of the
+conspirators, two months earlier, for in regard of this we have
+absolutely no information beyond that officially supplied. The execution
+of Faukes and his companions following close upon their
+arraignment,[337] all that had been elicited, or was said to have been
+elicited, at their trial, became henceforth evidence which could not be
+contradicted, the prosecution thus having a free hand in dealing with
+their subsequent victim.[338] In view of this circumstance it has been
+noted as remarkable that whereas the conspirators had been kept alive
+and untried for nearly three months, they were thus summarily dealt with
+at the moment when it was known that the capture of Father Garnet was
+imminent, and, as a matter of fact, he was taken on the very day on
+which the first company were executed.[339] It would appear that
+nothing should have seemed more desirable than to confront the Jesuit
+superior with those whom he was declared to have instigated to their
+crime, instead of putting them out of the way at the very moment when
+there was a prospect of doing so.
+
+
+ii. _The Fundamental Evidence._
+
+Amongst all the confessions and "voluntary declarations" extracted from
+the conspirators, there are two of exceptional importance, as having
+furnished the basis of the story told by the government, and ever since
+generally accepted. These are a long declaration made by Thomas Winter,
+and another by Guy Faukes, which alone were made public, being printed
+in the "King's Book," and from which are gathered the essential
+particulars of the story as we are accustomed to hear it.
+
+Of Winter's declaration, which is in the form of a letter to the Lords
+Commissioners, there is found in the State Paper Office only a copy,
+bearing date November 23rd, 1605, in the handwriting of Levinus Munck,
+Cecil's private secretary. This copy has been shown to the King, who in
+a marginal note objects to a certain "uncleare phrase," which has
+accordingly been altered in accordance with the royal criticism: and
+from it has evidently been taken the printed version, which agrees with
+it in every respect, including the above-mentioned emendation of the
+phraseology.
+
+[Illustration: FROM WINTER'S CONFESSION, NOVEMBER 23.]
+
+It must strike the reader as remarkable that, whereas, as has been said,
+the body of the letter is in the handwriting of the secretary, Munck,
+the names of the witnesses who attest it[340] are added in that of his
+master, Cecil himself.
+
+The "original" document, in Winter's own hand, is at Hatfield, and
+agrees in general so exactly with the copy, as to demonstrate the
+identity of their origin.[341] But while, as we have seen, the "copy" is
+dated November 23rd, the "original" is dated on the 25th.[342] On a
+circumstance so singular, light is possibly thrown by a letter from
+Waad, the Lieutenant of the Tower, to Cecil, on the 21st of the same
+month.[343] "Thomas Winter," he wrote, "doth find his hand so strong, as
+after dinner he will settle himself to write that he hath verbally
+declared to your Lordship, adding what he shall remember." The inference
+is certainly suggested that torture had been used until the prisoner's
+spirit was sufficiently broken to be ready to tell the story required of
+him, and that the details were furnished by those who demanded it. It
+must, moreover, be remarked that although Winter's "original"
+declaration is witnessed only by Sir E. Coke, the Attorney General, it
+appears in print attested by all those whom Cecil had selected for the
+purpose two days before the declaration was made.[344] It may be said
+that the inference drawn above is violent and unfair, and, perhaps, were
+there no other case to go upon but that of Winter, so grave a charge as
+it implies should not be made. There remains, however, the companion
+case of Faukes, which is yet more extraordinary.
+
+His declaration first makes its appearance as "The examination of Guy
+Fawkes, taken the 8th of November."[345] The document thus described is
+manifestly a draft, and not a copy of a deposition actually taken. It is
+unsigned: the list of witnesses is in the same handwriting as the rest,
+and in no instance is a witness indicated by such a title as he would
+employ for his signature.[346] Throughout this paper Faukes is made to
+speak in the third person, and the names of accomplices to whom he
+refers are not given.
+
+What, however, is most remarkable is the frank manner in which this
+document is treated as a draft. Several passages are cancelled and
+others substituted, sometimes in quite a contrary sense, so that the
+same deponent cannot possibly have made the statements contained in both
+versions. Other paragraphs are "ticked off," as the event proves, for
+omission.
+
+Nine days later, November 17th,[347] Faukes was induced to put his name
+to the substance of the matter contained in the draft.[348] The document
+is headed "The declaration[349] of Guy Fawkes, prisoner in the Tower of
+London." Faukes speaks throughout in the first person, and supplies the
+names previously omitted.[350] Most noteworthy is the manner in which
+this version is adapted to the emendations of the draft. The passages
+ticked off have disappeared entirely, amongst them the remarkable
+statements that "they [the confederates] meant also to have sent for the
+prisoners in the Tower, of whom particularly they had some
+consultation,"--that "they had consultation for the taking of the Lady
+Mary [the infant daughter of King James] into their possession"--and
+that "provision was made by some of the conspiracy of armour of proof
+this last summer, for this action." Where an alteration has been made in
+the draft, great skill is shown in combining what is important in both
+versions.[351]
+
+As to the means which were employed to compel Faukes to sign the
+declaration there can be no doubt; his signature bearing evidence that
+he had been tortured with extreme severity. The witnesses are but two,
+Coke, the Attorney General, and Waad, the Lieutenant of the Tower. When,
+however, the document came to be printed, as in the other case, a fuller
+list was appended, but not exactly that previously indicated, for to
+Faukes were assigned the same witnesses as to Winter, including the
+Earls of Worcester and Dunbar over and above his own list.[352]
+
+[Illustration: SIGNATURES OF FAUKES AND OLDCORNE.[353]]
+
+The printed version exhibits other points of interest. There was in the
+Archduke's service, in Flanders, an English soldier, Hugh Owen,[354]
+whom the government were for some reason, excessively desirous to
+incriminate, and get into their hands. For this purpose, a passage was
+artfully interpolated in the statement of Faukes, whereof no trace is
+found in the original. In the "King's Book," the passage in question
+stands thus, the words italicised being those fraudulently introduced:
+
+"About Easter, the parliament being prorogued till October next, we
+dispersed ourselves, and I retired into the Low-countries, _by advice
+and direction of the rest; as well to acquaint Owen with the particulars
+of the plot, as also_, lest, by my longer stay, I might have grown
+suspicious." But of Owen we shall see more in particular. It must not be
+forgotten that on several other days besides those named above, Faukes
+made declarations, still extant, viz., November 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, and
+16th, and January 9th and 20th. The most important items of information
+furnished by that selected for publication were not even hinted at in
+any of these.
+
+Farther light appears to be thrown on the manner in which this important
+declaration was prepared by another document found amongst the State
+Papers. This is an "interrogatory" drawn up by Sir E. Coke on November
+8th, the very day of the "draft," expressly for the benefit of
+Faukes.[355] That the "draft" was composed from this appears to be shown
+by a curious piece of evidence. We have already noticed the strange
+phraseology of one of the passages attributed to Faukes: "He confesseth
+that the same day that this detestable act should have been performed
+the same day should other of their confederacy have surprised the person
+of the Lady Elizabeth," etc. Precisely the same repetition occurs in
+the sixth of Mr. Attorney's suggested questions. "_Item_, was it not
+agreed that the same day that the act should have been done, the same
+day or soon after the person of the Lady Elizabeth should have been
+surprised," etc.?
+
+Moreover, it is apparent that this interrogatory is not founded on
+information already obtained, but is, in fact, what is known as a
+"fishing" document, intended to elicit evidence of some kind. In the
+first place, some of its suggestions are mutually incompatible. Thus in
+another place it implies that not Elizabeth but her infant sister Mary
+was the choice of the queen-makers:--"Who should have been protector of
+the Lady Mary, who, being born in England, they meant to prefer to the
+crown. With whom should she have married?" (She was then seven months
+old.) Again it asks: "What should have become of the Prince?" as though
+he might after all be the sovereign intended.
+
+Besides this, many points are raised which are evidently purely
+imaginary, inasmuch as no more was ever heard of them though if
+substantiated, they would have been supremely important.[356]
+
+The above details will not appear superfluous if the importance of these
+documents be fully understood. It is upon these narratives, stamped with
+features so incompatible with their trustworthiness, that we entirely
+depend for much of prime importance in the history of the conspiracy, in
+particular for the notable episode of the mine, which they alone relate,
+and which is not even mentioned, either in the other numerous
+confessions of Faukes and Winter themselves, or by any of the other
+confederates. Save for an incidental remark of Keyes, that he helped to
+work in the mine, we hear nothing else of it; while not only is this
+confession quite as strange a document as the two others, but, to
+complicate the matter still more, Keyes is expressly described by
+Cecil[357] himself as one of those that "wrought not in the mine."
+
+It is hard to understand how so remarkable an operation should have been
+totally ignored in all the other confessions and declarations, numerous
+and various as they are; while, on the other hand, should this striking
+feature of the Plot prove to be a fabrication, what is there of which to
+be certain?
+
+
+iii. _The Confession of Thomas Bates (December 4th, 1605)._
+
+There is another piece of evidence to which exceptional prominence has
+been given, the confession of Thomas Bates, Catesby's servant, dated
+December 4th, 1605. This is the only one of the conspirators'
+confessions specifically mentioned in the government account of their
+trial, and it is mentioned twice over--a circumstance not unsuspicious
+in view of the nature of that account as already described.[358]
+
+It is not necessary at present to enter upon the large question of the
+attitude of the Jesuits towards the Plot, nor to discuss their guilt or
+innocence. This is, however, beyond dispute, that the government were
+above all things anxious to prove them guilty,[359] and no document ever
+produced was so effective for this purpose as the said confession, for,
+if it were true, there could be no question as to the guilt of one
+Jesuit, at least, Father Greenway _alias_ Tesimond. The substance of
+Bates' declaration was as follows:
+
+That being introduced and sworn into the conspiracy by his master,
+Catesby, he was then told that, as a pledge of fidelity, he must receive
+the sacrament upon his oath, and accordingly he went to confession to
+Greenway, the Jesuit.
+
+_That in his confession he fully informed Greenway of the design, and
+that Greenway bade him obey his master, because it was for a good cause,
+and be secret, and mention the matter to no other priest._
+
+That he was absolved by Greenway, and afterwards received Holy
+Communion.
+
+It will be observed that the second paragraph, here italicized, is of
+supreme importance. We have evidence that although the conspirators,
+during the course of their operations, frequented the sacraments, they
+expressly avoided all mention of their design to their confessors,
+Catesby having required this of them, assuring them that he had fully
+satisfied himself that the project, far from being sinful, was
+meritorious, but that the priests were likely to give trouble.[360] We
+are even told by some authors that Catesby exacted of his confederates
+an oath of secrecy in this regard. It is clear that his authority must
+have had special weight with his own servant, who was, moreover,
+devotedly attached to his master, as he proved in the crisis of his
+fate. We might, therefore, naturally be prepared to learn that Bates,
+though confessing to Greenway, never acquainted him with the Plot; and,
+that in fact he never did so, there is some interesting evidence.
+
+It cannot escape observation as a suspicious circumstance that this
+most important confession, upon which so much stress was laid, exists
+amongst the State Papers only in a copy.[361] Moreover, this copy has
+been treated as though it were an original, being officially endorsed,
+and it has on some occasion been used in Court.[362] If, however, this
+version were not genuine, but prepared for a purpose, it is clear that
+it could not have been produced while Bates was alive to contradict it,
+and there appears to be no doubt that it was not heard of till after his
+death.
+
+This appears, in the first place, from a manuscript account of the
+Plot,[363] written between the trial of the conspirators and that of
+Father Garnet, that is, within two months of the former. The author sets
+himself expressly to prove that the priests must have been cognizant of
+the design, for, he argues, Catholics, when they have anything of the
+kind in hand, always consult their confessors about it, and it cannot be
+supposed that on this occasion only did they omit to do so. In support
+of his assertion, he quotes the instances of Parry, Babington, and
+Squires, but says nothing of Bates. He mentions Greenway as undoubtedly
+one of the guilty priests, but only because "his Majesty's proclamation
+so speaks it." Had the confession of Bates, as we have it, been so
+prominently adduced at the trial, as the official narrative represents,
+it is quite impossible that such a writer should have been content with
+these feeble inferences.
+
+Still more explicit is the evidence furnished by another MS. containing
+a report of Father Garnet's trial.[364] In this the confession of Bates
+is cited, but precisely without the significant passage of which we have
+spoken, as follows: "Catesby afterwards discovered the project unto him;
+shortly after which discovery, Bates went to Mass to Tesimond
+[Greenway], and there was confessed and had absolution."
+
+Here, again, it is impossible to suppose that the all-important point
+was the one omitted. It is clear, however, that the mention of a
+confession made to Greenway would _primâ facie_ afford a presumption
+that this particular matter had been confessed, thus furnishing a
+foundation whereon to build; and, knowing as we do how evidence was
+manipulated, it is quite conceivable that the copy now extant
+incorporates the improved version thus suggested.
+
+Such an explanation was unmistakably insinuated by Father Garnet, when,
+on his trial, this evidence was urged against him; for he significantly
+replied that "Bates was a dead man."[365] Greenway himself afterwards,
+when beyond danger, denied on his salvation that Bates had ever on any
+occasion mentioned to him any word concerning the Plot. It is still more
+singular that Bates himself appears to have known nothing of his own
+declaration. He had apparently said, in some examination of which no
+record remains, that he thought Greenway "knew of the business." This
+statement he afterwards retracted as having been elicited by a vain
+hope of pardon, in a letter which is given in full by Father
+Gerard,[366] and of which Cecil himself made mention at Garnet's
+trial.[367] But of the far more serious accusation we are considering he
+said never a word.
+
+There is, however, evidence still more notable. On the same day,
+December 4th, on which Bates made his declaration, Cecil wrote a most
+important letter to one Favat,[368] who had been commissioned by King
+James to urge the necessity of obtaining evidence without delay against
+the priests. This document is valuable as furnishing explicit testimony
+that torture was employed with this object. "Most of the prisoners,"
+says the secretary, "have wilfully forsworn that the priests knew
+anything in particular, and obstinately refuse to be accusers of them,
+yea, what torture soever they be put to."
+
+He goes on, however, to assure his Majesty that the desired object is
+now in sight, particularly referring to a confession which can be none
+other than that of Bates, but likewise cannot be that afterwards given
+to the world; for it is spoken of as affording promise, but not yet
+satisfactory in its performance.
+
+"You may tell his Majesty that if he please to read privately what this
+day we have drawn from a voluntary and penitent examination, the point I
+am persuaded (but I am no undertaker) shall be so well cleared, if he
+forbear to speak much of this but few days, as we shall see all fall out
+to the end whereat his Majesty shooteth."
+
+It seems clear, therefore, that the famous declaration of Bates, like
+those of Faukes and Winter, tends to discredit the story which in
+particulars so important rests upon such evidence.
+
+It may be farther observed that if the confession of Bates, as
+officially preserved, were of any worth, it would have helped to raise
+other issues of supreme importance. Thus its concluding paragraph runs
+as follows:
+
+"He confesseth that he heard his master, Thomas Winter, and Guy Fawkes
+say (presently upon the coming over of Fawkes) that they should have the
+sum of five-and-twenty thousand pounds out of Spain."
+
+This clearly means that the King of Spain was privy to the design, for a
+sum equivalent to a quarter of a million of our money could not have
+been furnished by private persons. The government, however, constantly
+assured the English ambassadors abroad of the great satisfaction with
+which they found that no suspicion whatever rested upon any foreign
+prince.
+
+
+iv. _Robert Winter._
+
+There are various traces of foul play in regard of this conspirator in
+particular, which serve to shake our confidence as to the treatment of
+all. Robert Winter was the eldest brother of Thomas, and held the family
+property, which was considerable. Whether this motive, as Mr. Jardine
+suggests, or some other, prompted the step, certain it is that the
+government in their published history falsified the documents in order
+to incriminate him more deeply. Faukes, in the confession of Nov. 17th,
+mentioned Robert Keyes as amongst the first seven of the conspirators
+who worked in the mine, and Robert Winter as one of the five introduced
+at a later period. The names of these two were deliberately interchanged
+in the published version, Robert Winter appearing as a worker in the
+mine, and Keyes, who was an obscure man of no substance, among the
+gentlemen of property whose resources were to have supported the
+subsequent rebellion. Moreover, in the account of the same confession
+sent to Edmondes by Cecil three days before Faukes signed it (_i.e._,
+Nov. 14th), the same transposition occurs, Keyes being explicitly
+described as one of those "who wrought not in the mine," although, as we
+have seen, he is one of the three who alone make any mention of it.
+
+Still more singular is another circumstance. About November 28th, Sir
+Edward Coke, the attorney-general, drew up certain farther notes of
+questions to be put to various prisoners.[369] Amongst these we read:
+"Winter to be examined of his brother. For no man else can accuse him."
+But a fortnight or so before this time the Secretary of State had
+officially informed the ambassador in the Low Countries that Robert
+Winter was one of those deepest in the treason, and, to say nothing of
+other evidence, a proclamation for his apprehension had been issued on
+November 18th. Yet Coke's interrogatory seems to imply that nothing had
+yet been established against him, and that he was not known to the
+general body of the traitors as a fellow-conspirator.
+
+
+v. _Captain Hugh Owen, Father William Baldwin, and others._
+
+We have seen something of the extreme anxiety evinced by the English
+government to incriminate a certain Hugh Owen, a Welsh soldier of
+fortune serving in Flanders under the archduke.[370] With him were
+joined Father Baldwin, the Jesuit, and Sir William Stanley, who, like
+Owen, was in the archduke's service. The measures taken in regard of
+them are exceedingly instructive if we would understand upon what sort
+of evidence the guilt of obnoxious individuals was proclaimed as
+incontrovertible.
+
+No time was lost in commencing operations. On November 14th, three days
+before Faukes signed the celebrated declaration which we have examined,
+and in which Owen was not mentioned, the Earl of Salisbury wrote to
+Edmondes, ambassador at Brussels,[371] that Faukes had now directly
+accused Owen, whose extradition must therefore be demanded. In proof of
+this assertion he inclosed a copy of the declaration, in which, however,
+curiously enough, no mention of Owen's name occurs.[372]
+
+Edmondes on his side was equally prompt. He at once laid the matter
+before the archduke and his ministers, and on November 19th was able to
+write to Salisbury that Owen and his secretary were apprehended and
+their papers and ciphers seized, and that, "If there shall fall out
+matter to charge Owen with partaking in the treason, the archduke will
+not refuse the king to yield him to be answerable to justice,"[373]
+though venturing to hope that he would be able to clear himself of so
+terrible an accusation.
+
+On "the last of November" the subject was pursued in an epistle from the
+King himself to the "Archdukes,"[374] in which the undoubted guilt of
+both Owen and Baldwin was roundly affirmed.[375]
+
+On December 2nd, 1605, Salisbury wrote to Edmondes:[376] "I do warrant
+you to deliver upon the forfeiture of my judgment in your opinion that
+it shall appear as evident as the sun in the clearest day, that Baldwin
+by means of Owen, and Owen directly by himself, have been particular
+conspirators."
+
+In spite of this, the authorities in Flanders asked for proofs of the
+guilt of those whom they were asked to give up. Wherefore Edmondes wrote
+(December 27th) to secure the co-operation of Cornwallis, his
+fellow-ambassador, at Madrid. After declaring that Owen and Baldwin were
+now found to have been "principal dealers in the late execrable
+treason," with remarkable _naïveté_ he thus continues:[377]
+
+"I will not conceal from your lordship that they have been here so
+unrespective as to desire for their better satisfaction to have a copy
+of the information against the said persons to be sent over hither;
+which I fear will be very displeasing to his Majesty to understand."
+
+In January (1605-6), Salisbury sending, in the King's name, instructions
+to Sir E. Coke as to the trial of the conspirators, concluded with this
+admonition:[378] "You must remember to lay Owen as foul in this as you
+can," which certainly does not suggest that the case against him was
+overwhelmingly strong.
+
+After the execution of the traitors, an Act of Attainder passed by
+Parliament included Owen amongst them.[379]
+
+The archdukes remaining unconvinced, another and very notable argument
+was brought into play. On February 12th, 1605-6, Salisbury wrote to
+Edmondes:[380]
+
+"As for the particular depositions against Owen and Baldwin, which the
+archdukes desire to have a sight of, you may let them know that it is a
+matter which can make but little to the purpose, considering that his
+Majesty already upon his royal word hath certified the archdukes of
+their guilt."
+
+As to Owen's own papers which had been seized, the archduke assured the
+English ambassador,[381] "that if there had been anything to have been
+discovered out of the said papers touching the late treason (as he was
+well assured of the contrary), he would not have failed to have imparted
+the same to his Majesty."
+
+At a later date the Spanish minister De Grenada wrote from
+Valladolid[382] that men could not be delivered up on mere suspicion,
+which might prove groundless, but that the archduke had received orders
+to sift the matter to the bottom, in order that justice might be done
+"very fully."
+
+About the same time President Richardot informed Edmondes[383] that Owen
+strenuously denied the charges against him, "and that there is the more
+probability of his innocency for that his papers having been carefully
+visited, there doth not appear anything in them to charge him concerning
+the said matter."
+
+On April 21st Salisbury informed Edmondes of a conference on the subject
+between the king and the archduke's ambassador.[384] The latter declared
+that his master was ready to prosecute the accused in his own courts if
+evidence was furnished him, but in reply King James explained that this
+was impossible, and that he "was loth to send any papers or accusations
+over, not knowing how they might be framed or construed there by the
+formalities of their laws." He added that it was useless now to talk of
+evidence, "seeing the wretch is already condemned by the public sentence
+of the whole Parliament, which sentence the archdukes might see if they
+would." The ambassador thereupon asked to have a copy, but was curtly
+told that it would presently be printed, when he could buy one for
+twelve pence and send it to his masters, but that the king was not
+disposed to make a present of it.
+
+In these circumstances the archdukes determined to detain Owen no
+longer, and he was presently discharged. The news of this proceeding
+produced a remarkable change in the tone of his accusers. On June 18th,
+the secretary wrote to Edmondes[385] that Owen's enlargement "seemed to
+give too much credit to his innocency;" moreover, that "though his
+Majesty showed no great disposition (for many considerations specified
+unto you) to send over the papers and accusations against him, ... yet
+this proceeded not out of any conscience of the invalidity of the
+proofs, but rather in respect that his process being made here, and the
+caitiff condemned by the public sentence of the Parliament, it would
+have come all to one issue, seeing they have proceeded when his Majesty
+left it to themselves to do as they thought fit."
+
+To reinforce this lucid explanation Salisbury sent six days later what
+had before been refused, an abstract of "confessions against Owen," and
+a corrected copy of the Act of Attainder. These documents deserve some
+consideration.
+
+We have seen how much stress was laid upon the action of Parliament in
+regard of Owen, although the Act of Attainder which it passed affords no
+information whatever to assist our judgment of his case. In moving for
+this attainder, Sir E. Coke appeared at the bar of the House of Commons
+(April 29th, 1606) to exhibit the evidence on which the charge rested.
+His notes of this evidence, which are extant,[386] clearly show that the
+government possessed no proofs at all beyond surmise and inference.[387]
+Three testimonies were cited which were quite inconsistent and mutually
+destructive: (1) An extract from a confession of Guy Faukes, January
+20th, 1605-6, declaring that he had himself initiated Owen in the Plot
+in May, 1605. (2) An information of one Ralph Ratcliffe, to the effect
+that Owen and Baldwin were busy with the Plot in April, 1604. (3) T.
+Winter's testimony--from his famous confession of November 23rd, or
+25th, 1605--that in the spring of 1604 Owen had assisted him to secure
+the services of Faukes.
+
+In Salisbury's letter to Edmondes, the first and the last of these alone
+were cited,[388] probably because it had by this time been perceived
+that Ratcliffe's evidence flatly contradicted that of Faukes.
+
+Winter's confession has already been discussed, and moreover affords no
+proof that Owen was acquainted with the purpose for which the services
+of Faukes were required. There remains the very circumstantial story of
+Faukes himself, which belongs to a curious and interesting class of
+documents, containing matter of the highest importance, whereof no
+trace, not even a copy, is to be found amongst the State Papers. These
+comprise various confessions of Faukes, dated November 19th, 25th, and
+30th, 1605, and January 20th, 1605-6, all dealing with information of a
+sensational nature, concerning which we learn nothing from the eleven
+depositions of the same conspirator preserved in the Record Office.[389]
+For our knowledge of these mysterious documents we have to depend on
+transcripts of portions of them among the Tanner MSS. in the Bodleian
+Library, on fragmentary Latin versions in the _Antilogia_ of Bishop
+Abbot, and on the extract cited from the last amongst them by Sir Edward
+Coke, which exactly agrees with that sent by Salisbury to Edmondes, as
+above mentioned.
+
+It cannot escape notice that although these versions all profess to be
+taken from the originals under Faukes' hand, they are so utterly
+different as to preclude the belief that they have been copied from the
+same documents.[390]
+
+It must farther be observed that we hear nothing of important matters
+contained in these confessions till the supposed author and his
+confederates were all dead, whereas these are such as would certainly
+have been produced on their trial had this been possible.[391] Some of
+the evidence thus afforded is, in fact, too good, for the Government's
+purpose, to be true, for if authentic, it would have secured results
+which, though much desired, were never obtained. In particular it would
+have established beyond question the guilt of the Jesuits abroad, and
+especially of Father Baldwin.[392] It is this Father, however, whose
+case conclusively proves the utter worthlessness of the evidence. Having
+been proclaimed and branded by the English government as a convicted
+traitor, he, five years later, fell into their hands, being delivered
+up, in 1610, by their ally the Elector Palatine. He was at once thrown
+into the Tower, where he was frequently and rigorously examined, it is
+said even on the rack.[393] After a confinement of eight years he was
+discharged "with honour," his innocence being attested by the respect
+with which he was treated by men of all parties.[394] In view of this
+unquestionable acquittal the famous proofs of his criminality, though
+certified on the royal word of King James himself, forfeit all claim to
+consideration.
+
+A word may be added concerning Father Cresswell, an English Jesuit
+residing in Spain. He, too, was assumed to have been deeply implicated
+in this and other treasons. In November, 1605, Cecil included his name
+in a list of traitors against whom proofs were to be procured.[395] It
+was even asserted that at the time of the intended explosion he came
+over to England "to bear his part with the rest of his Society in a
+victorial song of thanksgiving."[396] He was, moreover, loudly denounced
+as the principal agent in the notorious Spanish Treason.
+
+After all this it is somewhat surprising to find Sir Charles Cornwallis,
+the English Ambassador, while the excitement of the Powder Plot was at
+its height, testifying in the most cordial terms to his esteem for the
+said Cresswell. The latter having been called to Rome by his superiors,
+Cornwallis (December 23rd, N.S. 1605,) addressed to him the following
+letter.[397]
+
+ "Sir, although in matter of religion well you know that there are
+ many discords between us, yet sure in your duty and loyalty to my
+ King and Country I find in you so good a concordance I cannot but
+ much reverence and love you, and wish you all the happiness that a
+ man of your sort upon the earth can desire.
+
+ "Much am I (I assure you) grieved at your departure, and the more
+ that I was put in so good hope that your journey should have been
+ stayed. The time of the year unpleasant to travel in, your body, as
+ I think, not much accustomed to journeys of so great length, and the
+ great good you did here to your poor countrymen (which now they
+ want) are great motives to make your friends to wish your will in
+ that voyage had been broken.
+
+ "If it be not, I shall not believe in words, for many here do
+ greatly desire you for causes spiritual, and some for temporal. In
+ the latter number am I, who, not affecting your spiritualities (for
+ that these in you abound to superfluity), do much reverence and
+ respect your temporal abilities, as wherein I acknowledge much
+ wisdom, temper, and sincerity. So no friends you have shall ever
+ more desire good unto you than myself. And therefore I wish I were
+ able to make so good demonstration as willingly I would that I ever
+ will here and in all places in this world rest
+
+ "Your very assured loving friend,
+
+ "CH. CO."
+
+About the same time, in an undated letter to Lord Salisbury,[398]
+Cornwallis again expresses his regret on account of the removal of
+Cresswell from Spain.
+
+
+vi. _Other Documents._
+
+It is impossible to analyze in detail the evidence supplied by the
+several conspirators after their capture, or to examine the endless
+inconsistencies and contradictions with which it abounds. One or two
+points must, however, be indicated.
+
+1. As we have seen, it is clear that at the beginning an effort was made
+to invest the Plot with a far wider political significance than was
+afterwards attempted, and to introduce elements which were soon quietly
+laid aside. In the interrogatories prepared by Sir E. Coke and Chief
+Justice Popham, we find it suggested that the death of the Earl of
+Salisbury was a main feature of the scheme, "absolutely agreed upon"
+among the conspirators. Also that the titular Earl of Westmoreland, the
+titular Lord Dacre, the Earl of Northumberland, Sir Walter Raleigh, and
+others were mixed up in the business.
+
+Nor were such endeavours altogether fruitless, for, supposing the
+testimony extorted from the prisoners to be worthy of credit,
+information was obtained altogether changing the character and
+complexion of the design. This was, however, presently buried in
+oblivion and treated as of no moment whatever.
+
+Thus in Sir Everard Digby's declaration of Nov. 23rd,[399] we find him
+testifying that the Earls of Westmoreland and Derby,[400] were to have
+been sent to raise forces in the north. Faukes, in the famous confession
+which we have so fully discussed, was made to say "They meant also to
+have sent for the prisoners in the Tower to have come to them, of whom
+particularly they had some consultation," and although this important
+clause was omitted from the finished version finally adopted, it appears
+in that of Nov. 14th, sent by Cecil to the ambassador at Brussels.
+Again, in his examination of November 9th, famous for the ghastly
+evidence of torture afforded by his signature, we find Faukes declaring,
+"He confesseth also that there was speech amongst them to draw Sir
+Walter Rawley to take part with them, being one that might stand them in
+good stead, _as others in like sort were named_."[401]
+
+With regard to Raleigh it must be remembered that he was in a very
+special manner obnoxious to Salisbury, who, however, was at great pains
+to disguise his hostility. On occasion of Sir Walter's trial, in 1603,
+he vehemently protested that it was a great grief to him to have to
+pronounce against one whom he had hitherto loved.[402] But two years
+earlier, in his secret correspondence with James, he had not only
+described Raleigh to the future king as one of the diabolical
+triplicity hatching cockatrice eggs, but had solemnly protested that if
+he feigned friendship for such a wretch, it was only with the purpose of
+drawing him on to discover his real nature.[403]
+
+2. Even more worthy of notice is the shameless manner in which evidence
+was falsified. That produced in court consisted entirely of the written
+depositions of the prisoners themselves, and of those who had been
+similarly examined. It was, however, carefully manipulated before it was
+read; all that told in favour of those whose conviction was desired
+being omitted, and only so much retained as would tell against them. On
+this subject Mr. Jardine well remarks:[404] "This mode of dealing with
+the admissions of an accused person is pure and unmixed injustice; it is
+in truth a forgery of evidence; for when a qualified statement is made,
+the suppression of the qualification is no less a forgery than if the
+whole statement had been fabricated."
+
+It will be sufficient to cite one notorious and compendious example.
+In regard of the oath of secrecy taken by the conspirators, Faukes (Nov.
+9th, 1605) and Thomas Winter (Jan. 9th, 1605-6) related how they
+administered it to one another, "in a chamber," to quote Winter, "where
+no other body was," and afterwards proceeded to another chamber where
+they heard Mass and received Communion at the hands of Father
+Gerard.[405] Both witnesses, however, emphatically declared that the
+Father knew nothing of the oath that had been taken, or of the purpose
+of the associates.
+
+[Illustration: FROM FAUKES' CONFESSION OF NOVEMBER 9, 1605.]
+
+Such testimony in favour of one whom they were anxious above all things
+to incriminate, the government would not allow to appear. Accordingly,
+Sir E. Coke, preparing the documents to be used in court as evidence,
+marked off the exculpatory passages, with directions that they were not
+to be read.[406] Having thus suppressed the passage which declared that
+the Jesuit was unaware of the conspirators' purpose, and of their oath,
+Coke went on to inform the jury, in his speech, "This oath was by Gerard
+the Jesuit given to Catesby, Percy, Christopher Wright, and Thomas
+Winter, and by Greenwell [Greenway] the Jesuit to Bates at another time,
+and so to the rest."[407]
+
+3. Neither must it be forgotten that even apart from these manifest
+instances of tampering, the confessions themselves, obtained in such
+circumstances, are open to much suspicion. In an intercepted letter to
+Father Baldwin, of whom we have heard, Father Schondonck, another
+Jesuit, then rector of St. Omers, speaks thus:[408] "I much rejoice
+that, as I hear, there is no confession produced, by which, either in
+court or at the place of execution, any of our society is accused of so
+abominable a crime. This I consider a point of prime importance. _Of
+secret confessions, or those extorted by violence or torture, less
+account must be made; for we have many examples whereby the dishonesty
+of our enemies in such matters has been fully displayed._"
+
+Father John Gerard in his Autobiography[409] relates an experience of
+his own which illustrates the methods employed to procure evidence such
+as was required. When, in Queen Elizabeth's time, he had himself been
+taken and thrown into prison, the notorious Topcliffe, the
+priest-hunter, endeavoured to force him into an acknowledgment of
+various matters of a treasonable character. Father Gerard undertook to
+write what he had to say on the subject, and proceeded to set down an
+explicit denial of what his questioner suggested. What followed he thus
+relates.[410]
+
+"While I was writing this, the old man waxed wroth. He shook with
+passion, and would fain have snatched the paper from me."
+
+"'If you don't want me to write the truth,' said I, 'I'll not write at
+all.'"
+
+"'Nay,' quoth he, 'write so and so, and I'll copy out what you have
+written.'"
+
+"'I shall write what I please,' I answered, 'and not what _you_ please.
+Show what I have written to the Council, for I shall add nothing but my
+name.'"
+
+"_Then I signed so near the writing, that nothing could be put in
+between._ The hot-tempered man, seeing himself disappointed, broke out
+into threats and blasphemies: 'I'll get you into my power, and hang you
+in the air, and show you no mercy: and then I shall see what God will
+rescue you out of my hands.'"
+
+It was not by Catholics alone that allegations of this sort were
+advanced. Sir Anthony Weldon tells us[411] that on the trial of Raleigh
+and Cobham, the latter protested that he had never made the declaration
+attributed to him incriminating Raleigh. "That villain Wade,"[412] said
+he, "did often solicit me, and, not prevailing, got me, by a trick, to
+write my name on a piece of white paper, which I, thinking nothing, did;
+so that if any charge came under my hand, it was forged by that villain
+Wade, by writing something above my hand, without my consent or
+knowledge."
+
+Moreover, there exists undoubted evidence that the king's chief minister
+availed himself upon occasion of the services of such as could
+counterfeit handwriting and forge evidence against suspected persons.
+One Arthur Gregory[413] appears to have been thus employed, and he
+subsequently wrote to Salisbury reminding him of what he had done.[414]
+After acknowledging that he owes his life to the secretary who knows how
+to appreciate "an honest desire in respect of his Majesty's public
+service," Gregory thus continues:
+
+"Your Lordship hath had a present trial of that which none but myself
+hath done before, _to write in another man's hand_, and, discovering the
+secret writing being in blank, to abuse a most cunning villain in his
+own subtlety, leaving the same at last in blank again, wherein although
+there be difficulty their answers show they have no suspicion."
+
+This the calendarer of State Papers believes to refer to the case of
+Father Garnet, and it is certain from Gregory's own letter that at one
+time he held a post in the Tower. Is it not possible that an explanation
+may here be found of the strange circumstance, that perhaps the most
+important of Father Garnet's examinations[415] bears an endorsement,
+"This was forbydden by the King to be given in evidence"?
+
+Gregory's letter, of which we have been speaking, has appended to it an
+instructive postscript:
+
+"Mr. Lieutenant expecteth something to be written in the blank leaf of a
+Latin Bible, which is pasted in already for the purpose. I will attend
+it, and whatsoever else cometh."[416]
+
+
+vii. _Catholic Testimony._
+
+It will not improbably be urged that the government history is confirmed
+in all essential particulars by authorities to whom no exception can be
+taken, namely, contemporary Catholic writers, and especially the Jesuits
+Gerard and Greenway, whose narratives of the conspiracy corroborate
+every detail concerning which doubts have been insinuated.
+
+This argument is undoubtedly deserving of all consideration, but upon
+examination appears to lose much of its force. If the narratives in
+question agree with that furnished by the government, it is because they
+are based almost entirely upon it, and upon those published confessions
+of Winter and Faukes with which we are familiar.
+
+On this point Father Gerard is very explicit:[417] "Out of [Mr. Thomas
+Winter's] examination, with the others that were made in the time of
+their imprisonment, I must gather and set down all that is to be said or
+collected of their purposes and proceedings in this heady enterprize.
+For that, as I have said, they kept it so wholly secret from all men,
+that until their flight and apprehension it was not known to any that
+such a matter was in hand, and then there could none have access to them
+to learn the particulars. But we must be contented with that which some
+of those that lived to be examined, did therein deliver. Only for that
+some of their servants that were up in arms with them in the country did
+afterwards escape, somewhat might be learned by them of their carriage
+in their last extremities, and some such words as they then uttered,
+whereby their mind in the whole matter is something the more opened."
+
+Elsewhere he writes, exhibiting more confidence in government documents
+than we can feel:[418]
+
+"[The prisoners'] examinations did all agree in all material points, and
+therefore two only were published in print, containing the substance of
+the rest. And indeed [this is] the sum of that which I have been able to
+say in this narration touching either their first intentions or the
+names or number of the conspirators, or concerning the course they took
+to keep the matter so absolutely secret, or, finally, touching the
+manner of their beginning and proceeding in the whole matter; for
+that--as I noted before--it being kept a vowed secret in the heads and
+hearts of so few, and those also afterwards apprehended before they
+could have means to declare the particulars in any private manner,
+therefore no more can be known of the matter or manner of this tragedy
+than is found or gathered out of their examinations."
+
+As for Greenway, it should not be forgotten that for the most part he
+confined himself to translating Gerard's narrative from English into
+Italian, though he supplemented it occasionally with items furnished by
+his own experience as to the character and general conduct of the
+conspirators on previous occasions, or during their last desperate
+rally. Of this he was able to speak with more authority, as he not only
+chanced to be in the immediate neighbourhood, but actually visited them
+at Huddington House (the seat of Robert Winter) on November 6th, being
+summoned thither by Catesby through his servant Bates.[419] Greenway,
+like Gerard, constantly refers to the published confessions of Winter
+and Faukes as the sources of his information.
+
+It may here be observed that the practical identity of the narratives
+of these two fathers was unknown to Mr. Jardine, who having seen only
+that of Father Greenway, and believing it to be an original work,
+founded upon this erroneous assumption an argument which loses its force
+when we learn the real author to have been Gerard. Mr. Jardine maintains
+that the narrator must, from internal evidence, have been an active and
+zealous member of the conspiracy, "approving, promoting and encouraging
+it with the utmost enthusiasm."[420] It so happens, however, that the
+real author, Father Gerard, is just the one of the incriminated Jesuits
+whose innocence is held by historians certainly not partial to his
+Order, to be beyond question. Mr. Gardiner considers[421] that there is
+"strong reason" to believe him not to have been acquainted with the
+Plot. Dr. Jessopp is still more emphatic, and declares[422] that it is
+impossible for any candid reader of all the evidence to doubt that
+Gerard must be exonerated.
+
+What has been said of Gerard and Greenway may serve also for Father
+Garnet, who in his various examinations and other utterances assumes the
+truth of the government story, for neither had he materials to go upon
+except those officially supplied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is obvious that the conclusion to be drawn from the above
+considerations is chiefly negative. That the conspirators embarked on a
+plot against the state, is, of course unquestionable. What was the
+precise nature of that plot is by no means clear, and still less what
+were the exact circumstances of its initiation and its collapse. This
+only appears to be certain, that things did not happen as they were
+officially related, while the elaborate care expended on the
+falsification of the story seems to indicate that the true version would
+not have served the purposes to which that story was actually put.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[332] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 235. Mr. Jardine is here speaking expressly
+of the trial of Father Garnet, as reported in the book, but evidently
+intends his observations to extend to that of the conspirators as well.
+
+[333] _Ibid._ 105.
+
+[334] _True and Perfect Relation_, Introduction.
+
+[335] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 113.
+
+[336] The contemporary, Hawarde (_Les Reportes del Cases in Camera
+Stellata_) gives a report of the trial of the conspirators, under the
+curious title "_Al le arraignemente del Traitors por le grande treason
+of blowinge up the Parliamente Howse_," which, although evidently based
+upon the official account, differs in two remarkable particulars. In the
+first place it gives a different list of the commissioners by whom the
+trial was conducted, omitting Justice Warburton, and including instead,
+Lord Chief Baron Flemming, Justices Yelverton and Williams, and Baron
+Saville. Moreover, Hawarde says that the king and queen "were both there
+in pryvate," an important circumstance, of which the _True and Perfect
+Relation_ says nothing.
+
+[337] Viz., on January 30th and 31st: not January 31st and February 1st,
+as Mr. Gardiner has it.
+
+[338] Father Garnet clearly believed that this advantage was used
+unscrupulously against him, for when certain evidence attributed to
+Bates was cited, he replied that "Bates was a dead man," and would
+testify otherwise if he were alive. (Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 21203.
+_Foley's Records_, iv. p. 188.)
+
+[339] It is frequently said that the search at Hendlip was undertaken
+not for Garnet but for Oldcorne, whose presence there was known by the
+confession of Humphrey Littleton. But this confession was made several
+days after the search had been begun, and the directions for it given by
+Cecil to the sheriff, Sir H. Bromley, clearly indicate that he had in
+view some capture of prime importance. (See Gardiner's _History_, i.
+271, and Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, f. 693.)
+
+[340] Viz.: Nottingham, Suffolk, Worcester, Devonshire, Northampton,
+Salisbury, Marr, Dunbar, Popham, Coke, and Waad.
+
+[341] In the "original," however, there are some passages which do not
+appear in the copy, notably one in which Lord Monteagle is mentioned. It
+appears, therefore, that the "copy" is not the first version produced,
+but has been edited from another still earlier.
+
+[342] That this is not a slip of the pen is evidenced by the fact that
+Winter first wrote 23, and then corrected it to 25.
+
+[343] Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, 84.
+
+[344] The document is headed in the printed version: "Thomas Winter's
+Confession, taken the Twenty-third of November, 1605, in the Presence of
+the Counsellors, whose Names are underwritten."
+
+[345] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 49.
+
+[346] The list stands thus: "L. Admyrall--L. Chamberlayn--Erle of
+Devonshire--Erle of Northampton--Erle of Salisbury--Erle of Marr--L.
+Cheif Justice--attended by Mr. Attorney Generall."
+
+The Lord Admiral was the Earl of Nottingham, better known as Lord Howard
+of Effingham, the commander-in-chief against the Spanish Armada. There
+appears to be no foundation for the supposition that he was a Catholic.
+Northampton (Henry Howard) was a professing Catholic. The chamberlain
+was the Earl of Suffolk, the Chief Justice, Popham.
+
+[347] The _Calendar of State Papers_ assigns this document, like the
+other, to the 8th, a mistake not easy to understand, for not only is the
+date clearly written, but the printed version in the "King's Book" gives
+it correctly.
+
+[348] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 101.
+
+[349] This was originally written "deposition;" the title is altered in
+Coke's hand, who also added the words, "taken the 17 of Nov. 1605:
+acknowledged before the Lords Commissioners."
+
+[350] Thus the _examination_ of November 8th begins as follows: "He
+confesseth that a Practise in generall was first broken unto him,
+agaynst his Majesty, for the Catholique cause, and not invented, or
+propounded by himself: and this was first propounded unto him, about
+Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the seas, in the Low Countreyes, by
+an English Lay-man, and that English man came over with him in his
+company, into England, and they tow and three more were the first five,
+mencioned in the former examination," etc.
+
+The _declaration_ of November 17th opens: "I confesse that a practise in
+general was first broken unto me against his Majesty, for releife of the
+Catholique cause, and not invented or propounded by myself. And this was
+first propounded unto me about Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the
+Seas, in the Low Countries of the Archdukes obeysance, by Thomas Winter,
+who came thereupon with me into England, and there wee imparted our
+purpose to three other Englishmen more, namely Rob^t Catesby, Tho^s
+Percy, and John Wright, who all five consulting together," etc. See both
+documents in full, Appendix N.
+
+[351] Thus, in the confession of November 8th, we read as follows: "He
+confesseth, that it was resolved amonge them, that the same day that
+this detestable act should have been performed, the same day [_sic_]
+should other of their confederacye have surprised the person of the Lady
+Elizabeth and presently have proclaimed her queen [to which purpose a
+Proclamation was drawne, as well to avow and justifye the Action, as to
+have protested against the Union, and in noe sort to have meddled with
+Religion therein. And would have protested all soe against all
+strangers,] and this Proclamation should have been made in the name of
+the Lady Elizabeth."
+
+The portion within brackets is cancelled, and the following substituted:
+"He confesseth that if their purpose had taken effect, untill they had
+power enough, they would not have avowed the deed to be theirs; but if
+their power ... had been sufficient, they thereafter would have taken it
+upon them."
+
+The corresponding portion of the declaration of November 17th runs thus:
+"It was further resolved amongst us, that the same day that this action
+should have been performed, some other of our confederates should have
+surprised the person of the L. Elizabeth, the King's eldest daughter,
+... and presently proclaimed her for Queene, having a _project_ of a
+Proclamation ready for the purpose, wherein we made no mention of
+altering of Religion, nor would have avowed the deed to be ours, untill
+we should have had power enough to make our partie good, and then we
+would have avowed both."
+
+[352] The printed version of Fauke's declaration is headed: "The true
+Copy of the Deposition of Guido Fawkes, taken in the Presence of the
+Counsellors, whose Names are under written."
+
+[353] See Appendix K., _The Use of Torture_.
+
+[354] In the _Calendar of State Papers_ he is continually styled "Father
+Owen," or "Owen the Jesuit," without warrant in the original documents.
+That he was a soldier and not a priest there is no doubt.
+
+[355] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 38.
+
+[356] E.g. _Item._ Where you have confessed that it was discoursed
+between you that the prisoners in the Tower should have had intelligence
+after the act done, declare the particularity of that discourse, and
+whether some prisoners in the Tower should not have been called to
+office or place, or have been employed, etc.
+
+_Item._ Where you have confessed that the L. Elizabeth should have
+succeeded, and that she should have been brought up as a Catholic, and
+married to an English Catholic. (1) Who should have had the government
+of her? (2) Who was nominated to be the fittest to have married her?
+
+_Item._ Was it not resolved amongst you that after the act done you
+would have taken the Tower, or any other place of strength, and meant
+you not to have taken the spoil of London, and whom should you have
+instantly proclaimed?
+
+_Item._ By what priests or Jesuits were you resolved that it was godly
+and lawful to execute the act?
+
+_Item._ Whether was it not resolved that if it were discovered Catesby
+and others should have killed the king coming from Royston?
+
+_Item._ Were not Edw. Neville, calling himself Earl of Westmorland, Mr.
+Dacre, calling himself Lord Dacre, or any of the Nobility, privy to it?
+How many of the Nobility have you known at Mass? What persons in the
+Tower were named to be partakers with you?
+
+[357] To Edmondes, November 14th, 1605. (Stowe MSS.)
+
+[358] _Viz., The True and Perfect Relation._ The confession of Bates is
+mentioned but not textually quoted. It is in the "King's Book" that the
+confessions of Winter and Faukes are given.
+
+[359] "The great object of the government now was to obtain evidence
+against the priests."--Gardiner, _History of England_, i. 267.
+
+[360] See Rokewood's examination, December 2nd, 1605. (_Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, 136.) In the confession of Keyes, November 30th, 1605 (_Gunpowder
+Plot Book_, 126) we read: "He sayth that the reason that he revealed not
+the project to his ghostly father was for that Catesby told him that he
+had good warrant and authoritie that it might safely and with good
+conscience be done," etc.
+
+[361] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 145.
+
+[362] This is shown by a mark (§) in the margin opposite the important
+passage, attention being called to this by the same mark, and the name
+"Greenway" in the endorsement.
+
+[363] Brit. Mus., Harleian 360, f. 96.
+
+[364] Brit. Mus., Harleian 360, f. 109, etc. The reporter had clearly
+been present.
+
+[365] Brit. Mus., MSS. Add. 21, 203; Plut. ciii. F. Printed by Foley,
+_Records_, iv. 164 _seq._
+
+[366] _Narrative_, p. 210.
+
+[367] Plut. ciii. F. § 39.
+
+[368] Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, § 625.
+
+[369] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 116.
+
+[370] In the _Calendar of State Papers_, Mrs. Everett Green, as has been
+said, quite gratuitously and without warrant from the original
+documents, uniformly describes him as "Father Owen," or "Owen the
+Jesuit." Mr. Gardiner (_Hist._ i. 242) has been led into the same error.
+
+It is not impossible that Owen had some knowledge of the conspiracy,
+though the course adopted by his enemies seems to afford strong
+presumption to the contrary. It must, moreover, be remembered that, as
+Father Gerard tells us, he and others similarly accused, vehemently
+protested against the imputation, while in his case in particular we
+have some evidence to the same effect. Thomas Phelippes, the
+"Decipherer," of whom we have already heard, was on terms of close
+intimacy with Owen, and in December, 1605, wrote to him about the Plot
+in terms which certainly appear to imply a strong conviction that his
+friend had nothing to do with it.
+
+"There hath been and yet is still great paynes taken to search to the
+bottom of the late damnable conspiracy. The Parliamente hit seemes shall
+not be troubled with any extraordinarie course for their exemplarye
+punishment, as was supposed upon the Kinges speeche, but onlye with
+their attaynder, the more is the pitye I saye."--_Dom. James I._ xvii.
+62.
+
+[371] Stowe MSS. 168, 54.
+
+[372] This version of the deposition is interesting as being a form
+intermediate between the draft of November 8th and the finished document
+of November 17th. The passages cancelled in the former are simply
+omitted without any attempt to complete the sense of the passages in
+which they occurred. Those "ticked off" are retained.
+
+[373] Stowe MSS. 168, 58.
+
+[374] _I.e._, the Archduke Albert, and his consort the Infanta, daughter
+of Philip II., who, as governors of the Low Countries, were usually so
+designated.
+
+[375] "Nous avons bien voulu aussy par ces presentes, nous mesmes vous
+asseurer que ce qu'il [Edmondes] vous en a desja declaré, est fondé sur
+tout verité; et vous dire en oultre, que ces meschantes Creatures d'Owen
+et Baldouin, gens de mesme farine, ont eu aussi leur part en particulier
+a ceste malheureuse conspiration de Pouldre."--_Phillipps' MS._ 6297, f.
+129.
+
+[376] Stowe, 168, 65.
+
+[377] Winwood, ii. 183.
+
+[378] _Dom. James I._ xix. 94.
+
+[379] 3^o _Jac. I._ c. 3. On the 21st of June following, Salisbury
+forwarded to Edmondes a fresh copy of this Act, "because in the former
+there was a great error committed in the printing." (Phillipps, f. 157.)
+It would be highly interesting to know what the first version was. In
+that now extant it is only said regarding Owen, that inasmuch as he
+obstinately keeps beyond the seas, he cannot be arraigned, nor can
+evidence and proofs be produced against him. (_Statutes at large._)
+
+[380] Stowe, 168, 76; Phillipps, f. 141.
+
+[381] Edmondes to Salisbury, January 23rd, 1605(6). P.R.O., Flanders,
+38.
+
+[382] April 19th, 1606, _ibid._
+
+[383] Edmondes to Salisbury, April 5th, 1606, _ibid._
+
+[384] Phillipps, f. 150.
+
+[385] Phillipps, f. 152.
+
+[386] _Dom. James I._ xx. 52.
+
+[387] This is obvious from a marginal note in Coke's own hand, arguing
+that Owen must be guilty in this instance, as he has been guilty on
+former occasions, and "Qui semel malus est semper præsumitur esse malus
+in eodem genere mali."
+
+[388] It will be noticed that the confession of Faukes cited against
+Owen is dated two months after he had first been declared to be proved
+guilty by Faukes' testimony.
+
+[389] These are dated November 5th, 6th [bis], 7th, 8th [the "draft"],
+9th, 16th, 17th, January 9th, 20th, 26th.
+
+[390] Thus, to confine ourselves to the confession of January 20th, with
+which we are particularly concerned, we have the following variations:
+
+_Tanner transcript._ "At my going over M^r Catesby charged me two things
+more: the one to desire of Baldwin & M^r Owen to deal with the Marquis
+[Spinola] to send over the regiment of which he [Catesby] expected to
+have been Lieutenant Colonel under Sir Charles [Percy].... He wished me
+secondly to be earnest with Baldwin to deal with the Marquis to give the
+said M^r Catesby order for a Company of Horse, thinking by that means to
+have opportunity to buy Horses and Arms without suspition."
+
+According to _Abbot_, Faukes was to give instructions that when the time
+of Parliament approached, Sir Wm. Stanley was on some pretext to lead
+the English forces in the archduke's service towards the sea, and with
+them any others he could manage to influence. He also mentions the
+conspiracy of Morgan, as spoken of by Coke.
+
+In addition to all this, Abbot cites from the same confession the
+following extraordinary particulars (p. 160): Faukes, when he came to
+London, with T. Winter, went to Percy's house and found there Catesby
+and Father Gerard. They talked over matters, and agreed that nothing was
+to be hoped from foreign aid, nor from a general rising of Catholics,
+and that the only plan was to strike at the king's person: whereupon
+Catesby, Percy, John Wright, Winter, and himself, were sworn in by
+Gerard.
+
+[This is in absolute contradiction to Winter's evidence (November 23rd)
+that Percy was initiated in the middle of the Easter term, the other
+four having agreed on the scheme at the beginning of the same term; and
+to that of Faukes himself (November 17th) that he and Winter first
+resolved on a plot for the benefit of the Catholic cause, and afterwards
+imparted their idea to Catesby, Wright, and Percy.]
+
+_Sir E. Coke's Version._ "After the powder treason was resolved upon by
+Catesbye, Thomas Winter, the Wrightes, my self, and others, and
+preparation made by us for the execution of it, by their advise and
+direction I went into fflanders and had leave given unto me to discover
+our project in every particular to Hughe Owen and others, but with
+condicion that they should sweare first to secrecie as we our selves had
+done. When I arryved in fflanders I found M^r Owen at Bruxelles to whom
+after I had given the oathe of secrecye I discovered the whole busines,
+howe we had layed 20 whole barrells of powder in the celler under the
+parliament howse, and howe we ment to give it fire the first day of the
+parliament when the King, the prince, the duke, the Lords spirituall and
+temporall, and all the knights, citizens, and burgesses of parliament
+should be there assembled. And that we meant to take the Ladye Elizabeth
+and proclaime hir for we thought most like that the prince and duke
+would be there with the king. M^r Owen liked the plott very well, and
+said that Thomas Morgan had once propounded the very same in quene
+Elizabeth's time, and willed me that by ani meanes we should not make
+any mencion of religion at the first, and assured me that so soone as he
+should have certaine newes that this exploit had taken effect that he
+would give us what assistance he could and that he would procure that
+Sir W^m Stanley should have leave to come with those English men which
+be there and what other forces he could procure."
+
+The confession of Faukes in the Record Office, dated the same, January
+20th, is thus summarized in the _Calendar of State Papers_ (_Dom. James
+I._ xviii. 28): "Talked with Catesby about noblemen being absent from
+the meeting of Parliament; he said Lord Mordaunt would not be there,
+because he did not like to absent himself from the sermons, as the king
+did not know he was a Catholic; and that Lord Stourton would not come to
+town till the Friday after the opening."
+
+[391] The powder design of Morgan is an instance in point. The Thomas
+Morgan in question was doubtless the same as the partisan of Mary Queen
+of Scots.
+
+[392] _E.g._: "Winter came over to Owen, by him and the Fathers to be
+informed of a fit and resolute man for the execution of the enterprise.
+This examinate (being by the Fathers and Owen recommended to be used and
+trusted in any action for the Catholicks) came into England with
+Winter."--Faukes, November 19th, 1605 (Tanner MSS.).
+
+Abbot, whose whole object is to incriminate the Jesuits, does not
+mention this remarkable statement.
+
+Again we read, November 30th (_ibid._): "Father Baldwin told this
+examinate that about 2,000 horses would be provided by the Catholicks of
+England to join with the Spanish forces ... and willed this examinate to
+intimate so much to Father Creswell, which this examinate did."
+
+[393] Oliver, _Collectanea_, sub nom.; Foley, _Records_, iv. 120, note.
+
+[394] Foley, _Records_, iii. 509; _English Protestants' Plea_, p. 59.
+
+[395] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 115.
+
+[396] _England's Warning Peece_, by T. S. [Thomas Spencer], P.73.
+
+[397] Cotton MSS. _Vespasian C._, ix. f. 259.
+
+[398] Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 178.
+
+[399] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 104.
+
+[400] William Stanley.
+
+[401] The last words are added in another hand.
+
+[402] "I am in great dispute with myself to speak in the case of this
+gentleman. A former dearness between me and him tied so firm a knot of
+my conceit of his virtues, now broken by discovery of his imperfections,
+that I protest, did I serve a king that I knew would be displeased with
+me for speaking, in this case I would speak, whatever came of it; but
+seeing he is compacted of piety and justice, and one that will not
+mislike of any man for speaking a truth, I will answer," etc.--_State
+Trials._
+
+[403] "For this do I profess in the presence of Him that knoweth and
+searcheth all men's harts, that if I did not some tyme cast a stone into
+the mouth of these gaping crabbs, when they are in their prodigall
+humour of discourses, they wold not stick to confess dayly how contrary
+it is to their nature to be under your soverainty; though they confess
+(Ralegh especially) that (_rebus sic stantibus_) naturall pollicy
+forceth them to keep on foot such a trade against the great day of mart.
+In all which light and soddain humours of his, though I do no way check
+him, because he shall not think I reject his freedome or his affection
+... yet under pretext of extraordinary care of his well doing, I have
+seemed to dissuade him from ingaging himself so farr," etc.--_Hatfield
+MSS._, cxxxv. f. 65.
+
+[404] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 358.
+
+[405] Father Gerard (_Narrative_, p. 201) denies in the most emphatic
+terms that he was the priest who said mass on this occasion. The point
+is fully discussed by the late Father Morris, S. J., in his Life of
+Father Gerard, pp. 437-438.
+
+[406] The accompanying facsimile of this portion of Faukes' confession
+exhibits the marks made by Coke, and his added direction in the margin,
+_hucusque_ ("thus far"). In the original his additions are in red ink.
+
+[407] It is singular that he should not mention Faukes himself as one of
+those who received the oath from Gerard. There is no mention in any
+document of Greenway as giving the oath to Bates, or anyone else.
+
+The facsimile of Faukes' signature, appended to his confession of
+November 9th, though affording unmistakable evidence of torture, gives
+no idea of the original, wherein the letters are so faintly traced as to
+be scarcely visible. It is evident that the writer had been so severely
+racked as to have no strength left in his hands to press the pen upon
+the paper. He must have fainted when he had written his Christian name,
+two dashes alone representing the other.
+
+This signature, with other of the more sensational documents connected
+with the Plot, is exhibited in the newly established museum at the
+Record Office.
+
+[408] _Dom. James I._ xviii. 97, February 27th, 1606, N. S. (Latin).
+
+[409] _Narratio de rebus a se in Anglia gestis_ (Stonyhurst MSS.).
+Published in Father G. R. Kingdon's translation under the title of
+_During the Persecution_.
+
+[410] _During the Persecution_, p. 83.
+
+[411] _Court and Character of King James_, p. 350 (ed. 1811).
+
+[412] Sir William Waad, Lieutenant of the Tower, to whose charge the
+Powder Plot conspirators were committed, was afterwards dismissed from
+his office on a charge of embezzling the jewels of the Lady Arabella
+Stuart.
+
+[413] Presumably the same Arthur Gregory who at an earlier period had
+counterfeited the seals of Mary Queen of Scots' correspondence.
+
+[414] _Dom. James I._ xxiv. 38.
+
+[415] March 3rd, 1605-6 (Hatfield MSS.).
+
+[416] Eudaemon Joannes cites the renegade Alabaster as testifying to
+having seen a letter seemingly of his own to Garnet, which he had never
+written. (_Answer to Casaubon_, p. 159.)
+
+[417] _Narrative_, p. 54.
+
+[418] _Ibid._ p. 113.
+
+[419] Though we have not now to consider the question of Father
+Greenway's connection with the conspirators, it may not be out of place
+to cite his own account of this visit (_Narrative_, Stonyhurst MSS., f.
+86 b):
+
+"Father Oswald [Greenway] went to assist these gentlemen with the
+Sacraments of the Church, understanding their danger and their need, and
+this with evident danger to his own person and life: and all those
+gentlemen could have borne witness that he publicly told them how he
+grieved not so much because of their wretched and shameful plight, and
+the extremity of their peril, as that by their headlong course they had
+given the heretics occasion to slander the whole body of Catholics in
+the kingdom, and that he flatly refused to stay in their company, lest
+the heretics should be able to calumniate himself and the other Fathers
+of the Society."
+
+[420] In this, as in some other respects, Mr. Jardine shows himself
+rather an advocate than an impartial historian. He holds that the
+complicity of the writer of the _Narrative_ with the plotters is proved
+by the intimate knowledge he displays concerning them, "their general
+conduct--their superstitious fears--their dreams--'their thick coming
+fancies'--in the progress of the work of destruction." (_Criminal
+Trials_, ii. xi.)
+
+There is here an evident allusion to the silly story of the "bell in the
+wall" (related by Greenway and not by Gerard), to which Mr. Jardine
+gives extraordinary prominence. He does not, however, inform us that
+Greenway relates this (_Narrative_, f. 58 b) and some similar matters,
+on the authority of "an acquaintance to whom Catesby told it shortly
+before his death," and that he leaves it to the judgment of his readers.
+
+Greenway's frequent and earnest protestations of innocence Mr. Jardine
+summarily dismisses with the observation that they are "entitled to no
+credit whatever" (p. xii).
+
+[421] _History_, i. 243.
+
+[422] _Dictionary of National Biography_ (Digby, Sir E.).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE SEQUEL.
+
+
+AS we have already seen, the Gunpowder Plot formed no exception to the
+general law observable in conspiracies of its period, proving extremely
+advantageous to those against whom it was principally directed. No
+single individual was injured by it except those concerned in it, or
+accused of being so concerned. On the other hand, it marked an epoch in
+public policy, and irrevocably committed the king and the nation to a
+line of action towards Catholics, which up to that time they had hoped,
+and their enemies had feared, would not be permanently pursued.
+
+"The political consequences of this transaction," says Mr. Jardine,[423]
+"are extremely important and interesting. It fixed the timid and
+wavering mind of the king in his adherence to the Protestant party, in
+opposition to the Roman Catholics; and the universal horror, which was
+naturally excited not only in England but throughout Europe by so
+barbarous an attempt, was artfully converted into an engine for the
+suppression of the Roman Catholic Church: so that the ministers of James
+I., having procured the reluctant acquiescence of the king, and the
+cordial assent of public opinion, were enabled to continue in full force
+the severe laws previously passed against Papists, and to enact others
+of no less rigour and injustice."
+
+Such was the effect in fact produced, and the calm deliberation
+displayed in dealing with the crisis appears to indicate that no
+misgivings were entertained as to the chance of anything but advantage
+resulting from it. We have already seen with what strange equanimity the
+presence of the powder beneath the Parliament House was treated. Not
+less serene was the attitude of the minister chiefly responsible for the
+safety of the State in face of the grave dangers still declared to be
+threatening, even after the "discovery." Preparations, it was officially
+announced, had been made for an extensive rising of the Catholics, and
+this had still to be reckoned with. As the king himself informed Sir
+John Harington, the design was not formed by a few, the "whole legion of
+Catholics" were implicated: the priests had been active in preaching the
+holy war, and the Pope himself had employed his authority on behalf of
+the cause.[424]
+
+Moreover, the conspirators, except Faukes, escaped from London, and
+hurried to the intended scene of action, where, though no man
+voluntarily joined them, they were able at first to collect a certain
+force of their own retainers and domestics, and began to traverse the
+shires in which their influence was greatest, committing acts of plunder
+and violence, and calling on all men to join them for God and the
+country. For a couple of days the local magistrates did not feel strong
+enough to cope with them, and forwarded to the capital reports capable,
+it might be supposed, of alarming those who were bewildered by so
+totally unexpected an assault, for which the evidence in hand showed
+preparations of no ordinary magnitude to have been made. The numbers of
+the insurgents, it was said, were constantly increasing; only a feeble
+force could be brought against them; they were seizing horses and
+ammunition, and all this in "a very Catholic country."
+
+In his famous speech to Parliament, delivered on November 9th, the king
+dwelt feelingly on the danger of the land, left exposed to the traitors,
+in the absence of the members of the legislature, its natural guardians.
+"These rebels," he declared,[425] "that now wander through the country
+could never have gotten so fit a time of safety in their passage, or
+whatsoever unlawful actions, as now; when the country, by the aforesaid
+occasions, is, in a manner, left desolate and waste unto them."[426]
+
+Meanwhile, however, the secretary remained imperturbably tranquil as
+before, and so well aware of the true state of the case that he could
+afford to make merry over the madcap adventurers. On the same 9th of
+November he wrote to the ambassadors: "It is also thought fit that some
+martial men should presently repair down to those countries where the
+Robin Hoods are assembled, to encourage the good and to terrify the bad.
+In which service the Earl of Devonshire is used, a commission going
+forth for him as general: although I am easily persuaded that this
+Faggot will be burnt to ashes before he shall be twenty miles on his
+way."
+
+His prescience was not at fault, for before despatching the letter the
+minister was able to announce the utter collapse of the foolish and
+unsupported enterprise.
+
+No time was lost in turning the defeated conspiracy to practical
+account. On the very 5th of November[427] itself the Commons proceeded,
+before all other business, to the first reading of a bill for the better
+execution of penal statutes against Recusants. On the following day this
+was read a second time. The house next met on the 9th, to hear the
+king's speech, and was then prorogued to January 21st following. On that
+day, the foremost article on the programme was the first reading of a
+bill (whether the same or another) for the better execution of penal
+statutes; another was likewise proposed for prevention of the danger of
+papistical practices; and a committee was appointed "to consider of some
+course for the timely and severe proceeding against Jesuits, Seminaries,
+and other popish agents and practisers, and for the prevention and
+suppression of their plots and practices."[428] On the 22nd there was a
+motion directed against the seminaries beyond the seas, and the bill for
+better execution of penal statutes was read a second time. On the 23rd
+the bill for a public thanksgiving was read twice, being finally passed
+on the 25th. Its preamble runs thus: "Forasmuch as ... no nation of the
+earth hath been blessed with greater benefits than this kingdom now
+enjoyeth, having the true and free profession of the gospel under our
+most gracious sovereign lord King James, the most great, learned, and
+religious king that ever reigned therein ... the which many malignant
+and devilish papists, Jesuits, and seminary priests, much envying and
+fearing, conspired most horribly ..." and so forth.
+
+Thus did the Commons set to work, and the other House, though they
+declined to sanction all that was proposed in the way of exceptional
+severity towards the actual conspirators, were no wise lacking in zeal
+against the Catholic body.
+
+The course of legislation that ensued is thus described by Birch:[429]
+
+"The discovery of the Plot occasioned the Parliament to enjoin the oath
+of allegiance to the king, and to enact several laws against Popery, and
+especially against the Jesuits and Priests who, as the Earl of Salisbury
+observed,[430] sought to bring all things into confusion.... In passing
+these laws for the security of the Protestant religion, the Earl of
+Salisbury exerted himself with distinguished zeal and vigour, which
+gained him great love and honour from the kingdom, as appeared, in some
+measure, in the unusual attendance upon him at his installation into the
+Order of the Garter, on the 20th of May, 1606,[431] at Windsor."
+
+It is, indeed, abundantly clear that beyond all others this statesman
+benefited by the Plot, in consequence of which he obtained, at least for
+a time, a high degree of both power and popularity. His installation at
+Windsor, above mentioned, was an almost regal triumph. Baker notes[432]
+that he was attended on the occasion "beyond ordinary promotion." Howes
+writes[433] that he "set forward from his house in the Strand, being
+almost as honourably accompanied, and with as great a train of lords,
+knights, gentlemen, and officers of the Court, with others besides his
+peculiar servants, very richly attired and bravely mounted, as was the
+King when he rid in state through London."
+
+Neither were there wanting to the secretary other advantages which, if
+less showy, were not less substantial. It will be remembered how, in
+his secret correspondence with the King of Scots before the death of
+Elizabeth, Cecil had constantly endeavoured to turn the mind of his
+future sovereign against the Earl of Northumberland, whom he declared to
+be associated with Raleigh and Cobham in a "diabolical triplicity," and
+to be "a sworn enemy of King James."[434] These efforts had not been
+altogether successful, and though Cobham and Raleigh had been
+effectually disposed of in connection with the conspiracy known as the
+"Main," Northumberland was still powerful, and was thought by many to be
+Cecil's most formidable rival. As one result of the Gunpowder Plot, he
+now disappeared for ever from public life.
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. III.]
+
+When we remember the terms in which the secretary had previously
+described him, as well as the result about to ensue, it is not a little
+startling to remark with what emphasis it was protested, in season and
+out, that a ruling principle of the government's action was to do
+nothing which might even seem to cast a slur upon the earl's character,
+while at the same time the very point is artfully insinuated which was
+to be turned against him.[435] Thus in the "King's Book," in explanation
+of the curious roundabout courses adopted in connection with the
+"discovery," we are told that a far-fetched excuse was devised for the
+search determined upon, lest it might "lay an ill-favoured imputation
+upon the Earl of Northumberland, one of his Majesty's greatest subjects
+and counsellors; this Thomas Percy being his kinsman and most confident
+familiar." So again Cecil wrote to the ambassadors: "It hath been
+thought meet in policy of State (all circumstances considered) to commit
+the Earl of Northumberland to the Archbishop of Canterbury, there to be
+honourably used, until things be more quiet. Whereof if you shall hear
+any judgment made, as if his Majesty or his council could harbour a
+thought of such a savage practice to be lodged in such a nobleman's
+breast, you shall do well to suppress it as a malicious discourse and
+invention, this being only done to satisfy the world that nothing be
+undone which belongs to policy of State, when the whole monarchy was
+proscribed to dissolution; and being no more than himself discreetly
+approved when he received the sentence of the council for his
+restraint."
+
+Yet what was the issue? A series of charges were brought against
+Northumberland, all of which broke down except that of having, as
+Captain of the Royal Pensioners, admitted Percy amongst them without
+exacting the usual oath. He in vain demanded an open trial, and was
+brought before the Star Chamber, by which, after he had been assailed by
+Coke in the same violent strain previously employed against Raleigh, he
+was sentenced to forfeit all offices which he held under the Crown, to
+be imprisoned during the king's pleasure, and to pay a fine of £30,000,
+equal to at least ten times that sum at the present day.
+
+As if this were not enough, fresh proceedings were taken against him six
+years later, when he was again subjected to examination, and again, says
+Lingard,[436] foiled the ingenuity or malice of his persecutor.
+
+It seems, therefore, by no means extraordinary that men, as we have
+heard from the French ambassador, should have commonly attributed the
+earl's ruin to the resolution of his great rival to remove from his own
+path every obstacle likely to be dangerous, or that Cecil should himself
+bear witness,[437] in 1611, to the "bruites" touching Northumberland
+which were afloat, and should be anxious, as "knowing how various a
+discourse a subject of this nature doth beget," to "prevent any
+erroneous impression by a brief narrative of the true motive and
+progress of the business."
+
+As to Northumberland's own sentiments, he, we are told by Osborne,[438]
+declared that the blood of Percy would refuse to mix with that of Cecil
+if they were poured together in the same basin.
+
+It is, moreover, evident not only that the great statesman, to use
+Bishop Goodman's term, actually profited largely by the powder business,
+but that from the first he saw in it a means for materially
+strengthening his position; an opportunity which he lost no time in
+turning to account by making it appear that in such a crisis he was
+absolutely necessary to the State. This is shown by the remarkable
+manifesto which he promptly issued, a document which appears to have
+been almost forgotten, though well deserving attention.
+
+A characteristic feature of the traitorous proceedings of the period was
+the inveterate habit of conspirators to drop compromising documents in
+the street, or to throw them into yards and windows. In the court of
+Salisbury House was found, in November, 1605, a threatening letter, more
+than usually extraordinary. It purported to come from five Catholics,
+who began by unreservedly condemning the Gunpowder Plot as a work
+abhorred by their co-religionists as much as by any Protestants. Since,
+however, his lordship, beyond all others, seemed disposed to take
+advantage of so foul a scandal, in order to root out all memory of the
+Catholic religion, they proceeded to warn him that they had themselves
+vowed his death, and in such fashion that their success was certain.
+None of the accomplices knew who the others were, but it was settled who
+should first make the attempt, and who, in order, afterwards. Moreover,
+death had no terrors for any of them, two being stricken with mortal
+sickness, which must soon be fatal; while the other three were in such
+mental affliction as not to care what became of them.
+
+As a reply to this strange effusion Cecil published a tract,[439]
+obviously intended as a companion to the famous "King's Book," in which
+with elaborate modesty he owned to the impeachment of being more zealous
+than others in the good cause, and protested his resolution, at whatever
+peril to himself, to continue his services to his king and country. The
+sum and substance of this curious apology is as follows.
+
+Having resolved to recall his thoughts from the earthly theatre to
+higher things, which statesmen are supposed overmuch to neglect, he had
+felt he could choose no better theme for his meditations than the
+"King's Book," wherein so many lively images of God's great favour and
+providence are represented, every line discovering where Apelles' hand
+hath been; so that all may see there needs now no Elisha to tell the
+King of Israel what the Aramites do in their privatest councils.
+
+While in this most serious and silent meditation, divided between
+rapture at God's infinite mercy and justice, and thought of his own
+happiness to live under a king pleasing to God for his zealous
+endeavours to cleanse the vessels of his kingdom from the dregs and lees
+of the Romish grape,--and while his heart was not a little cheered to
+observe any note of his own name in the royal register, for one that had
+been of any little use in this so fortunate discovery,--as the poor day
+labourer who taketh contentment when he passeth that glorious
+architecture, to the building whereof he can remember to have carried
+some few sticks and stones,--while thus blissfully engaged, he is
+grieved to find himself singled out from the honourable body of the
+council,--why, he knows not, for with it he would be content to be
+identified--as the author of the policy which is being adopted; and,
+conscious that in his humble person the Body of Authority is assailed,
+he thinks it well, for once, to make a reply.
+
+Having recited the threatening letter in full, he presently continues:
+
+"Though I participate not in the follies of that fly who thought herself
+to raise the dust because she sat on the chariot-wheel, yet I am so far
+from disavowing my honest ambition of my master's favour, as I am
+desirous that the world should hold me, not so much his creature, by the
+undeserved honours I hold from his grace and power, as my desire to be
+the shadow of his mind, and to frame my judgment, knowledge, and
+affections according to his. Towards whose Royal Person I shall glory
+more to be always found an honest and humble subject, than I should to
+command absolutely in any other calling."
+
+Of those who threaten him he says very little, assuming, however, as
+self-evident, that they are set on by some priest, who, after the manner
+of his tribe, doth "carry the unlearned Catholics, like hawks hooded,
+into those dangerous positions."
+
+But, as for himself, let the world understand that he is not the man to
+neglect his duty on account of the personal danger it entails. "Far I
+hope it shall be from me, who know so well in whose HOLY BOOK my days
+are numbered, once to entertain a thought to purchase a span of time, at
+so dear a rate, as for the fear of any mortal power, in my poor talent,
+_Aut Deo, aut Patriæ, aut Patri patriæ deesse_."[440]
+
+In spite of the singular ability of this manifesto, the art of the
+writer is undoubtedly somewhat too conspicuous to permit us to accept it
+as the kind of document which would be produced by one who felt himself
+confronted by a serious peril. An interesting and most pertinent
+commentary is supplied by a contemporary Jesuit, Giles Schondonck,
+Rector of St. Omers College, in a letter to Father Baldwin, the same of
+whom we have already heard in connection with the Plot.[441]
+
+Schondonck has, he says, read and re-read Cecil's book, which Baldwin
+had lent him. If his opinion be required, he finds in it many flowers of
+wit and eloquence, and it is a composition well adapted for its object;
+but the original letter which has evoked this brilliant rejoinder is a
+manifest fraud, not emanating from any Catholic, but devised by the
+enemies of the Church for her injury. The writers plainly contradict
+themselves. They begin by denouncing the Powder Plot as impious and
+abominable, and they do so most righteously, and they declare its
+authors to have been turbulent spirits and not religious, in which also
+they are right. But they go on to approve the design of murdering Cecil.
+What sense is there in this? If the one design be impious and
+detestable, with what colour or conscience can the other be approved?
+There is no difference of principle, though in the one case many were to
+be murdered, in the other but a single man. No one having in him any
+spark of religion could defend either project, much less approve it.
+Moreover, much that is set down is simply ridiculous. Men in the last
+extremity of sickness, or broken down by sorrow, are not of the stuff
+whereof those are made by whom desperate deeds are done.
+
+From another Jesuit we obtain instructive information which at least
+serves to show what was the opinion of Catholics as to the way in which
+things were being managed. This is conveyed in a letter addressed
+December 1st, 1606, to the famous Father Parsons by Father Richard
+Blount, Father Garnet's successor as superior of the English
+mission.[442] It must be remembered that this was not meant for the
+public eye, and in fact was never published. It cannot have been
+intended to obtain credence for a particular version of history, and it
+was written to him who, of all men, was behind the scenes so far as the
+English Jesuits were concerned. Much of it is in cipher which,
+fortunately, has been interpreted for us by the recipient.
+
+Blount begins with a piece of intelligence which is startling enough.
+Amongst the lords of the council none was a more zealous enemy of Popery
+than the chamberlain, the Earl of Suffolk,[443] who was more than once
+on the commission for expelling priests and Jesuits, and had in
+particular been so energetic in the matter of the Powder Plot that
+Salisbury modestly confessed that in regard of the "discovery" he had
+himself been "much less forward."[444] Now, however, we are told, only a
+twelvemonth later, that this nobleman and his wife are ready for a
+sufficient fee to procure "some kind of peace" for the Catholics. The
+needful sum may probably be raised through the Spanish Ambassador, but
+the issue is doubtful "because Salisbury will resist."--"Yet such is the
+want of money with the chamberlain at this time--whose expenses are
+infinite--that either Salisbury must supply, or else he must needs break
+with him."[445]
+
+After some particulars concerning the jealousy against the Scots, and
+the matter of the union (which "sticketh much in the Parliament's
+teeth") Blount goes on to relate how Cecil has been attempting to float
+a second Powder Plot--the scene being this time the king's court itself.
+He has had another letter brought in, to set it going, and had seemingly
+calculated on capturing the writer himself and some of his brethren in
+connection with it. In this, however, he has been foiled, and the matter
+appears to have been dropped. In Blount's own words:[446]
+
+"Now these last days we expected some new stratagem, because Salisbury
+pretended a letter to be brought to his lordship found by chance in St.
+Clement's Churchyard, written in ciphers, wherein were many persons
+named, and a question asked, whether there were any concavity under the
+stage in the court. But belike the device failed, and so we hear no
+words of it. About this time this house was ransacked, where by chance
+Blount came late the night before, finding four more, Talbot, N. Smith,
+Wright, Arnold; being all besieged from morning to night. If things had
+fallen out as was expected, then that letter would have haply been
+spoken of, whereas now it is very secret, and only served to pick a
+thanks of King James, with whom Salisbury keepeth his credit by such
+tricks, as upon whose vigilancy his majesty's life dependeth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One other feature of the after history demands consideration. As Fuller
+tells us,[447] "a learned author, making mention of this treason,
+breaketh forth into the following rapture:
+
+ 'Excidat illa dies aevo, ne postera credant
+ Saecula; nos certe taceamus, et obruta multâ
+ Nocte tegi propriae patiamur crimina gentis.'
+
+ 'Oh, let that day be quite dashed out of time,
+ And not believ'd by the next generation;
+ In night of silence we'll conceal the crime,
+ Thereby to save the credit of the nation.'"
+
+"A wish," he adds, "which in my opinion, hath more of poetry than of
+piety therein, and from which I must be forced to dissent." Assuredly
+if it were judged that silence and oblivion should be the lot of the
+conspiracy, no stranger means were ever adopted to secure the desired
+object. A public thanksgiving was appointed to be held every year, on
+the anniversary of the "discovery;" a special service for that day was
+inserted in the Anglican liturgy, and Gunpowder Plot Sermons kept the
+memory of the Treason green in the mind not of one but of many
+generations.
+
+Moreover, the country was flooded with literature on the subject, in
+prose and rhyme, and the example of Milton is sufficient to show how
+favourite a topic it was with youthful poets essaying to try their
+wings.[448]
+
+In regard of the history, one line was consistently adopted. The Church
+of England in its calendar marked November 5th, as the _Papists'
+Conspiracy_, and in the collect appointed for the day the king and
+estates of the realm were described as being "by Popish treachery
+appointed as sheep to the slaughter, in a most barbarous and savage
+manner, beyond the examples of former ages." Similarly, preachers and
+writers alike concurred in saying little or nothing about the actual
+conspirators, but much about the iniquity of Rome; the official
+character of the Plot, and its sanction, even its first suggestion, by
+the highest authorities of the Church, being the chief feature of the
+tale hammered year after year into the ears of the English people. The
+details of history supplied are frequently pure and unmixed fables.[449]
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. IV.]
+
+Nor was the pencil less active than the pen in popularizing the same
+belief. Great was the ingenuity spent in devising and producing pictures
+which should impress on the minds of the most illiterate a holy horror
+of the Church which had doomed the nation to destruction. One of the
+most elaborate of these was headed by an inscription which admirably
+summarizes the moral of the tale.
+
+THE POWDER TREASON.--Propounded by _Satan_: Approved by _Antichrist_
+[_i.e._ the Pope]: Enterprised by _Papists_: Practized by _Traitors_:
+Revealed by an _Eagle_ [Monteagle]: Expounded by an _Oracle_ [King
+James]: Founded in _Hell_: Confounded in _Heaven_.
+
+Accordingly we find representations of Lucifer, the Pope, the King of
+Spain, the General of the Jesuits, and other such worthies, conspiring
+in the background while the redoubtable Guy walks arm in arm with a
+demon to fire the mine, the latter grasping a papal Bull (unknown to the
+Bullarium), expedited to promote the project: or again, Faukes and
+Catesby stand secretly conspiring in the middle of the street, while
+Father Garnet, in full Jesuit habit (or what is meant for such) exhorts
+them to go on: or a priest gives the conspirators "the sacrament of
+secrecy;" or representative Romish dignitaries blow threats and curses
+against England and her Parliament House,--or the Jesuits are buried in
+Hell in recompense of their perfidy.
+
+It cannot, however, escape remark that while the limners have been
+conscientiously careful in respect of these details, they have one and
+all discarded accuracy in regard of another matter in which we might
+naturally have expected it. In no single instance is Guy Faukes
+represented as about to blow up the right house. Sometimes it is the
+House of Commons that he is going to destroy, more frequently the
+Painted Chamber, often a nondescript building corresponding to nothing
+in particular,--but in no single instance is it the House of Lords.
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. V.]
+
+The most extraordinary instance of so strange a vagary is afforded by a
+plate produced immediately after the occurrence it commemorates, in the
+year 1605 itself.[450] In this, Faukes with his inseparable lantern, but
+without the usual spurs, is seen advancing to the door of the "cellar,"
+which stands conspicuous above ground. Aloft is seen the crescent moon,
+represented in exactly the right phase for the date of the
+discovery.[451] The accuracy exhibited as to this singular detail makes
+it more than ever extraordinary that the building to which he directs
+his steps is unquestionably St. Stephen's Chapel--The House of Commons.
+
+One point of the history, in itself apparently insignificant, was at the
+time invested with such extravagant importance, as to suggest a question
+in its regard, namely the day itself whereon the marvellous deliverance
+took place. A curious combination of circumstances alone assigned it to
+the notorious Fifth of November. Parliament, as we have seen, was
+originally appointed to meet on the 3rd of October, but was suddenly
+adjourned for about a month, and so little reason did there seem to be
+for the prorogation[452] as to fill the conspirators with alarm lest
+some suspicion of their design had prompted it; wherefore they sent
+Thomas Winter to attend the prorogation ceremony, and observe the
+demeanour of those who took part in it. Afterwards, though the discovery
+might have easily been made any time during the preceding week, nothing
+practical was done till the fateful day itself had actually begun, when,
+as the acute Lingard has not failed to observe, a remarkable change at
+once came over the conduct of the authorities, who discarding the
+aimless and dilatory manner of proceeding which had hitherto
+characterized them, went straight to the point with a promptitude and
+directness leaving nothing to be desired.
+
+Whatever were their motive in all this, the action of the government
+undoubtedly brought it about that the great blow should be struck on a
+day which not a little enhanced the evidence for the providential
+character of the whole affair. Tuesday was King James' lucky day, more
+especially when it happened to be the 5th of the month, for on Tuesday,
+August the 5th, 1600, he had escaped the mysterious treason of the
+Gowries.
+
+This coincidence evidently created a profound impression. "Curious folks
+observe," wrote Chamberlain to Carleton,[453] "that this deliverance
+happened on the fifth of November, answerable to the fifth of August,
+both Tuesdays; and this plot to be executed by Johnson [the assumed name
+of Faukes], and that at Johnstown [_i.e._, Perth]." On the 27th of
+November, Lake suggested to the Archbishop of Canterbury,[454] that as
+a perpetual memorial of this so providential circumstance, the
+anniversary sermon should always be delivered upon a Tuesday. Two days
+later, the Archbishop wrote to his suffragans,[455] reminding them how
+on a Tuesday his majesty had escaped the Gowries, and now, on another
+Tuesday, a peril still more terrible, which must have ruined the whole
+nation, had not the Holy Ghost illumined the king's heart with a divine
+spirit. In remembrance of which singular instance of God's governance,
+there was to be an annual celebration.[456]
+
+Most important of all, King James himself much appreciated the
+significance of this token of divine protection, and not only impressed
+this upon his Parliament, but proroguing it forthwith till after
+Christmas, selected the same propitious day of the week for its next
+meeting, as a safeguard against possible danger. "Since it has pleased
+God," said his majesty,[457] "to grant me two such notable deliveries
+upon one day of the week, which was Tuesday, and likewise one day of the
+month, which was the fifth, thereby to teach me that as it was the same
+devil that still persecuted me, so it was one and the same God that
+still mightily delivered me, I thought it therefore not amiss, that the
+twenty-first day which fell to be upon Tuesday, should be the day of
+meeting of this next session of parliament, hoping and assuring myself,
+that the same God, who hath now granted me and you all so notable and
+gracious a delivery, shall prosper all our affairs at that next session,
+and bring them to an happy conclusion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whatever may be thought of this particular element of its history, it is
+perfectly clear that the fashion in which the Plot was habitually set
+before the English people, and which contributed more than anything else
+to work the effect actually produced, was characterized from the first
+by an utter disregard of truth on the part of those whose purposes it so
+opportunely served, and with such lasting results.
+
+
+A SUMMARY.
+
+The evidence available to us appears to establish principally two
+points,--that the true history of the Gunpowder Plot is now known to no
+man, and that the history commonly received is certainly untrue.
+
+It is quite impossible to believe that the government were not aware of
+the Plot long before they announced its discovery.
+
+It is difficult to believe that the proceedings of the conspirators were
+actually such as they are related to have been.
+
+It is unquestionable that the government consistently falsified the
+story and the evidence as presented to the world, and that the points
+upon which they most insisted prove upon examination to be the most
+doubtful.
+
+There are grave reasons for the conclusion that the whole transaction
+was dexterously contrived for the purpose which in fact it opportunely
+served, by those who alone reaped benefit from it, and who showed
+themselves so unscrupulous in the manner of reaping.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[423] _Criminal Trials_, ii. I.
+
+[424] _Nugæ Antiquæ_, i. 374.
+
+[425] _Harleian Miscellany_, iv. 249.
+
+[426] This terrible state of things was alleged as a principal reason
+for the prorogation of the Parliament for two months and a half. As a
+matter of fact, the rebels had been overthrown and captured the day
+before that on which the king's speech was delivered, and news of that
+event was received that same evening.
+
+[427] _Commons' Journals._
+
+[428] In the preamble of the Act so passed we read: "Forasmuch as it is
+found by daily experience, that many his Majesty's subjects that adhere
+in their hearts to the popish religion, by the infection drawn from
+thence, and by the wicked and devilish counsel of Jesuits, seminaries,
+and other like persons dangerous to the church and state, are so
+perverted in the point of their loyalties and due allegiance unto the
+King's majesty, and the Crown of England, as they are ready to entertain
+and execute any treasonable conspiracies and practices, as evidently
+appears by that more than barbarous and horrible attempt to have blown
+up with gunpowder the King, Queen ..." etc., etc.
+
+[429] _Negotiations_, p. 256.
+
+[430] "Our parliament is prorogued till the 18th of next November. Many
+things have been considerable in it, but especially the zeal of both
+Houses for the preservation of God's true religion, by establishing many
+good laws against Popery and those firebrands, Jesuits, and Priests,
+that seek to bring all things into confusion. His Majesty resolveth once
+more by proclamation to banish them all; and afterwards, if they shall
+not obey, then the laws shall go upon them without any more
+forbearance."--Cecil to Winwood, June 7th, 1606 (Winwood, _Memorials_,
+ii. 219).
+
+[431] In the _Dictionary of National Biography_, and Doyle's _Official
+Baronage_, this installation is erroneously assigned to 1605.
+
+[432] _Chronicle_, p. 408.
+
+[433] Continuation of Stowe's _Annals_, p. 883.
+
+[434] Letter iii.
+
+[435] At Northumberland's trial Lord Salisbury thus expressed
+himself: "I have taken paines in my nowne heart to clear my lord's
+offences, which now have leade me from the contemplation of his
+virtues; for I knowe him vertuous, wyse, valiaunte, and of use and
+ornamente to the state.... The cause of this combustion was the
+papistes seekinge to restore their religion. Non libens dico, sed res
+ipsa loquitur."--Hawarde, _Les Reportes_, etc.
+
+[436] _History_, vii. 84, note. On this subject Mr. Sawyer, the editor
+of Winwood (1715), has the following remark: "We meet with some account
+of his [Northumberland's] offence, though couched in such tender terms,
+that 'tis a little difficult to conceive it deserved so heavy a
+punishment as a fine of £30,000 and perpetual imprisonment."
+(_Memorials_, iii. 287, note.)
+
+[437] To Winwood, _Memorials_, iii. 287.
+
+[438] _Traditional Memoirs_, p. 214.
+
+[439] _An Answere to certaine Scandalous Papers, scattered abroad under
+colour of a Catholicke Admonition._ "Qui facit vivere, docet orare."
+Imprinted at London by Robert Barker, Printer to the King's most
+Eccellent Majestie. Anno 1606.
+
+This was published in January, 1605-6, on the 28th of which month Sir W.
+Browne, writing from Flushing, mentions that "my lord of Salisbury hath
+lately published a little booke as a kynd of answer to som secrett
+threatning libelling letters cast into his chamber." (Stowe MSS., 168,
+74, f. 308.)
+
+[440] On this subject Cornwallis wrote to Salisbury (Winwood, ii. 193):
+"Many reports are here spread of the Combination against your Lordship,
+and that five English Romanists would resolve your death. It seems that
+since they cannot be allowed _Sacrificium incruentum_, they will now
+altogether put in use their sacrifices of blood. But I hope and suppose
+that their hearts and their hands want much of the vigour that rests in
+their wills and their pens. Your Lordship doth take especial courage in
+this, that they single you out as the chief and principal watch Tower of
+your Country and Commonwealth, and turn the strength of their malice to
+you whom they hold the discoverer of all their unnatural and destructive
+inventions against their prince and country," etc.
+
+[441] P.R.O. _Dom. James I._ xviii. 97, February 27th, N.S., 1606. The
+original, which is in Latin, has been utterly misunderstood by the
+Calendarer of State Papers.
+
+[442] Stonyhurst MSS., _Anglia_, iii. 72.
+
+[443] Thomas Howard, cr. 1603.
+
+[444] To the ambassadors.
+
+[445] Father Blount's account is undoubtedly in keeping with what we
+know of the Earl, and especially of his Countess, who was a sister of
+Sir Thomas Knyvet, the captor of Guy Faukes. Suffolk, in 1614, became
+Lord High Treasurer, but four years afterwards grave irregularities were
+discovered in his office; he was accused of embezzlement and extortion,
+in which work his wife was proved to have been even more active than
+himself. They were sentenced to restore all money wrongfully extorted,
+to a fine of £30,000, and to imprisonment during pleasure.
+
+[446] In this letter all proper names are in cipher, as well as various
+other words.
+
+[447] _Church History_, x. 40.
+
+[448] We have four Latin epigrams of Milton's, _In proditionem
+Bombardicam_, which, though pointless, are bitterly anti-Catholic. A
+longer poem, of 226 lines, _In quintum Novembris_, is still more
+virulent.
+
+It is somewhat remarkable that the universal Shakespeare should make no
+allusion to the Plot, beyond the doubtful reference to equivocation in
+_Macbeth_ (ii. 3). He was at the time of its occurrence in the full flow
+of his dramatic activity.
+
+[449] See Appendix L, _Myths and Legends of the Powder Plot_.
+
+[450] Brit. Mus. Print Room, Crace Collection, portf. xv. 28. This is
+reproduced, as our frontispiece.
+
+[451] There was a new moon at 11.30 p.m. on October 31st.
+
+[452] The reasons assigned in the proclamation for this prorogation are
+plainly insufficient: viz., "That the holding of it [the Parliament] so
+soone is not convenient, as well for that the ordinary course of our
+subjects resorting to the citie for their usuall affaires at the Terme
+is not for the most part till Allhallowtide or thereabouts." Why, then,
+had the meeting been fixed for so unsuitable a date?
+
+[453] November 7th, 1605. (_Dom. James I._)
+
+[454] Tanner MSS. lxxv. 44.
+
+[455] _Ibid._
+
+[456] On his arrival in England, as Osborne tells us (_Memoirs_, p.
+276), King James "brought a new holiday into the Church of England,
+wherein God had publick thanks given him for his majestie's deliverance
+out of the hands of Earle Goury;" but the introduction was not a
+success, Englishmen and Scots alike ridiculing it. Gunpowder Plot Day
+was more fortunate.
+
+[457] _Harleian Miscellany_, iv. 251.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A.
+
+NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+_Frontispiece. The Powder Plot. I._
+
+FROM the Crace Collection, British Museum, _Portf._ xv. 20. Thus
+described in the catalogue of the collection:
+
+"A small etching of the House of Lords. Guy Fawkes in the foreground.
+W.E. exc. 1605."
+
+This plate is of exceptional interest as having been executed within
+five months of the discovery of the Plot, _i.e._, previously to March
+25th, 1606, the first day of the year, Old Style.
+
+Guy Faukes is represented as approaching the House of Commons (St.
+Stephen's Chapel), not the House of Lords, as the catalogue says.
+
+
+_Title-Page._
+
+Obverse, or reverse, of a medal struck, by order of the Dutch senate, to
+commemorate the double event of the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot and
+the expulsion of the Jesuits from Holland. Drawn from a copy of the
+medal in pewter, by Paul Woodroffe. The design here exhibited is thus
+described in Hawkins and Frank's _Medallic Illustrations_:
+
+"The name of Jehovah, in Hebrew, radiate, within a crown of thorns."
+
+"Legend, chronogrammatic,
+
+ Non DorMItastI AntIstes IaCobI"
+
+[which gives the date 1605]
+
+On its other face the medal bears a snake gliding amid roses and lilies
+[symbolizing Jesuit intrigues in England and France], with the legend
+_Detectus qui latuit. S.C._ [Senatus Consulto]."
+
+This is reproduced on the cover.
+
+
+_Group of Conspirators_ (p. 3).
+
+From a print published at Amsterdam.
+
+Eight conspirators are represented, five being omitted, viz., Grant,
+Keyes, Digby, Rokewood, and Tresham.
+
+Bates, as a servant, wears no hat.
+
+
+_The Houses of Parliament in the time of James I._ (pp. 56-7).
+
+Restored from the best authorities, and drawn for the author by H.W.
+Brewer.
+
+
+_Ground Plan of House of Lords and adjacent Buildings_ (p. 59).
+
+Extracted from the "Foundation plan of the Ancient Palace of
+Westminster; measured, drawn and engraved by J. T. Smith" (_Antiquities
+of Westminster_, p. 125)
+
+
+_The House of Lords in 1807_ (p. 61).
+
+From J.T. Smith's _Antiquities of Westminster_.
+
+This sketch, made from the east, or river, side, was taken during the
+demolition of the buildings erected against the sides of the Parliament
+House. These were put up previously to the time when Hollar made his
+drawing of the interior (temp. Charles II.), which shows the walls hung
+with tapestry, the windows having been blocked up.
+
+According to a writer in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ (No. 70, July,
+1800), who signs himself "Architect," in a print of the time of James I.
+the tapestry is not seen, and the House "appears to have preserved much
+of its original work." The only print answering to this description
+which I have been able to find exhibits the windows, but is of no value
+for historical purposes, as it is a reproduction of one of the time of
+Queen Elizabeth, the figure of the sovereign alone being changed. This
+engraving is said to be "taken from a painted print in the Cottonian
+Library," of which I can find no trace. [B. Mus., K. 24. 19. b.]
+
+To the left of our illustration is seen the gable of the Prince's
+Chamber. The door to the right of this opened into the cellar, and by
+it, according to tradition, Faukes was to have made his exit.
+
+In front of this is seen part of the garden attached to Percy's lodging.
+
+
+_Interior of "Guy Faukes' Cellar"_ (p. 71).
+
+Two views of the interior of the "cellar," drawn by H. W. Brewer, from
+elevations in J.T. Smith's _Antiquities of Westminster_, p. 39.
+
+The remains of a buttery-hatch, at the southern end, testify to the
+ancient use of the chamber as the palace kitchen; of which the Earl of
+Northampton made mention at Father Garnet's trial.
+
+The very ancient doorway in the eastern wall, seen on the left of the
+picture, was of Saxon workmanship, and, like the foundations beneath,
+probably dated from the time of Edward the Confessor, who first erected
+this portion of the palace, most of which had been rebuilt about the
+time of Henry III. By this doorway, according to some accounts, Faukes
+intended to escape after firing the train, though others assign this
+distinction to one near the other end.
+
+These two illustrations were originally prepared for the _Daily Graphic_
+of November 5th, 1894, and it is by the courtesy of the proprietors of
+that journal that they are here reproduced.
+
+
+_Vault under the East End of the Painted Chamber_ (p. 73).
+
+From Brayley and Britton's _Palace of Westminster_, p. 247.
+
+This has been constantly depicted and described as "Guy Faukes' Cellar."
+
+
+_Arches from Guy Faukes' Cellar_ (p. 75).
+
+Drawn for the author by H. W. Brewer.
+
+Sir John Soane, who in 1823 took down the old House of Lords, removed
+the arches from the "cellar" beneath it, to his own house in Lincoln's
+Inn Fields, now the Soane Museum, where they are still to be seen in a
+small court adjoining the building. They do not, however, appear to have
+been set up precisely in their original form, being dwarfed by the
+omission of some stones, presumably that they might occupy less space.
+In our illustration they are represented exactly as they now stand,
+with the modern building behind them. Some incongruous relics of other
+stonework which have been introduced amongst them have, however, been
+omitted.
+
+The architecture of these arches, and of the adjacent Prince's Chamber,
+assigns them to the best period of thirteenth century Gothic.
+
+
+_Cell at S.E. corner of Painted Chamber_ (p. 83).
+
+Often styled "Guy Faukes' Cell."
+
+From Brayley and Britton, _op. cit._, p. 360.
+
+There appears to be no reason for associating this with Faukes.
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. II._ (p. 90).
+
+"Invented by Samuel Ward, Preacher, of Ipswich. Imprinted at Amsterdam,
+1621." [British Museum, _Political and Personal Satires_, i. 41.]
+
+This is the portion to the right of a composition representing on the
+left the Spanish Armada, and in the centre a council table at which are
+gathered the Devil, the Pope, the King of Spain, the General of the
+Jesuits, and others. An eye above is fixed on the cellar. Faukes in this
+case is going to blow up the Painted Chamber.
+
+
+_Interior of the old House of Lords (Scene on occasion of the King's
+Speech, 1755)_ (p. 97).
+
+This plate represents the House in the reign of George II. In the
+century and a half since the time of the Powder Plot it is probable that
+the windows in the side walls had been blocked up, and the tapestry
+hung. The latter represented the defeat of the Armada.
+
+[From Maitland's _London_ (1756), ii. 1340.]
+
+
+_Lord Monteagle and the Letter_ (p. 115).
+
+From _Mischeefes Mystery_.
+
+King James enthroned, with crown and sceptre, upon a daïs, at the foot
+of which stands the Earl of Salisbury. An eagle bears a letter in its
+beak, to receive which the king and his minister extend their left
+hands.
+
+The English poem, by John Vicars, embellished with this woodcut, was
+published in 1617, being a much expanded version of one in Latin
+hexameters, entitled _Pietas Pontificia_, by Francis Herring, which
+appeared in 1606.
+
+
+_Arrest of Guy Faukes_ (p. 125).
+
+From _Mischeefes Mystery_.
+
+Guy Faukes booted and spurred, and with his lantern, prepares to open a
+door at the extremity of the Painted Chamber. Sir Thomas Knyvet with his
+retinue approaches unseen. The stars and the beams from the lantern show
+that it is the middle of the night.
+
+
+_Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot_ (p. 136).
+
+From a print in the Guildhall Library.
+
+Catesby, Faukes, and Garnet (the latter in what is apparently meant for
+the Jesuit habit) stand in the middle of the street conspiring
+secretly. Through the open door of the "cellar" the powder barrels are
+seen.
+
+This illustration (without the coins) stands at the head of Book XVIII.
+of M. Rapin de Thoyras' _History of England_, translated by N. Tindal.
+
+
+"_Guy Faukes' Lantern_" (p. 139).
+
+Drawn by H.W. Brewer.
+
+This object, the authenticity of which is not unquestionable, is
+exhibited in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. It bears the inscription,
+"Laterna illa ipsa qua usus est, et cum qua deprehensus Guido Faux in
+crypta subterranea ubi domo Parliamenti difflandæ operam dabat. Ex dono
+Robti Heywood nuper Academiae Procuratoris, Ap. 4^o, 1641."
+
+It will be remembered that the honour of having arrested Faukes has been
+claimed for one of the name of Heywood.
+
+The history of the famous lantern has not escaped the variations which
+we are accustomed to meet with on other points. Faukes is generally said
+to have been found with it in his hands, and it has consequently become
+an inseparable adjunct in pictures of him. On the other hand, we are
+told, "In a corner, behind the door, was a dark lantern containing a
+light" (Brayley and Britton, _Palace of Westminster_, p. 377).
+
+
+_Thomas Percy_ (p. 149).
+
+From Grainger.
+
+Around the portrait are four small engravings representing:
+
+1. The arrest of Guy Faukes, who is here called "Thomas Ichrup."
+
+2. The presentation of Thomas Ichrup to the King of Jerusalem (_i.e._,
+the British Solomon).
+
+3. The assault and bombardment of the "citadel" to which Percy has fled.
+
+4. Percy killed by an arrow.
+
+
+_Thomas Winter's Confession_ (p. 168).
+
+A portion of the copy of Winter's confession, in the handwriting of
+Levinus Munck, Lord Salisbury's private secretary, and dated November
+23rd. In the margin is a note in the handwriting of King James,
+objecting to a certain "uncleare phrase," which has been altered in
+accordance with the royal wish. In the printed version it appears in the
+amended form.
+
+
+_Signatures exemplifying the Effects of Torture_ (p. 173).
+
+Three signatures of Faukes (November 9th, 1605), and three of Father
+Edward Oldcorne (March 6th, 1605-6), at different stages of the same
+examination.
+
+
+_Guy Faukes' Confession of November 9th, 1605_ (p. 199).
+
+A portion of this confession, in which Faukes speaks of the oath taken
+by the conspirators and of their reception of the sacrament at the hands
+of Father John Gerard, adding, however, that "Gerard was not acquainted
+with their purpose." The last clause has been marked for omission by Sir
+Edward Coke who has written in the margin _hucusq._ ("thus far").
+
+The letter B in the margin is also inserted by Coke, who habitually
+indicated by such letters which portions of the depositions were to be
+read in court and which omitted, all being always suppressed which told
+in any way in favour of the accused.
+
+The document is written by a clerk, and signed by Faukes at the foot of
+each page.
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. III._ (p. 215).
+
+This is taken from a large plate [British Museum, _Political and
+Personal Satires_, i. 67], of which only the lower portion is here
+reproduced. At the top is the inscription:
+
+THE POWDER TREASON, Propounded by Sathan, Approved by Anti-Christ,
+Enterprised by Papists, Practized by Traitors, Reveled by an Eagle,
+Expounded by an Oracle.--Founded in Hell, Confounded in Heaven.
+
+Beneath are many emblematical devices.
+
+In the portion here exhibited, King James is seen on his throne with
+Lords and Commons before him. Under the floor is a diminutive figure of
+Faukes with an ample store of barrels. At the bottom, in the left hand
+corner, some of the conspirators receive the sacrament from Father
+Gerard: on the right they are executed. On a lunette are the thirteen
+conspirators, with the arch-traitor Garnet in the centre, the band being
+described as "The Pope's Saltpeeter Saints." Within the lunette are the
+Jesuits in Hell.
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. IV._ (p. 227).
+
+This is the portion on the left of a composite picture [British Museum,
+_Political and Personal Satires_, 63], on the right being represented
+the catastrophe known as the "Blackfriars Downfall." On Sunday, October
+26th, 1623, many Catholics having assembled in an upper room of the
+French ambassador's house, in Blackfriars, to hear a sermon from the
+Jesuit, Father Drury, the floor collapsed, and many, including the
+preacher, were killed. As October 26th, O.S., corresponded to November
+5th, N.S., it was ingeniously discovered that the accident was meant to
+signalize Gunpowder Plot day, though this fell on November 5th, O.S., or
+November 15th, N.S.
+
+In our illustration the Parliament House is represented by a nondescript
+edifice, the wall of which is partially removed, showing King James and
+some of the Peers. An oven-like vault beneath represents the "cellar,"
+well stored with barrels, which Faukes is preparing to light with a
+torch fanned by a crowned fiend with a pair of bellows. A company of
+halberdiers approaches under the guidance of an angel. In the background
+is a royal funeral procession.
+
+A Latin inscription is attached which runs thus:
+
+ "Anno 1623, Quinto Novembris, eo scripto die quo Angliæ
+ Parliamentum, a^o 1605, proditione et insidiis Jesuitarum, pulvere
+ nitreo inflammari et in æthera spargi debuit, Jesuitarum conventus
+ Londini, ... ad missam et conciones audiendas congregatus, fatali
+ providentia, ædium ruina præcipitatus et dissipatus est, oppressis
+ centum et plus totidem vulneratis.
+
+ Loiolides sanctos efflare volebat ad astra;
+ Astra repercutiunt fulmine Loiolidem.
+ Loiolides, sine te penetrabit astra fidelis:
+ Tu fato ad Stygias præcipitaris aquas."
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. V._ (p. 229).
+
+This is an edition of Samuel Ward's print described above, improved and
+embellished by a "Transmariner" in 1689. [British Museum, _Political and
+Personal Satires_, i. 43.]
+
+The tent in which the council table stands is ornamented at the four
+corners with figures of a wolf, a parrot, an owl, and a dragon: a
+cockatrice is on the table; on the top lie a gun, a sword, and a brace
+of pistols. A demon, bearing behind him a Papal Bull, accompanies
+Faukes, beneath whose lantern, as a play on his name, is written _Fax_.
+At the door of the cellar are scorpions and a serpent. On the top of the
+barrels within are seen the "yron barres," placed there to make the
+breach the greater.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B. (p. 33).
+
+_Sir Everard Digby's letter to Salisbury._
+
+
+IT seems to have been always assumed that this celebrated letter, which
+is undated, was written after the failure of the Gunpowder Plot, and the
+consequent arrest of Sir Everard, and doubtless to some extent internal
+evidence supports this view, as the writer speaks of himself as
+deserving punishment, and of "our offence." It is, moreover, clear that
+the letter, which is undated, cannot have been written before May 4th,
+1605, the date of Cecil's earldom. On the other hand, the whole tone of
+the document appears utterly inconsistent with the supposition that it
+was written by one branded with the stigma of such a crime as the
+Powder Plot. Some of the expressions used, especially in the opening
+sentence, appear, likewise, incompatible with such a supposition, and
+the letter bears the usual form of address for those sent in ordinary
+course of post, "To the Right Hon. the Earl of Salisburie give these";
+it has moreover been sealed with a crest or coat-of-arms; all of which
+is quite unlike a document prepared by a prisoner for those who had him
+under lock and key. It is noteworthy, too, that at the trial, according
+to the testimony of the official account itself, on the very subject of
+the treatment of Catholics, Salisbury acknowledged "that Sir E. Digby
+was his ally."
+
+It seems probable, therefore, that the letter was written before Digby
+had been entangled by Catesby in the conspiracy (_i.e._, between May and
+September, 1605). If so, what was the "offence" of which he speaks? The
+answer to this question would throw an interesting light on this
+perplexed history. The following is Sir Everard's letter:
+
+"Right Honourable, I have better reflected on your late speeches than at
+the present I could do, both for the small stay which I made, and for my
+indisposition that day, not being very well, and though perhaps your
+Lordship may judge me peremptory in meddling, and idle in propounding,
+yet the desire I have to establish the King in safety will not suffer me
+to be silent.
+
+"One part of your Lordship's speech (as I remember) was that the King
+could not get so much from the Pope (even then when his Majesty had done
+nothing against Catholics) as a promise that he would not excommunicate
+him, so long as that mild course was continued, wherefore it gave
+occasion to suspect, that if Catholics were suffered to increase, the
+Pope might afterwards proceed to excommunication, if the King would not
+change his religion. But to take away that doubt, I do assure myself
+that his Holiness may be drawn to manifest so contrary a disposition of
+excommunicating the King, that he will proceed with the same course
+against all such as shall go about to disturb the King's quiet and happy
+reign; and the willingness of Catholics, especially of priests and
+Jesuits, is such as I dare undertake to procure any priest in England
+(though it were the Superior of the Jesuits) to go himself to Rome to
+negotiate this business, and that both he and all other religious men
+(till the Pope's pleasure be known) shall take any spiritual course to
+stop the effect that may proceed from any discontented or despairing
+Catholic.
+
+"And I doubt not but his return would bring both assurance that such
+course should not be taken with the King, and that it should be
+performed against any that should seek to disturb him for religion. If
+this were done, there could then be no cause to fear any Catholic, and
+this may be done only with those proceedings (which as I understood your
+lordship) should be used. If your Lordship apprehend it to be worth the
+doing, I shall be glad to be the instrument, for no hope to put off from
+myself any punishment, but only that I wish safety to the King and ease
+to Catholics. If your Lordship and the State think it fit to deal
+severely with Catholics, within brief there will be massacres,
+rebellions, and desperate attempts against the King and State. For it is
+a general received reason amongst Catholics, that there is not that
+expecting and suffering course now to be run that was in the Queen's
+time, who was the last of her line, and last in expectance to run
+violent courses against Catholics; for then it was hoped that the King
+that now is would have been at least free from persecuting, as his
+promise was before his coming into this realm, and as divers his
+promises have been since his coming, saying that he would take no soul
+money nor blood. Also, as it appeared, was the whole body of the
+Council's pleasure, when they sent for divers of the better sort of
+Catholics (as Sir Thos. Tressam and others) and told them it was the
+King's pleasure to forgive the payment of Catholics, so long as they
+should carry themselves dutifully and well. All these promises every man
+sees broken, and to thrust them further in despair, most Catholics take
+note of a vehement book written by Mr. Attorney, whose drift (as I have
+heard) is to prove that the only being a Catholic is to be a traitor,
+which book coming forth, after the breach of so many promises, and
+before the ending of such a violent parliament, can work no less effect
+in men's minds than a belief that every Catholic will be brought within
+that compass before the King and State have done with them. And I know,
+as the priest himself told me, that if he had not hindered there had
+somewhat been attempted, before our offence, to give ease to Catholics.
+But being so safely prevented, and so necessary to avoid, I doubt not
+but your Lordship and the rest of the Lords will think of a more mild
+and undoubted safe course, in which I will undertake the performance of
+what I have promised and as much as can be expected, and when I have
+done, I shall be as willing to die as I am ready to offer my service,
+and expect not nor desire favour for it, either before the doing it, nor
+in the doing it, nor after it is done, but refer myself to the resolved
+course for me. So, leaving to trouble your Lordship any further, I
+humbly take my leave. Your Lordship's poor bedesman, EV. DIGBY."
+
+_Addressed_ "To the Right Honourable the Earl of Salisburie give these."
+
+_Sealed._ [P.R.O. _Dom. James I._ xvii. 10.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C. (p. 34).
+
+_The Question of Succession._
+
+
+FATHER PARSONS' well-known book on this subject, written under the
+pseudonym of Doleman, was denounced by Sir Edward Coke as containing
+innumerable treasons and falsehoods. In fact, as may be seen in the work
+itself, it is an exhaustive and careful statement of the descent of each
+of the possible claimants, and of other considerations which must enter
+into the settlement. Sir Francis Inglefield wrote that it was necessary
+to take some step of this kind, to set men thinking on so important a
+question which would soon have to be decided, for that the anti-Catholic
+party had made it treason to discuss it during the queen's life, with
+intent to foist a successor of their own selection on the nation, when
+the moment should arrive, trusting to the ignorance universally
+prevalent as to the rights of the matter; but that such lack of
+information could not help the people to a sound decision. [Stonyhurst
+MSS., _Anglia_, iii. 32.]
+
+The Spanish sympathies of Parsons and his party were afterwards made
+much of as evidence of their traitorous disposition. On this subject it
+must be noted (1) the Infanta of Spain was amongst those whose claim was
+urged on genealogical grounds; (2) the project was to marry her to an
+English nobleman. As Parsons tells us, when she married and was endowed
+with another estate, English Catholics ceased to think of her. [_Ibid._
+ii. 444.] (3) Father Garnet notes that, "since the old king of Spain
+died [1598], there hath been no pretence ... for the Infanta, or the
+King [of Spain], or any of that family, but for any that should maintain
+Catholic religion, and principally for His Majesty" [James I.]. [_Ibid._
+iii. n. 41.]
+
+A remark of Parsons' on this point, which at the time was considered
+almost blasphemous, will seem now almost a truism, viz., that the title
+of particular succession in kingdoms is founded only upon the positive
+laws of several countries, since neither kingdoms nor monarchies are of
+the essence of human society, and therefore every nation has a right to
+establish its own kings in what manner it likes, and upon what
+conditions. Wherefore, as each of the other great parties in England
+(whom he designates as Protestants and Puritans) will look chiefly to
+its own political interests, and exact from the monarch of its choice
+pledges to secure them, it behoves Catholics, being so large a part of
+the nation, to take their proper share in the settlement, and therefore
+to study betimes the arguments on which the claims of the competitors
+are severally based.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX D. (p. 36).
+
+_The Spanish Treason._
+
+
+THE history of the alleged treasonable negotiations with Spain,
+conducted by various persons whose names were afterwards connected with
+the Gunpowder Plot, appears open to the gravest doubt and suspicion. It
+would be out of place to discuss the question here, but two articles on
+the subject, by the present writer, will be found in the _Month_ for May
+and June, 1896.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX E. (p. 60).
+
+_Site of Percy's lodging_ [_see_ View, p. 56, and Plan, p. 59.]
+
+
+THAT the lodging hired by Percy stood near the south-east corner of the
+old House of Lords (_i.e._ nearer to the river than that building, and
+adjacent to, if not adjoining, the Prince's Chamber) is shown by the
+following arguments.
+
+1. John Shepherd, servant to Whynniard, gave evidence as to having on a
+certain occasion seen from the river "a boat lye cloase to the pale of
+Sir Thomas Parreys garden, and men going to and from the water through
+the back door that leadeth into Mr. Percy his lodging." [_Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, 40, part 2.]
+
+2. Faukes, in his examination of November 5th, 1605, speaks of "the
+windowe in his chamber neere the parliament house towards the water
+side."
+
+3. It is said that when digging their mine the conspirators were
+troubled by the influx of water from the river, which would be
+impossible if they were working at the opposite side of the Parliament
+House.
+
+[It has always been understood that Percy's house stood at the south end
+of the House of Lords, but Smith (_Antiquities of Westminster_, p. 39)
+places it to the south-west instead of the south-east, saying that it
+stood on the site of what was afterwards the Ordnance Office.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX F. (p. 64).
+
+_Enrolment of Conspirators._
+
+
+The evidence on this point is most contradictory.
+
+1. The Indictment, on the trial of the conspirators, mentions the
+following dates.
+
+_May 20th, 1604._ [Besides Garnet, Greenway, Gerard, "and other
+Jesuits,"] there met together T. Winter, Faukes, Keyes, Bates, Catesby,
+Percy, the two Wrights, and Tresham, by whom the Plot was approved and
+undertaken.
+
+_March 31st, 1605_, R. Winter, Grant, and Rokewood were enlisted.
+
+[No mention is made of Digby, who was separately arraigned, nor in his
+arraignment is any date specified.]
+
+2. According to Faukes' confession of November 17th, 1605, Percy,
+Catesby, T. Winter, J. Wright, and himself were the first associates.
+Soon afterwards C. Wright was added. After Christmas, Keyes was
+initiated and received the oath. At a later period, Digby, Rokewood,
+Tresham, Grant, and R. Winter were brought in. Bates is not mentioned.
+
+[In this document the names of Keyes and R. Winter have been
+interchanged, in Cecil's writing, and thus it was printed: the latter
+being made to appear as an earlier confederate.]
+
+3. According to T. Winter's declaration of November 23rd, 1605, Catesby,
+J. Wright, and himself were the first associates, Percy and Faukes being
+presently added. Keyes was enlisted before Michaelmas, C. Wright after
+Christmas, Digby at a later period, and Tresham "last of all." No others
+are mentioned.
+
+4. Keyes--November 30th, 1605--says that he was inducted a little before
+Midsummer, 1604.
+
+5. R. Winter and Grant (January 17th, 1605-6) fix January, 1604-5, for
+their introduction to the conspiracy, and Bates (December 4th, 1605)
+gives the preceding December for his. Neither date agrees with that of
+the indictment in support of which these confessions were cited.
+
+6. There is, of course, no evidence of any kind to show that Father
+Garnet and the "other Jesuits" ever had any conference with the
+conspirators, nor was such a charge urged on his trial.
+
+7. Sir Everard Digby's case is exceptionally puzzling. All the evidence
+represents him as having been initiated late in September, or early in
+October, 1605. Among the Hatfield MSS., however, there is a letter
+addressed to Sir Everard, by one G. D., and dated June 11th, 1605,
+which treats ostensibly of a hunt for "the otter that infesteth your
+brooks," to be undertaken when the hay has been cut, but has been
+endorsed by Cecil himself, "Letter written to Sir Everard Digby--_Powder
+Treason_;" the minister thus attributing to him a knowledge of the Plot,
+more than three months before it was ever alleged that he heard of it.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX G. (p. 94).
+
+_Henry Wright the Informer._
+
+
+1. _Letter to Sir T. Challoner, April, 1604._ [_Gunpowder Plot Book_, n.
+236.]
+
+Good Sir Thomas, I am as eager for setting of the lodgings as you can
+be, and in truth whereas we desired but twenty, the discoverer had set
+and (if we accept it) can set above three score, but I told him that the
+State would take it for good service if he set twenty of the most
+principal Jesuits and seminary priests, and therewithal I gave him
+thirteen or fourteen names picked out of his own notes, among the which
+five of them were sworn to the secresy. He saith absolutely that by
+God's grace he will do it ere long, but he stayeth some few days
+purposely for the coming to town of Tesmond [Greenway] and Kempe, two
+principals; their lodgings are prepared, and they will be here, as he
+saith for certain, within these two days. For the treason, Davies
+neither hath nor will unfold himself for the discovery of it till he
+hath his pardon for it under seal, as I told you, which is now in great
+forwardness, and ready to be sealed so that you shall know all.... Your
+worship's most devoted,
+
+HEN. WRIGHT.
+
+[A pardon to Joseph Davies for all treasons and other offences appears
+on the Pardon Roll, April 25th, 1605, thus supplying the approximate
+date of the above letter.]
+
+2. _Application to the King._ [_Gunpowder Plot Book_, n. 237.]
+
+"If it may please your Majesty, can you remember that the Lord Chief
+Justice Popham and Sir Thomas Challoner, Kt., had a hand in the
+discovery of the practices of the Jesuits in the powder, and did from
+time reveal the same to your Majesty, for two years' space almost before
+the said treason burst forth by an obscure letter to the Lord
+Mounteagle, which your Majesty, like an angel of God, interpreted,
+touching the blow, then intended to have been given by powder. The man
+that informed Sir Thomas Challoner and the Lord Popham of the said
+Jesuitical practices, their meetings and traitorous designs in that
+matter, whereof from time to time they informed your Majesty, was one
+Wright, who hath your Majesty's hand for his so doing, and never
+received any reward for his pains and charges laid out concerning the
+same. This Wright, if occasion serve, can do more service."
+
+[_Addressed_, "Mr. Secretary Conway."
+
+_Headed_, "Touching Wright and his services performed in the damnable
+plot of the Powder treason."]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX H. (p. 119).
+
+_Lord Monteagle to King James_, (British Museum MSS. Add. 19402, f.
+146.)
+
+
+"MOST gracious Soveraine.--Your maiestyes tender and fatherly love over
+me, In admonishinge me heartofore, to seake resolution In matter of
+religion, geves me both occasion, and Incouragement, as humbly to thanke
+your maiestye for this care of my soules good, so to crave leave of
+gevinge into your maiestyes hand this accompt, that your wisdome, seinge
+the course and end of my proceadinges, might rest assured that by the
+healp of god, I will [live and] dye, In that religion which I have nowe
+resolved to profes.
+
+"It may please your maiestye therfore to knowe, that as I was breed upp
+In the Romish religion and walked in that, because I knew no better, so
+have I not sodainely or lightly made the chaunge, which nowe I desire to
+be seane In, for I speake, Sir, as before him that shall Judg my soule,
+I have by praier, for god his gidance, and with voues to him, to walk in
+that light he should shew me, and by longe carefull and diligent
+readinge, and conference with lerned men, on both sides, and impartiall
+examination of ther profes and argumentes, come to discerne the
+Ignorance I was formerly wrapped In, as I nowe wonder that ether my
+self, or any other of common understandinge, showld bee so blynded, as
+to Imbrace that gods trewth, [_sic_] which I nowe perseyue to be
+grounded uppon so weake foundations. And as I never could digest all
+poyntes therin, wherof not few seamed to bee made for gaine and
+ambition, of the papacye, so nowe I fynde that the hole frame and bodye
+of that religion (wherin they oppose us) difereth from the platforme,
+which god him self hath recorded In the holy scriptures, and hath In
+length of tyme, by the Ignorance and deceiptfulness of men, bene peaced
+together, and is now maintayned by factious obstinacye, and certain
+coulerable pretences, such as the wittes and learninge of men, are able
+to cast uppon any humaine errors, which they list to uphowld. Nether
+have I left any thinge I doubted of untried or unresolued, becawse I did
+Intend and desire to so take up the trewth of god, once discouered to
+me, as neuer to suffer yt to bee questioned any more In my owne
+consienc. And In all this, Sir, I protest to your maiestye, before
+almightye god, I have simply and only propounded to my self the trew
+seruise of god, and saluation of my owne soule, Not gaine, not honor, no
+not that which I doe most highly valew, your maiestyes fauour, or better
+opinion of me. Nether on the other side am I affraide of those censures
+of men whether of the partye I have abandoned, or of others which I
+shall Incur by this alteration, howldinge yt contentment Innough to my
+self, That god hath in mercye enlightened my mynde to see his sacred
+trewth, with desire to serue [the paper here is mutilated].... And rest,
+your maie[styes] most loyall and obedient servant W. Mownteagle."
+
+_Addressed_, "To the Kinge his most excellent Maiestye."
+
+From the absence of any allusion to the Powder Plot and its "discovery,"
+it appears certain that this letter must have been written previously to
+it.
+
+On August 1st, 1609, Sir Wm. Waad wrote to Salisbury that the disorders
+of Lord Monteagle's house were an offence to the country. At this period
+he appears to have been suspected of concealing Catholic students from
+St. Omers. [_Calendar of State Papers._]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX I. (p. 140).
+
+_Epitaph in St. Anne's, Aldersgate._ [Maitland, London (1756), p. 1065.]
+
+
+"_Peter Heiwood_, younger son of _Peter Heiwood_, one of the Counsellors
+of _Jamaica_, ... Great Grandson to _Peter Heiwood_ of _Heywood_ in the
+County Palestine of _Lancaster_; who apprehended _Guy Faux_ with his
+dark Lanthorn; and for his zealous prosecution of Papists, as Justice of
+Peace, was stabbed in _Westminster-Hall_ by _John James_, a _Dominican_
+Friar, An. Dom. 1640. Obiit _Novem. 2. 1701_.
+
+ Reader, if not a Papist bred
+ Upon such Ashes gently tread."
+
+It is to be presumed that the person who died in 1701 is not the same
+who was stabbed in 1640, or who discovered Guy Faukes in 1605.
+
+The Dominican records contain no trace of any member of the Order named
+John James, nor does so remarkable an event as the stabbing of a Justice
+of Peace in Westminster Hall appear to be chronicled elsewhere.
+
+Peter Heywood, J.P. for Westminster, was active as a magistrate as late
+as December 15th, 1641. [_Calendar of State Papers._]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX K. (p. 173).
+
+_The Use of Torture._
+
+
+THERE can be no doubt that torture was freely employed to extract
+evidence from the conspirators and others who fell into the hands of the
+government.
+
+The Earl of Salisbury, in his letter to Favat, of December 4th, 1605,
+clearly intimates that this was the case, when he complains "most of the
+prisoners have wilfully forsworn that the priests knew anything in
+particular, and obstinately refuse to be accusers of them, _yea, what
+torture soever they be put to_."
+
+About the middle of November, Lord Dunfermline wrote to Salisbury [_Dom.
+James I._ xvi. 81] recommending that the prisoners should be confined
+apart and in darkness, that they should be examined by torchlight, and
+that the tortures should be slow and at intervals, as being thus most
+effectual.
+
+There is every reason to believe that the Jesuit lay-brother, Nicholas
+Owen, _alias_ Littlejohn, actually died upon the rack. [_Vide_ Father
+Gerard's _Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot_, p. 189.]
+
+Finally we have the king's instructions as to Faukes [_Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, No. 17]. "The gentler tortours are to be first usid unto him, _et
+sic per gradus ad ima tenditur_,[458] and so God speede your goode
+worke."[459] Guy's signature of November 9th is sufficient evidence that
+it was none of the "gentler tortours" which he had endured.
+
+In the violently Protestant account of the execution of the
+traitors,[460] we read: "Last of all came the great Devil of all Faukes,
+who should have put fire to the powder. His body being weak with torture
+and sickness, he was scarce able to go up the ladder, but with much ado,
+by the help of the hangman, went high enough to brake his neck with the
+fall."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX L. (p. 227).
+
+_Myths and Legends of the Powder Plot._
+
+
+AROUND the Gunpowder Plot has gathered a mass of fabulous embellishment
+too curious to be passed over in silence. This has chiefly attached
+itself to Guy Faukes, who, on account of the desperate part allotted to
+him has impressed the public mind far more than any of his associates,
+and has come to be erroneously regarded as the moving spirit of the
+enterprise.
+
+One of the best authenticated facts regarding him is that when
+apprehended he was booted and spurred for a journey, though it is
+usually said that he was to have travelled by water.
+
+There is, however, a strange story, told with much circumstantiality,
+which gives an elaborate but incomprehensible account of a tragic
+underplot in connection with him. This is related at considerable length
+in a Latin hexameter poem, _Venatio Catholica_, published in 1609, in
+the _History of the Popish Sham Plots_, and elsewhere. According to this
+tangled tale the other conspirators wished both to get rid of Faukes,
+when he had served their purpose, and to throw the suspicion of their
+deed upon their enemies, the Puritans. To this end they devised a
+notable scheme. A certain Puritan, named Pickering, a courtier, but a
+godly man, foremost amongst his party, had a fine horse ("Bucephalum
+egregium"). This, Robert Keyes, his brother-in-law, purchased or hired,
+and placed at the service of Faukes for his escape. The steed was to
+await him at a certain spot, but in a wood hard by assassins were to
+lurk, who, when Guy appeared, should murder him, and having secured the
+money with which he was furnished, should leave his mangled corpse
+beside the Bucephalus, known as Mr. Pickering's. Thus Faukes would be
+able to tell no tales, and--though it does not appear why--suspicion
+would be sure to fall on the Puritan, and he would be proclaimed as the
+author of the recent catastrophe.
+
+ "Hoc astu se posse rati convertere in hostes
+ Flagitii infamiam, causamque capessere vulgo
+ Qua Puritanos invisos reddere possent,
+ Ut tantæ authores, tam immanis proditionis.
+ Cognito equo, et facta (pro more) indagine cædis,
+ Aulicus hic sceleris tanquam fabricator atrocis
+ Proclamandus erat, Falso (ne vera referre
+ Et socios sceleris funesti prodere possit)
+ Sublato."
+
+Many curious circumstances have likewise been imported into the history,
+and many places connected with it which appear to have no claim whatever
+to such a distinction.
+
+Thus we hear (_England's Warning Peece_) that the Jesuit Cresswell came
+over from Spain for the occasion "to bear his part with the rest of his
+society in a victorial song of thanksgiving." Also that on November 5th,
+a large body of confederates assembled at Hampstead to see the House of
+Parliament go up in the air.
+
+In the _Gentleman's Magazine_, February, 1783, is a remarkable
+description of a summer house, in a garden at Newton Hall, near
+Kettering, Northamptonshire, in which the plotters used to meet and
+conspire, the place then belonging to the Treshams; "and for greater
+security, they placed a conspirator at each window, Guy Faukes, the arch
+villain, standing in the doorway, to prevent anybody overhearing them."
+
+According to a wide-spread belief Guy Faukes was a Spaniard.[461] He has
+also been called a Londoner, and his name being altered to Vaux, has
+been said to have a family connection with Vauxhall. He was in fact a
+Yorkshireman of good family, though belonging to a younger branch of no
+great estate. His father, Edward Faukes, was a notary at York, where he
+held the office of registrar and advocate of the cathedral church. Guy
+himself was an educated man, more than commonly well read. He is always
+described in the process as "Guido Faukes, Gentleman."
+
+Another most extraordinary example of an obvious myth, which was
+nevertheless treated as sober history, is furnished by the absurd
+statement that the astute and wily Jesuits not only contrived the Plot,
+but published its details to the world long before its attempted
+execution, in order to vindicate to themselves the credit of so glorious
+a design. Thus Bishop Kennet, in a fifth of November sermon, preached at
+St. Paul's before the Lord Mayor, in 1715, tells us:[462]
+
+"It was a general surmise at least among the whole Order of Jesuits in
+foreign parts: or else one of them could hardly have stated the case so
+exactly some four or five years before it broke out. Father Del-Rio, in
+a treatise printed An. 1600, put the case, as if he had already looked
+into the Mine and Cellars, and had surveyed the barrels of powder in
+them, and had heard the whole confessions of Faux and Catesby."
+
+This "general surmise" does not appear to have been confined to the
+Jesuits themselves. Another ingenious writer, nearly a century
+earlier,[463] tells a wonderful story concerning the sermon of a
+Dominican, preached in the same year, 1600, wherein it was related how
+there was a special hell, beneath the other, for Jesuits, so thick and
+fast did they arrive as to need extra accommodation. The preacher avowed
+that he had, in his vision of the place, given warning to the demon in
+charge of it, "to search them with speed, for fear that they had
+conveyed hither some gunpowder with them, for they are very skilfull in
+Mine-workes, and in blowing up of whole States and Parliament-houses,
+and if they can blow you all up, then the Spanyards will come and take
+your kingdom from you."
+
+Another notable specimen of the way in which reason and probability were
+cast to the winds is afforded by two letters written from Naples in
+1610, one to King James and the other to Salisbury, by Sir Edwin
+Rich,[464] who announced that Father Greenway--who of all the Jesuits
+was said to be most clearly convicted as a traitor--intended to send to
+the king a present of an embroidered satin doublet and hose, which,
+being craftily poisoned, would be death to him if he put them on.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[458] "And so by degrees to the uttermost."
+
+[459] These instructions furnish an interesting specimen of the king's
+broad Scotch, _e.g._, "Quhat Gentlewomans Letter it was y^t was founde
+upon him, and quhairfor doth she give him an other Name in it y^n he
+giues to himself. If he was ever a papiste; and if so, quho brocht him
+up in it. If otherwayes, hou was he convertid, quhair, quhan, and by
+quhom."
+
+The following passage is very characteristic of the writer:
+
+"Nou last, ye remember of the crewellie villanouse pasquille y^t rayled
+upon me for y^e name of Brittanie. If I remember richt it spake
+something of harvest and prophecyed my destructi[=o] about y^t tyme. Ye
+may think of y^s, for it is lyke to be by y^e Laboure of such a
+desperate fellow as y^s is."
+
+[460] _The Arraignment and execution of the late traitors_, etc., 1606.
+
+[461] See, for instance, _London and the Kingdom_ (mainly from the
+Guildhall Archives), by Reginald R. Sharpe, ii. 13.
+
+[462] P. 9.
+
+[463] Lewis Owen, _Unmasking of all popish Monks_, etc. (1628), p. 49.
+
+[464] _Dom. James I._ lvii. 92-93, October 5th.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX M.
+
+_Sir William Waad's Memorial Inscriptions._
+
+
+IN a room of the Queen's House in the Tower, in which the conspirators
+are supposed to have been examined by the Lords of the Council, Sir
+William Waad has left a series of inscriptions as memorials of the
+events in which he played so large a part. Of these the most noteworthy
+are the following:
+
+I.
+
+ Jacobus Magnus, Magnæ Britanniæ
+ rex, pietate, justitia, prudentia, doctrina, fortitudine,
+ clementia, ceterisq. virtutibus regiis clariss'; Christianæ
+ fidei, salutis publicæ, pacis universalis propugnator, fautor
+ auctor acerrimus, augustiss', auspicatiss'.
+ Anna Regina Frederici 2. Danorum Regis invictiss' filia sereniss^a,
+ Henricus princeps, naturæ ornamentis, doctrinæ præsidiis, gratiæ
+ Muneribus, instructiss', nobis et natus et a deo datus,
+ Carolus dux Eboracensis divina ad omnem virtutem indole,[465]
+ Elizabetha utriusq. soror Germana, utroque parente dignissima
+ Hos velut pupillam oculi tenellam
+ providus muni, procul impiorum
+ impetu alarum tuarum intrepidos
+ conde sub umbra.
+
+[This is evidently intended for a Sapphic stanza, but the last two words
+of v. 3 have been transposed, destroying the metre.]
+
+II.
+
+ Robertus Cecil, Comes Sarisburiensis, summus et regis
+ Secretarius, et Angliæ thesaurarius, clariss' patris
+ et de repub. meritissimi filius, in paterna munera
+ successor longe dignissimus;
+ Henricus, comes Northamptoniæ, quinq. portuum præfectus et
+ privati sigilli custos, disertorum litteratissimus, litteratorum
+ disertissimus;
+ Carolus comes Nottingamiæ, magnus Angliæ admirallus
+ victoriosus;
+ Thomas Suffolciæ comes, regis camerarius splendidissimus,
+ tres viri nobilissimi ex antiqua Howardorum familia, ducumq.
+ Norfolciæ prosapia;
+ Edwardus Somersetus, comes Wigorniæ, equis regiis præfectus
+ ornatissimus;
+ Carolus Blunt, comes Devoniæ, Hyberniæ prorex et pacificator,
+ Joannes Areskinus,[466] illustris Marriæ comes, præcipuarum in
+ Scotia arcium præfectus;
+ Georgius Humius, Dunbari comes, Scotiæ thesaurarius
+ prudentiss'
+ omnes illustriss' ordinis garteri milites;
+ Joannes Popham, miles, justiciarius Angliæ capitalis,
+ et justitiæ consultissimus:
+
+ Hi omnes illustrissimi viri, quorum nomina ad sempiternam eorum
+ memoriam posteritati consecrandam proxime supra ad lineam posita
+ sunt, ut regi a consiliis, ita ab eo delegati quæsitores, reis
+ singulis incredibili diligentia ac cura sæpius appellatis, nec
+ minore solertia et dexteritate pertentatis eorum animis, eos suis
+ ipsorum inter se collatis responsionibus convictos, ad voluntariam
+ confessionem adegerunt: et latentem nefarie conjurationis seriem,
+ remq. omnem ut hactenus gesta et porro per eos gerenda esset, summa
+ fide erutam, æterna cum laude sua, in lucem produxerunt, adeo ut
+ divina singulari providentia effectum sit, ut tam præsens, tamq.
+ f[oe]da tempestas, a regia majestate, liberisq. regiis, et omni
+ regno depulsa, in ipsos autores eorumq. socios redundarit.
+
+III.
+
+Conjuratorum Nomina, ad perpetuam ipsorum infamiam et tantæ diritatis
+detestationem sempiternam.
+
+ Thomas Winter Thomas Percy
+ Robert Winter Robert Catesby
+ _Monachi_ { Henry Garnet John Winter John Wright
+ _salutare_ { John Gerrard Guy Fawkes Christopher Wright
+ _Jesu_ { Oswald Tesmond Thomas Bates Francis Tresham
+ _nom[=e]_ { Ham[=o] Everard Digby, K. Thomas Abbington
+ _ementiti_ { Baldw[=i] Am' Rookewood Edmond Baineham, K.
+ John Graunt William Stanley, K.
+ Robert Keyes Hughe Owen.
+ Henry Morg[=a]
+
+IV.
+
+Besides the above there is a prolix description of the Plot, devised
+against the best of sovereigns, "a Jesuitis Romanensibus, perfidiæ
+Catholicæ et impietatis viperinæ autoribus et assertoribus, aliisq.
+ejusdem amentiæ scelerisq. patratoribus et sociis susceptæ, et in ipso
+pestis derepente inferendæ articulo (salutis anno 1605, mensis Novembris
+die quinto), tam præter spem quam supra fidem mirifice et divinitus
+detectæ."
+
+There is, moreover, a sentence in Hebrew, with Waad's cipher beneath,
+and a number of what seem to be meant for verses. The following lines
+are evidently the Lieutenant's description of his own office:
+
+ "Custodis Custos sum, Carcer Carceris, arcis
+ Arx, atque Argu' Argus; sum speculæ specula;
+ Sum vinclum in vinclis; compes cum compede, clav[=u]
+ Firmo hærens, teneo tentus, habens habeor.
+ Dum regi regnoq. salus stet firma quieta,
+ Splendida sim Compes Compedis usque licet."
+
+This is considerably more metrical and intelligible than some of the
+rest.
+
+In 1613 Waad was dismissed from his post, one of the charges against him
+being that he had embezzled the jewels of Arabella Stuart.[467]
+
+In Theobald's _Memoirs of Sir Walter Raleigh_ (p. 16), Waad is described
+as "the Lieutenant of the Tower, and Cecil's great Creature."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[464] _Dom. James I._ lvii. 92-93, October 5th.
+
+[465] At the time of the Plot Charles was not quite five years old.
+
+[466] Erskine.
+
+[467] _Dom. James I._ lxxii. 129.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX N.
+
+THE PUBLISHED CONFESSION OF GUY FAUKES. A.
+
+
+_The draft, November 8th, 1605_ (G.P.B. 49).
+
+*** Passages between square brackets have been cancelled. Those marked *
+have been ticked off for omission.
+
+
+_The Confession of Guy Fawkes, taken the 8 of November, 1605._
+
+HE confesseth that a Practise in generall was first broken unto him,
+agaynst his Majesty, for the Catholique cause, and not invented or
+propounded by himself, and this was first propounded unto him about
+Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the seas in the Low countreyes, by
+an English Lay-man, and that English man came over with him in his
+company into England, and they tow and three more weare the first five
+mencioned in the former examination. And they five resolving to do some
+thinge for the Catholick cause,--a vowe being first taken by all of them
+for secrecye,--one of the other three propounded to perform it with
+Powder, and resolved that the place should be,--where this action should
+be performed and justice done,--in or neere the place of the sitting of
+the Parliament, wherein Religion had been uniustly suppressed. This
+beeinge resolved the manner [of it] was as followeth.
+
+
+THE PUBLISHED CONFESSION OF GUY FAUKES. B.
+
+_As signed by Faukes, November 17th, 1605_ (G.P.B. 101).
+
+*** Square brackets indicate an erasure. Italics an addition or
+substitution.
+
+The [deposition] _declaration_ of Guy Fawkes prisonner in the Tower of
+London _taken the 17 of Nov. 1605, acknowledged before the Lords
+Commissioners._[468]
+
+
+_A._ I confesse that a practise in generall was first broken unto me
+against his Majestie, for releife of the Catholique cause, and not
+invented or propounded by my self.
+
+And this was first propounded unto me about Easter last was twelvemonth,
+beyond the Seas, in the Low countries of the Archdukes obeysance by
+Thomas Wynter, who came thereupon with me into England, and there wee
+imparted our purpose to three other Englishmen more, namely Rob^t
+Catesby, Tho^s Percy, and John Wright, who all five consulting together
+of the meanes how to execute the same, and taking a vowe among our
+selves for secresie Catesby propounded to have it performed by
+Gunpowder, and by making a myne under the upper house of Parliament,
+which place wee made choice of the rather,
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+First they hyred the Howse at Westminster of one Ferris,[469] and
+havinge the howse they sought to make a myne under the upper howse of
+Parliament, and they begann to make the myne in or about the xi of
+December, and they five first entered into the worke, and soone after
+toke an other unto them, havinge first sworne him and taken the
+Sacrament, for secrecye. And when they came to the wall,--that was about
+three yards thicke,--and found it a matter of great difficultie, they
+tooke to them an other in like manner, with oath and Sacrament as afore
+sayd. All which seaven, were gentlemen of name and bloode, and not any
+man was employed in or about that action,--noe not so much as in
+digginge and myning that was not a gentleman. And having wrought to the
+wall before Christmas, they reasted untill after the holydayes, and the
+day before Christmas,--having a masse of earth that came out of the
+myne,--they carryed it into the Garden of the said Howse, and after
+Christmas they wrought on the wall till Candlemas, and wrought the wall
+half through, and sayeth that all the tyme while the others wrought he
+stood as Sentynell to descrie any man that came neere, and when any man
+came neere to the place, uppon warninge given by him they rested untill
+they had notyce to proceed from hym, and sayeth that they seaven all lay
+in the Howse, and had shott and powder, and they all resolved to dye in
+that place before they yeilded or weare taken.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+because Religion having been unjustly suppressed there, it was fittest
+that Justice and punishment should be executed there.
+
+_B._ This being resolved amongst us, Thomas Percy hired a howse at
+Westminster for that purpose, neare adjoyning the Parl^t howse, and
+there wee beganne to make a myne about the xi of December 1604. The fyve
+that entered into the woorck were Thomas Percye, Robert Catesby, Thomas
+Wynter, John Wright, and my self, and soon after we tooke another unto
+us, Christopher Wright, having sworn him also, and taken the Sacrament
+for secrecie.
+
+_C._ When wee came to the verie foundation of the Wall of the house,
+which was about 3 yeards thick, and found it a matter of great
+difficultie, we took to us another gentleman Robert [Wynter] _Keys_[470]
+in like manner with our oathe and Sacrament as aforesaid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_D._ It was about Christmas when wee brought our myne unto the Wall, and
+about Candlemas we had wrought the Wall half through. And whilst they
+were a working, I stood as sentinell, to descrie any man that came
+neare, whereof I gave them warning, and so they ceased untill I gave
+them notice agayne to proceede. All wee seaven lay in the house, and had
+shott and powder, being resolved to dye in that place before we should
+yeild or be taken.
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+And as they weare workinge, they heard a rushinge in the cellar which
+grew by _one_[471] Brights selling of his coles whereuppon this
+Examinant, fearinge they had been discovered, went into the cellar and
+viewed the cellar, and perceivinge the commoditye thereof for their
+purposs, and understandinge how it would be letten his maister, M^r
+Percy, hyred the Cellar for a yeare, for 4 pounds rent. And confesseth
+that after Christmas 20^{ty} barrells of Powder weare brought by
+themselves to a Howse which they had on the Banksyde in Hampers, and
+from that Howse removed the powder to the sayd Howse, neere the upper
+Howse of Parliament. And presently upon hyringe the cellar, they
+themselfs removed the powder into the cellar, and couvered the same with
+faggots which they had before layd into the sellar.
+
+After, about Easter, he went into the Low Countryes,--as he before hath
+declared in his former examination,--and that the trew purpos of his
+goinge over was least beinge a dangerous man he should be known and
+suspected, and in the meane tyme he left the key [of the cellar] with
+M^r Percye, whoe in his absence caused more Billetts to be layd into the
+Cellar, as in his former examination he confessed, and retourned about
+the end of August or the beginninge of September, and went agayne to the
+sayd howse, nere to the sayd cellar, and received the key of the cellar
+agayne of one of the five. And then they brought in five or six barrells
+of powder more into the cellar, which all soe they couvered with
+billetts, saving fower little barrells covered with ffaggots, and then
+this examinant went into the Country about the end of September.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+_E._ As they were working upon the wall, they heard a rushing in a
+cellar of removing of coles; whereupon wee feared wee had been
+discovered, and they sent me to go to the cellar, who fynding that the
+coles were a selling, and that the Cellar was to be lett, viewing the
+commoditye thereof for our purpose, Percy went and hired the same for
+yearly Rent.
+
+Wee had before this provyded and brought into the house 20 barrells of
+Powder, which wee removed into the Cellar, and covered the same with
+billets and fagots, which we provided for that purpose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_F._ About Easter, the Parliament being proroged tyll October next, wee
+dispersed our selfs and I retired into the Low countryes, _by advice and
+direction of the rest, as well to acquaint Owen with the particulars of
+the plot, as also_[472] lest by my longer staye I might have grown
+suspicious, and so have come in question.
+
+In the meane tyme Percy, having the key of the Cellar, layd in more
+powder and wood into it.
+
+I returned about the beginning of September next and then receyving the
+key againe of Percy, we brought in more powder and billets to cover the
+same againe.
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+* It appeareth the powder was in the cellar, placed as it was found the
+5 of November, when the Lords came to proroge the Parliament, and sayeth
+that he returned agayne to the sayd Howse neare the cellar on Wednesday
+the 30 of October.
+
+[He confesseth he was at the Erle of Montgomeryes marriage, but as he
+sayeth with noe intention of evill, havinge a sword about him, and was
+very neere to his Majesty and the Lords there present.]
+
+Forasmuch as they knew not well how they should come by the person of
+the Duke Charles, beeinge neere London, where they had no forces,--if he
+had not been all soe blowne upp,--He confesseth that it was resolved
+amonge them, that the same day that this detestable act should have been
+performed, the same day should other of their confederacye have
+surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth, and presently have
+proclaimed her queen [to which purpose a Proclamation was drawne, as
+well to avowe and justify the Action, as to have protested against the
+Union, and in no sort to have meddeled with Religion therein. And would
+have protested all soe agaynst all strangers] and this proclamation
+should have been made in the name of the Lady Elizabeth.
+
+* Beinge demanded why they did not surprise the Kinges person and draw
+him to the effectinge of their purpose, sayeth that soe many must have
+been acquaynted with such an action as it could not have been kept
+secrett.
+
+He confesseth that if their purpose had taken effect untill they had
+power enough they would not have avowed the deed to be theirs; but if
+their power,--for their defence and safetye,--had been sufficient they
+themselfes would have taken it upon them.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+And so [I] went for a tyme into the country, till the 30 of October.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_G._ It was farther resolved amongst us that the same day that this
+action should have been performed some other of our confederates should
+have surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth the Kings eldest
+daughter, who was kept in Warwickshire at the Lo. Harringtons house, and
+presently have proclaimed her for Queene, having a project of a
+Proclamation ready for the purpose, wherein we made no mention of
+altering of Religion,----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+---- nor would have avowed the deed to be ours untill we should have had
+power enough to make our partie good, and then we would have avowed
+both.
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+* They meant all soe to have sent for the Prisoners in the Tower to have
+come to them, of whom particularly they had some consultation.
+
+* He confesseth that the place of Rendez-vous was in Warwickshire, and
+that armour was sent thither, but the particuler thereof he knowes not.
+
+He confesseth that they had consultation for the takinge of the Lady
+Marye into their possession, but knew not how to come by her.
+
+And confesseth that provision was made by some of the conspiracye of
+some armour of proofe this last Summer for this Action.
+
+* He confesseth that the powder was bought of the common Purse of the
+Confederates.
+
+ L. Admyrall }
+ L. Chamberlayne }
+ Erle of Devonshire } attended by M^r
+ Erle of Northampton } Attorney generall.
+ Erle of Salisbury }
+ Erle of Marr }
+ L. cheif Justice }
+
+[_Endorsed_] Examination of Guy Fauks, Nov^r 8th, 1605.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+_H._ Concerning Duke Charles, the Kings second son, we hadd sundrie
+consultations how to sease on his person, but because wee found no
+meanes how to compasse it,--the Duke being kept near London,--where we
+had not forces enough, wee resolved to serve ourselves with the Lady
+Elizabeth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_J._ The names of other principall persons that were made privie
+afterwards to this horrible conspiracie.
+
+ [_Signed_] GUIDO FAUKES.
+
+ Everard Digby, Knight
+ Ambrose Ruckwood
+ Francis Tresham
+ John Grant
+ Robert [Keys] _Wynter_
+
+ [_Witnessed_] Edw. Coke W. Waad.
+
+ [_Endorsed_] Fawkes his [deposition] _declaration 17 Nov.
+ 1605_.[473]
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[468] Alterations and additions (in italics) made by Sir Edward Coke.
+
+[469] This name has seemingly been tampered with.
+
+[470] Changed by Cecil; but on November 14th, writing to Edmondes, he
+included Keyes amongst those that "wrought not in the myne," and R.
+Winter amongst those who did.
+
+[471] Interlined.
+
+[472] The words italicised are added in the published version.
+
+[473] Words in italics added by Coke.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ Abbot, Robert, Bishop of Salisbury, his version of the missing
+ confessions of Faukes, 192 _seq._
+
+ Acton, Robert, 113.
+
+ Alabaster, Thomas, a priest in government employ, 204 _note_.
+
+ Andrew, William, servant to Sir E. Digby, evidence of, 78 _note_.
+
+ _Annals of England_, cited, 48.
+
+ _Answere to Scandalous papers_ (Cecil's manifesto), 44, 219 _seq._
+
+
+ Babington's Plot, 14.
+
+ Baldwin, Father William, S.J.; allegations against him, 185, 187
+ _seq._; which are not substantiated, 195; correspondence with Father
+ Schondonck, 201, 222.
+
+ Bancroft, Richard, Archbishop of Canterbury, 46, 147.
+
+ Barlow, Thomas, Bishop of Lincoln, 62, 70 _note_.
+
+ Barnes, a government agent, 112.
+
+ Bartlett, George, servant to Catesby, his evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Bates, Thomas, servant to Catesby, his introduction to the
+ Conspiracy, 3, 178; his alleged evidence against Greenway, 178-183;
+ trial and execution, 6. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Batty, Matthew, evidence regarding Monteagle, 78 _note_.
+
+ "Blackfriars Downfall," the, 242.
+
+ Blount, Father Richard, S.J., on government intelligence, 77; on
+ Suffolk's proposal of toleration, 224; on Cecil's "new stratagem,"
+ 224, 225.
+
+ Brayley and Britton (_Palace of Westminster_), 79 _note_.
+
+ Brewer, Rev. John Sherren, on the fate of Parry, the conspirator,
+ 14; on government devices, 15; on Cecil's knowledge of the Plot, 48;
+ on the Monteagle letter, 117.
+
+ Bromley, Sir Henry, Sheriff of Worcestershire, 167 _note_.
+
+ Buck, Mr., alleged warning given to, 51 _note_, 106.
+
+ Burnet, Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury, 46.
+
+ "Bye," the, 15 _note_.
+
+
+ Camden, William, the historian, 36 _note_.
+
+ Capon, William, on the old Palace of Westminster, 79, 86; on traces
+ of the mine, 87.
+
+ Carleton, Dudley, afterwards Viscount Dorchester, patronized by
+ Cecil, 62; assists Percy to hire the house at Westminster, 61;
+ reports the French version of the Plot, 140; and its contradiction,
+ 141; his mysterious connection with the Conspiracy, 150 _note_; his
+ opinion of Percy, 150.
+
+ Castlemaine, Earl of (Roger Palmer), on State plots, 14, 48; on
+ Osborne's qualifications as an historian, 44 _note_; on the fate of
+ decoy ducks, 152.
+
+ Carte, Thomas (_General History of England_), 46.
+
+ Carey, ----, evidence regarding Percy, 150.
+
+ Catesby, Robert, a ringleader in the Conspiracy, 9, 64; his
+ character and antecedents, 35 _seq._; persuades his associates not
+ to reveal their project to priests, 179; undertakes to proclaim the
+ new sovereign, 83; his death, 4, 152 _seq._; suspicions concerning
+ him, 156, 160. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Catholics, their numbers, 28; their condition under Elizabeth, 29;
+ their hopes from James, 31, 33, 247, 248; his promises to them, 29;
+ they welcome his accession, _ibid_, 34; temporary relief at his
+ hands, _ibid_; their consequent increase, 28, 30; Cecil's hostility,
+ 28, 30, 47, 48, 51, 105; attempt to charge them with the Plot, 4-6,
+ 107, 108; legislation against them on account of it, 212 _seq._; its
+ lasting effects in their regard, 209, 225.
+
+ Cecil, Robert, first Earl of Salisbury, his character, 19 _seq._;
+ dignities conferred by James I., 19 _note_; and nicknames, 19
+ _note_; his unpopularity, 21 _seq._; difficulties and dangers of his
+ position, 26 _seq._; in the pay of Spain, 21; and probably of
+ France, 22 _note_; his secret correspondence with King James, 21;
+ his intrigues against Northumberland and Raleigh, 26, 198, 216;
+ hostility to the Catholics, 27, 95, 105; anxiety on account of the
+ king's attitude, 28; and dealings with Pope Clement VIII., 104;
+ endeavours to commit James to a policy of intolerance, 105; his
+ political methods, 44, 111; employs the services of forgers, 112
+ _note_, 203; his knowledge of the Plot, 94 _seq._; alleged secret
+ dealings with Percy, 15; Tresham, 158; and Catesby, 160; contradicts
+ himself concerning the "discovery," 123 _seq._; his inexplicable
+ delay in making it, 132; and conduct afterwards, 137; was not taken
+ by surprise, 210; at once turns the Plot to his advantage, 213; his
+ determination to incriminate priests, 4 _seq._, 130; advantages
+ reaped by him, 30, 213 _seq._; his Manifesto, 218 _seq._; suspected
+ of having originated or manipulated the Conspiracy, 43 _seq._;
+ alleged attempt to float a second Plot, 225.
+
+ Cecil, Thomas, first Earl of Exeter, 19 _note_, 160 _note_.
+
+ Cecil, William, second Earl of Salisbury, his testimony reported,
+ 160.
+
+ Cecil, William, a priest in government employ, 45 _note_.
+
+ "Cellar," the, its situation and character, 58, 79 _note_; hired by
+ the conspirators, 69 _seq._; problems concerning it, 87 _seq._; its
+ after history, 137; accompanies the migrations of the House of
+ Lords, 80 _note_.
+
+ Challoner, Sir Thomas, information addressed to, 94, 95.
+
+ Chamberlain, John, M.P., on Cecil's death and character, 23, 24;
+ account of the "discovery," 128; on the King's lucky day, 231; on
+ Percy's character, 150.
+
+ Charles, Duke of York, afterwards Charles I.; plans of the
+ conspirators regarding him, 81 _seq._
+
+ Chichester, Sir Arthur, Deputy in Ireland, 4, 108, 124.
+
+ Coal, Father Greenway's description of, 71 _note_.
+
+ Cobham, eighth Lord (Henry Brooke), his charge of forgery against
+ Waad, 202.
+
+ Cobham, ninth Lord (William Brooke), his evidence reported, 45.
+
+ Coke, Sir Edward, Attorney-General, his falsification of evidence,
+ 200; Cecil's instructions to him, 116 _note_; his assertions, 85,
+ 88; interrogatories prepared by him, 176; his humour, 63 _note_;
+ proofs against Owen, 190; witnesses Thomas Winter's declaration,
+ 169; and that of Faukes, 172; his treatment of Raleigh and
+ Northumberland, 217.
+
+ Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice, on the English penal laws, 29 _note_.
+
+ Conspirators, the, list of, 2, 3; their character and antecedents,
+ 35-41; their enrolment, 9, 64, 252; their plans and proceedings,
+ 9-11, 60 _seq._; mining operations, 10, 63; incredibility of the
+ story, 65 _seq._, 76 _seq._, 141; they hire the "cellar," 69 _seq._;
+ purchase and store gunpowder, 78; difficulties concerning it, 78,
+ 132, 134-137; further designs, 11, 80-82; alarmed by the
+ prorogation, 114, 230; flight and attempted rebellion, 2; their
+ fate, 4-6.
+
+ Cope, Sir Walter, on the character of Cecil, 27 _note_.
+
+ Cornwallis, Sir Charles, English Ambassador in Spain, on the
+ character of the conspirators, 40; letter to Father Cresswell, 195;
+ on the Catholic design to murder Cecil, 221 _note_.
+
+ Cresswell, Father Joseph, S.J., allegations concerning him, 195;
+ Cornwallis' letter to him, _ibid_.
+
+
+ Dacre, Francis, titular Lord, efforts to connect him with the Plot,
+ 177.
+
+ Darnley, Henry, Lord, father of James I., the victim of a gunpowder
+ plot, 37, 50.
+
+ Davenport, Father Christopher, O.P. (Francis à S. Clara), 145
+ _note_.
+
+ Davies, Joseph, a government "discoverer," 94.
+
+ De Beaumont, M., French Ambassador, 119 _note_.
+
+ De la Boderie, M., French Ambassador, on Cecil's insecurity, 26; on
+ the ruin of Northumberland, 23.
+
+ Del-Rio, Father Martin, S.J., said to have described the Plot A.D.
+ 1600, 263.
+
+ Derby, Earl of (William Stanley), attempt to incriminate him, 198.
+
+ De Ros, Lord, on Faukes' plan of escape, 144 _note_.
+
+ Devonshire, Earl of (Charles Blount), 168 _note_, 170 _note_, 211,
+ 266.
+
+ Digby, Sir Everard, joins the Conspiracy, 10, 253; difficulties and
+ contradictions regarding him, 79 _note_, 253; his letter to
+ Salisbury, 33, 245; part assigned to him, 78 _note_; his fate, 6.
+ _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Digby, Sir John, English Ambassador in Spain, 22 _note_.
+
+ Digby, Sir Kenelm, his evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Digby, Sir Robert, 38 _note_.
+
+ Dixon, Hepworth (_Her Majesty's Tower_), on government intelligence,
+ 111 _note_.
+
+ Dodd, Rev. Charles, on the origin of the Plot, 18, 51.
+
+ Dorset, Earl of (Thomas Sackville), his esteem for Cecil, 21.
+
+ Dunbar, Earl of (George Hume), 168 _note_, 172, 266.
+
+ Dunfermline, Earl of (Alexander Seaton), on the effective use of
+ torture, 259.
+
+ Dunsmoor Heath, projected hunting match on, 11.
+
+
+ Edmondes, Sir Thomas, English Ambassador at Brussels, account of the
+ "discovery" sent to him, 108, 124; version of Faukes' confession
+ sent to him, 186; proofs against Owen sent to him, 190, 191; his
+ negotiations with the archdukes, 186 _seq._; letters of, 102, 187,
+ 188, 189; letters to, 85, 106, 113, 154, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190.
+
+ Elizabeth, Princess, daughter of James I., designs of the
+ conspirators regarding her, 81.
+
+ _England's Warning Peece_, 195, 262.
+
+ _English Protestants' Plea_, 40, 51, 108 _note_, 195 _note_.
+
+ Eudaemon-Joannes, Father Andrew, S.J., 204.
+
+
+ Faukes, Guy or Guido, _alias_ John Johnson, his position and
+ character, 39, 262; his Spanish mission, 36; introduced to the
+ Conspiracy, 9, 64; passes as Percy's servant, 71, 77; keeps guard
+ while the others work, 66; discovers the "cellar," 70; has charge of
+ the premises, 77, 89, 142; visits Flanders, 91, 162; appointed to
+ fire the powder, 1; plans for his escape, 144; arrest, 123-128;
+ published confession, 169 _seq._, 268 _seq._; evidence falsified,
+ 200; missing depositions, 191; tortured, 172, 200, 260; trial and
+ execution, 6, 260; fables respecting him, 261. _See also_
+ Conspirators.
+
+ Favat, Mr., Cecil's letter to, 5, 182.
+
+ Ferrers, Henry, sub-lets the house at Westminster to Percy, 61.
+
+ Fifth of November, a propitious day for the "discovery," 231; the
+ day solemnized, 5.
+
+ Floyde, Griffith, a government spy, 49.
+
+ French historians on the Plot, 141 _note_.
+
+ French official accounts of the Plot, 140, 141.
+
+ Fuller, Mr., M.P., 132 _note_.
+
+ Fuller, Thomas (_Church History of Britain_), 46, 225.
+
+ Fulman MSS., 169.
+
+
+ Gardiner, Professor Samuel Rawson, his favourable estimate of
+ Cecil's character, 20; on the Spanish pension, 22 _note_; repudiates
+ imputations against the government, 18; on the conspirators' plans,
+ 82; on the Monteagle letter, 117; on the king's interpretation, 132
+ _note_; on the desire to incriminate priests, 4 _note_.
+
+ Garnet, Father Henry, S.J., proclaimed as a principal conspirator,
+ 5; his capture, 7, 166; lack of evidence, 7; trial and execution,
+ _ibid_.; his account of the conspirators' proceedings, 208; his
+ evidence against Catesby, 157; on the accession of James, 29 _note_.
+
+ _Gentleman's Magazine_, 52 _note_, 262.
+
+ Gerard, Col. John, 160 _note_.
+
+ Gerard, Father John, S.J., proclaimed as a principal conspirator, 5;
+ exonerated by historians, 237; his history of the Plot, 205; his
+ experiences in the Tower, 202; on the persecution of Catholics, 32;
+ opinion of the "discovery," 49; and of the official narrative, 129;
+ on the death of Percy and Catesby, 156 _note_.
+
+ Goodman, Godfrey, Bishop of Gloucester, on the origin of the
+ Conspiracy, 44; on the king's promises to Catholics, 29 _note_; on
+ the persecution of Catholics, 32; on the "discovery," 134 _note_; on
+ the death of Whynniard, 92 _note_; on Percy's intercourse with
+ Cecil, 151; on the death of Percy and Catesby, 154; his religious
+ views, 145 _note_.
+
+ Gowrie Conspiracy, the, 231, 232.
+
+ "Great Horses," 2 _note_.
+
+ Grange, Justice E., 148 _note_.
+
+ Grant, John, 37. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Green, Mrs. Everett, wrongly describes Owen as a Jesuit, 185 _note_.
+
+ Green, John Richard (_History of the English People_), 30.
+
+ Greenway, _alias_ Tesimond, Father Oswald, S.J., proclaimed as a
+ principal conspirator, 5; Bates' alleged evidence against him,
+ 178-183; his history of the Plot, 206; opinion of the official
+ narrative, 134; on the effects of an explosion, 133; on government
+ despatches concerning Percy, 155; his visit to the rebels at
+ Huddington, 206 _note_; fables respecting him, 264.
+
+ Gregory, Arthur, a forger employed by government, 203.
+
+ Grene, Father Martin, S.J., notes on the Plot, 45.
+
+ Gunpowder, amount procured by the conspirators, 78; difficulties
+ concerning it, 132 _seq._
+
+
+ Hagley Hall, R. Winter and S. Littleton captured there, 4.
+
+ Hallam, Henry (_Constitutional History_), repudiates imputations
+ against the government, 18; on Father Garnet's capture, _ibid_.,
+ _note_; on King James's title to the crown, 34.
+
+ Harington, Sir John, 4.
+
+ Hawarde, John (_Les Reportes del Cases in Camera Stellata_), 165
+ _note_.
+
+ Heiwood, or Heywood, Peter, 139 _note_, 258.
+
+ Hendlip House (Thomas Abbington's), the scene of Father Garnet's
+ capture, 18 _note_, 166 _note_.
+
+ Henry, Prince of Wales, anticipations concerning him, 33; the
+ conspirators' plans in his regard, 80, 81, 176.
+
+ Herring, Francis (_Pietas Pontificia_), 27 _note_, 143 _note_.
+
+ Higgons, Bevil (_English History_), 47.
+
+ Hoby, Sir Edward, on the death of Percy, 154.
+
+ Holbeche House (Stephen Littleton's), the conspirators there slain
+ or captured, 2, 4.
+
+ House of Lords, its situation and subsequent migrations, 55 _seq._;
+ never represented in pictures of the Plot, 228.
+
+ House, Percy's, at Westminster, its position, 60, 251; circumstances
+ of the bargain for it, 60; difficulties concerning it, 62, 64, 67,
+ 88.
+
+ Howes, Edmund (continuation of Stowe's _Chronicle_), 127.
+
+ Huddington House (Robert Winter's), 206 _note_.
+
+
+ Ichrup, Thomas, name given to Faukes, 149, 244.
+
+ Inglefield, Sir Francis, 249.
+
+
+ James I., King of Great Britain, his claim to the succession, 34;
+ circumstances of his accession, 34, 35; hopes of the Catholics, 28;
+ who support his cause, 34; his policy at first favourable to them,
+ 29; soon reversed, 31; his dealings with Pope Clement VIII., 104;
+ his supposed interpretation of the letter, 128, 131; Tuesday his
+ lucky day, 230; his speech to Parliament, 211; accuses Catholics in
+ general and the Pope, 4; suspected of previous knowledge of the
+ Plot, 46; anxiety for evidence against priests, 182; letter to the
+ Archdukes, 187 _note_; alleged subsequent opinion of the Plot, 45;
+ instructions for the torture of Faukes, 259; his Scotch dialect, 260
+ _note_; gives his royal word against Owen and Baldwin, 187; his
+ policy permanently affected, 209.
+
+ James, John, a supposed Dominican, 139 _note_, 258.
+
+ Jardine, David, on the character of the official narrative, 129,
+ 163; on the falsification of evidence, 199; on the Monteagle letter,
+ 117; on the king's interpretation, 132 _note_; on the established
+ facts of the case, 12; not perfectly impartial, 161, 207; on the
+ results of the Plot, 213.
+
+ Jessopp, Augustus, D.D., on the value of money, 36 _note_, 117
+ _note_; on Father Gerard's innocence, 207.
+
+ Jesuits, efforts to incriminate, 177 _note_; Cecil on their
+ "insolencies," 106.
+
+
+ Kennet, White, Bishop of Peterborough, 45 _note_, 46, 263.
+
+ Keyes, Robert, contradictions respecting him, 84 _note_, 183. _See
+ also_ Conspirators.
+
+ "King's Book," the, its character, 108; Cecil's description of it,
+ 219, 220.
+
+ Knyvet, or Knevet, Sir Thomas, leads the party which captures
+ Faukes, 124 _seq._; receives a peerage, 139 _note_; the Countess of
+ Suffolk his sister, 224 _note_.
+
+
+ Lake, Sir Thomas, 19, 232.
+
+ Lenthal, William, Speaker of the Long Parliament, his evidence
+ reported, 160.
+
+ Lindsay, Sir James, conveys messages between King James and Pope
+ Clement VIII., 104.
+
+ Lingard, John, D.D., 68 _note_, 231.
+
+ Littleton, Humphrey, 167 _note_.
+
+ Littleton, Stephen, 2, 4, 156.
+
+ Lodge, Edmund, F.S.A. (_Illustrations of British History_), 98.
+
+ Lopez' Plot, 14.
+
+
+ "Main," the, 15 _note_, 26, 216.
+
+ Mar, Earl of (John Erskine), 168 _note_, 172, 266.
+
+ Mary, Princess, daughter of James I., 81, 176.
+
+ Milton, poems on the Plot, 226.
+
+ Mine, the, story told respecting it, 63 _seq._; difficulties
+ respecting it, 84 _seq._
+
+ _Mischeefe's Mystery_, 72, 115, 121, 123, 153 _note_, 159.
+
+ Money, value of, 36 _note_, 117 _note_; amount raised by
+ conspirators, 39.
+
+ Monteagle, Lord (William Parker), his character and antecedents,
+ 118; relations with the king and court, 34, 119; letter to the king,
+ 119, 256; connection with the conspirators, 118; communicates the
+ warning letter to Cecil, 120-123, 160; attends parliament on the day
+ of the "discovery," 137 _note_; devices of the government on his
+ behalf, 116; rewards conferred, 116; subsequent conduct, 258.
+
+ Moore, Sir Francis, his evidence reported, 151.
+
+ Moore, Sir Jonas, 138.
+
+ More, Father Henry, S.J., 49.
+
+ Morgan, Harry, 81 _note_.
+
+ Morgan, Thomas, 157 _note_, 193 _note_.
+
+
+ Naunton, Sir Robert, on Cecil's character, 19.
+
+ Northampton, Earl of (Henry Howard), a nominal Catholic promoted by
+ King James, 29; Cecil's agent in his secret correspondence, 26
+ _note_; on Cecil's death, 23; on the history of the "cellar," 58
+ _note_; not admitted to all Cecil's secrets, 112.
+
+ Northumberland, Earl of (Henry Percy), a rival of Cecil's, 26; who
+ secretly traduces him, 26 _note_, 215, 216; the Plot turned to his
+ ruin, 26, 107, 216-218; which is attributed to Cecil, 26 _note_,
+ 218, his sentiments in return, 218.
+
+ Nottingham, Earl of, Lord Admiral (Charles Howard), 170 _note_,
+ 265.
+
+
+ Oates, Titus, 46, 138.
+
+ Oath taken by the conspirators, 9.
+
+ Oldcorne, _alias_ Hall, Father Edward, S.J., captured along with
+ Garnet, 7; never accused of complicity _ib._; Catholic demonstration
+ at his execution, 28 _note_; tortured, 173.
+
+ Oldmixon (_Royal House of Stuart_), 25 _note_, 46.
+
+ Osborne, Francis, on Cecil's unpopularity, 25; on the "discovery,"
+ 44; on the 5th of August celebration, 232 _note_; on Northumberland
+ and Cecil, 218; his qualifications as an historian, 44.
+
+ Owen, Captain Hugh, falsely described as a Jesuit, 173 _note_, 185
+ _note_; particularly obnoxious to the government, 173, 185; evidence
+ fabricated against him, 174; Cecil's instruction respecting him, 116
+ _note_; efforts made to secure him, 185 _seq._; his intercourse with
+ Phelippes, 112, 185 _note_.
+
+ Owen, Lewis, 263.
+
+
+ Paris, Henry, 162.
+
+ Parliament, its successive adjournments, 67, 70 _note_, 91, 114,
+ 230; meets on the day of the "discovery," 136; activity against
+ Catholics, 5, 212 _seq._
+
+ Parry, Sir Thomas, English Ambassador at Paris, instructions given
+ to, 28 _note_; intelligence supplied by, 98, 101, 102; account of
+ the discovery furnished to, 126 _seq._
+
+ Parry, Dr. William, his Plot, 14, 153.
+
+ Parsons, Father Robert, S.J., letters to, 29 _note_, 77, 223; his
+ views as to the succession, 249; on Walsingham's "spyery," 77.
+
+ Percy, Sir Charles, 192 _note_.
+
+ Percy, Thomas, one of the first and principal conspirators, 9, 64;
+ his antecedents, 36, 37, 148; house hired by him, 60; and "cellar,"
+ 75; strange conduct in both transactions, 88; conduct afterwards,
+ 88, 91; undertakes to seize Duke Charles or Princess Elizabeth, 82;
+ his death, 4, 152 _seq_; profession of religious zeal, 148; bigamy,
+ _ibid_; Catholics suspicious of him, 150; alleged secret dealings
+ with Cecil, 151; the case against him, 148-156. _See also_
+ Conspirators.
+
+ Phelippes, Thomas, the "decipherer," employed by the government,
+ 111; their devices against him, 112; correspondence with Hugh Owen,
+ 185 _note_.
+
+ Pickering, Mr., and his horse, 261. _Plain and Rational Account of
+ the Catholick Faith_, 49.
+
+ Plots under Elizabeth and James I., 14, 15, 153, 157 _note_, 193
+ _note_; their common feature, 13.
+
+ _Polititian's Catechism_, 51 _note_, 106, 137 _note_.
+
+ Pope Clement VIII., interchanges communications with James I., 104.
+
+ Pope Paul V., represented as an accomplice in the Plot, 5, 239.
+
+ Popham, Sir John, Lord Chief Justice, 170 _note_, 197, 266.
+
+
+ Raleigh, Sir Walter, Cecil's enmity towards him, 26 _note_, 48
+ _note_, 198; his ruin, 26, 216; attempt to implicate him in the
+ Powder Plot, 197, 198.
+
+ Ratcliffe, Ralph, a government spy, 95, 96, 191.
+
+ Rich, Sir Edwin, 264.
+
+ Richardot, President, 189.
+
+ Rogers, Professor Thorold, on the value of money, 117 _note_; on
+ James's title to the throne, 34.
+
+ Rokewood, Ambrose, 179 _note_. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+
+ Salisbury, first Earl of. _See_ Cecil, Robert.
+
+ Salisbury, second Earl of. _See_ Cecil, William.
+
+ Sanderson, Sir William, 46.
+
+ Schondonck, Father Giles, S. J., Rector of St. Omers, on the
+ innocence of the Jesuits, 201; on Cecil's manifesto, 222.
+
+ Scott, Sir Walter, 132 _note_.
+
+ Shakespeare, never alludes to the Plot, 226 _note_.
+
+ Sharpe, Dr. R. R., 262 _note_.
+
+ Shepherd, John, evidence of, 251.
+
+ Smith, John Thomas (_Antiquities of Westminster_), 58 _note_, 79
+ _note_, 89 _note_.
+
+ Soane, Sir John, 238.
+
+ Southwaick, or Southwell, a government spy, 99-102.
+
+ Speed, John (_Historie_), 62, 63 _note_.
+
+ Squires, Edward, his plot, 14.
+
+ Stanley, Sir William, 185, 192 _note_.
+
+ Strange, Father Thomas, S. J., 96 _note_.
+
+ Streete, John, pensioned for killing Percy and Catesby, 155.
+
+ Strype, John (_Annals_), 28 _note_.
+
+ Suffolk, Earl of, Lord Chamberlain (Thomas Howard), his venality,
+ 224.
+
+
+ Talbot, John, of Grafton, 38 _note_.
+
+ Talbot, Peter, Archbishop of Dublin. _See Polititian's Catechism._
+
+ Theobald, Lewis, 267.
+
+ Topcliffe, Richard, priest-hunter, 202.
+
+ Torture, use of, 4, 5, 172, 173, 201 _note_, 259, 260.
+
+ Tresham, Francis, enlisted in the enterprise, 10, 252 _seq_.; his
+ previous record, 35, 36; his action on behalf of King James, 34;
+ suspected of writing the warning letter, 147, 158; and of collusion
+ with Cecil, _ibid._; his conduct after the "discovery," 3, 158; his
+ death in the Tower, 6 _note_, 158. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Tresham, Sir Thomas, proclaims King James, 34; summoned to Court,
+ 248.
+
+ _True and Perfect Relation_, character of the narrative, 43, 163.
+
+ Tytler, Patrick Fraser, 112.
+
+
+ Usher, James, Archbishop of Armagh, his evidence reported, 45.
+
+
+ _Venatio Catholica_, 261.
+
+ _Vetusta Monumenta_, 79, 86.
+
+ Villeroy, M., on Cecil's duplicity, 23.
+
+ "Vinegar House," 60 _note_.
+
+ Vowell, Peter, evidence reported, 160.
+
+
+ Waad, Sir William, lieutenant of the Tower, charged by Cobham with
+ forgery of evidence, 202; dismissed from his post, 203 _note_, 267;
+ his inscriptions in the Tower, 264, 267; letters to Cecil, 168, 258.
+
+ Walsh, Sir Richard, sheriff of Worcestershire, 4, 154 _note_.
+
+ Ward, Samuel, preacher and artist, 239.
+
+ Webb, John, evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Weldon, Sir Anthony, on Cecil's unpopularity, 25.
+
+ Welwood, James (_Memoirs_), 46.
+
+ Westmoreland, titular Earl of (Henry Neville), attempt to implicate
+ him, 197.
+
+ Whynniard, Mr., landlord of Percy's house, 61 _note_, 89; his sudden
+ death, 92 _note_.
+
+ Whynniard, Mrs., evidence of, 61, 67, 72, 88, 142.
+
+ Willaston, William, intelligence supplied by, 99.
+
+ Wimbledon, Viscount (Edward Cecil), his evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Windsor, Lord, his house plundered by the conspirators, 2.
+
+ Winter, Robert, introduced to the conspiracy, 10; captured at
+ Hagley, 4; evidences of foul play in his regard, 183, 184; trial and
+ execution, 6. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Winter, Thomas, one of the first conspirators, 9, 64; character, 35;
+ Spanish mission, 36, 118; brings Faukes from Flanders, 9; attends
+ the prorogation, Oct. 3rd, 74 _note_, 230; captured at Holbeche, 4;
+ his published confession, 167 _seq._; probably tortured, 169; trial
+ and execution, 6. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Wood, Anthony à, notes addressed to, 159.
+
+ Worcester, Earl of (Edward Somerset), 168 _note_, 266.
+
+ Wotton, Sir Henry, 160.
+
+ Wren, Sir Christopher, 138.
+
+ Wright, Christopher, his introduction to the Conspiracy, 9, 64;
+ character, 35, 37; previous employment in Spain, 36; killed at
+ Holbeche, 4, 152. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Wright, Henry, his informations, 94, 95, 254.
+
+ Wright, John, one of the first conspirators, 9, 64; character, 35,
+ 37; killed at Holbeche, 4, 152. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+
+CHISWICK PRESS:--CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
+TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
+
+
+TRANSCRIBERS' NOTES:
+
+p 14: there is no closing quotation mark following the line '"making and
+fomenting plots was then in fashion; nor can it be denied that good
+grounds for such an opinion were not lacking.' The closing mark is
+placed at the end of this sentence, though this may be incorrect.
+
+p 20: continuation of footnote 37 from previous page begins with 'avor';
+this is a typo for 'favor'.
+
+p 24: 'the' repeated in footnote 49, epigram 2; one 'the' removed.
+
+p 32: added a closing quotation mark following 'and prepared for them'.
+
+p 36: added . to end of footnote 87, after 'The Spanish Treason'.
+
+p 49: Inserted , into footnote 124; 'James I., lxxxi.'.
+
+p 120: footnote 257: missing closing bracket; corrected.
+
+p 154: inserted , into footnote 310; 'James I., i. 588'.
+
+p 160: changed ' to " to match quote mark style, footnote 329.
+
+p 194: footnote 396: 'Englands' changed to 'England's'.
+
+p 248: added missing full-stop: 'give ease to Catholics'.
+
+p 255: added opening double-quote marks to the passage entitled
+'Application to the King.'
+
+p 266: the oe ligature was represented as [oe]
+
+p 268, 269: uncommon 'inverted asterism' topographic marks are used to
+signify important notes on conventions used in the text; they have the
+form of three asterixes arranged in a v-shape. For simplicity, they are
+replaced with '***' in this document.
+
+p 281: 'incrediblty' changed to 'incredibility', 'o' changed to 'of'.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's What was the Gunpowder Plot?, by John Gerard
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? ***
+
+***** This file should be named 34807-8.txt or 34807-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/4/8/0/34807/
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Adam Styles and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+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 1.F.3. 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, are 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.
diff --git a/34807-8.zip b/34807-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..27b4f15
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h.zip b/34807-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cfe6bad
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/34807-h.htm b/34807-h/34807-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c50e817
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/34807-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,10952 @@
+<!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">
+<head>
+ <meta name="generator" content=
+ "HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 11 February 2007), see www.w3.org" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=us-ascii" />
+
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? THE TRADITIONAL
+ STORY TESTED BY ORIGINAL EVIDENCE, by JOHN GERARD, S.J.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ p { margin-top: .45em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .45em;
+ text-indent: 1.25em;
+ }
+
+ .ni { text-indent: 0em;}
+
+ .jhil { text-align: justify; padding-left:1.25em; text-indent:-1.25em; font-size: 0.85em; }
+
+ .right { text-align: right;}
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+
+ .g {letter-spacing: 5px;}
+ .g3 {letter-spacing: 3px;}
+ .g2 {letter-spacing: 2px;}
+
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center;
+ font-weight: 500;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+ hr { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+ table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 90%;}
+
+ td.rpad {width:50%; padding:0px 10px 0px 0px;}
+ td.lpad {width:50%; padding:0px 0px 0px 10px;}
+
+ body{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+
+ .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 90%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+ } /* page numbers */
+ .pagenuml { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 0%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: left;
+ } /* page numbers */
+
+ .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */
+ .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em;
+ padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em;
+ float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em;
+ font-size: smaller; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;}
+
+ .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;}
+ .bl {border-left: solid 2px;}
+ .bt {border-top: solid 2px;}
+ .br {border-right: solid 2px;}
+ .bbox {border: solid 2px;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .u {text-decoration: underline;}
+
+ .td6 {width: 6%;}
+ .td10c {text-align: center; width: 10%;}
+ .td10r {text-align: right; width: 10%;}
+ .td80j {text-align: justify; width: 80%; text-indent: 1.25em;}
+ .td80jni {text-align: justify; width: 80%; text-indent: 0em;}
+ .td80jhi {text-align: justify; padding-left:1.25em; text-indent:-1.25em;}
+ .td90lni {text-align: left; width: 90%; text-indent: 0em;}
+ .td80jhil {width: 50%; padding:0px 10px 0px 0px; text-align: justify; padding-left:1.25em; text-indent:-1.25em;}
+ .td80jhir {border-left: 1px solid black; width: 50%; padding:0px 0px 0px 10px; text-align: justify; padding-left:1.25em; text-indent:-1.25em;}
+
+ .caption {font-weight: 750;}
+
+ .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center; display: block;}
+
+ .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top:
+ 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .footnotes {background: #eeeeee; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+ .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;}
+
+ .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;}
+ .poem br {display: none;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ span.c17 {text-decoration: overline;}
+ h4.c16 {font-style: italic}
+ div.c15 {width: 300px;}
+ hr.c14 {width: 45%;}
+ div.c13 {width: 556px;}
+ div.c12 {width: 580px;}
+ span.c11 {text-decoration: overline}
+ span.c10 {margin-left: 1em;}
+ div.c9 {width: 536px;}
+ div.c8 {width: 510px;}
+ div.c7 {width: 600px;}
+ p.c6 {font-style: italic}
+ p.c5 {margin-left: 1.25em;}
+ span.c4 {margin-left: 1.25em;}
+ div.c3 {width: 120px;}
+ hr.c2 {width: 65%;}
+ div.c1 {width: 497px;}
+ </style>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of What was the Gunpowder Plot?, by John Gerard
+
+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: What was the Gunpowder Plot?
+ The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence
+
+Author: John Gerard
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2011 [EBook #34807]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Adam Styles and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <p class="ni">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: This text makes extensive use of archaic spellings
+ in quoted material which has not been amended or modernized. Where typographic errors
+ have been repaired, they are detailed in further transcribers' notes at the end of
+ the text.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c1"><a name="image1" id="image1"></a><img src="images/image1.png"
+ width="497" height="800" alt="" title="" /></div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2 class="g3"><small>WHAT WAS THE</small><br />
+ GUNPOWDER PLOT?</h2>
+
+ <h5 class="g2">THE TRADITIONAL STORY TESTED BY<br />
+ &nbsp;<br />
+ ORIGINAL EVIDENCE</h5>
+
+ <h4><span class="smcap">by</span></h4>
+
+ <h3 class="g2"><span class="smcap">John Gerard, S.J.</span></h3>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c3"><a name="image2" id="image2"></a><img src="images/image2.png"
+ width="120" height="114" alt="" title="" /></div>
+
+ <h4><span class="smcap"><span class="g2">LONDON<br />
+ OSGOOD, McILVAINE &amp; CO.</span><br />
+ <small>45, Albemarle Street, W.<br />
+ 1897</small></span></h4>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">The</span> following study of the Gunpowder Plot has
+ grown out of the accidental circumstance that, having undertaken to read a paper before
+ the Historical Research Society, at Archbishop's House, Westminster, as the day on
+ which it was to be read chanced to be the 5th of November,<a name="FN1A" id=
+ "FN1A"></a><a href="#FN1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> I was asked to take the famous conspiracy
+ for my subject. It was with much reluctance that I agreed to do so, believing, as I
+ then did, that there was absolutely nothing fresh to say upon this topic, that no
+ incident in our annals had been more thoroughly threshed out, and that in regard of
+ none, so far, at least, as its broader outlines are concerned, was the truth more
+ clearly established.</p>
+
+ <p>When, however, I turned to the sources whence our knowledge of the transaction is
+ derived, and in particular to the original documents upon which it is ultimately based,
+ I was startled to find how grave were the doubts and difficulties which suggested
+ themselves at every turn, while, though slowly and gradually, yet with ever gathering
+ force, the conviction forced itself upon me, that, not merely in its details is the
+ traditional story unworthy of credit, but that all the evidence points to a conclusion
+ fundamentally at <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[Pg
+ vi]</a></span>variance with it. Nothing contributed so powerfully to this conviction as
+ to find that every fresh line of reasoning or channel of information which could be
+ discovered inevitably tended, in one way or another, towards the same result. In the
+ following pages are presented to the reader the principal arguments which have wrought
+ this change of view in my own mind.<sup><a name="FN2A" id="FN2A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN2">[2]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>I cannot pretend to furnish any full or wholly satisfactory answer to the question
+ which stands upon the title-page. The real history of the Plot in all its stages we
+ shall, in all probability, never know. If, however, we cannot satisfy ourselves of the
+ truth, it will be much to ascertain what is false; to convince ourselves that the
+ account of the matter officially supplied, and almost universally accepted, is
+ obviously untrue, and that the balance of probability lies heavily against those who
+ invented it, as having been the real plotters, devising and working the scheme for
+ their own ends.</p>
+
+ <p>Neither have I any wish to ignore, or to extenuate, the objections which militate
+ against such a conclusion, objections arising from considerations of a general
+ character, rather than from any positive evidence. Why, it may reasonably be asked, if
+ the government of the day were ready to go so far as is alleged, did they not go
+ further? Why, being supremely anxious to incriminate the priests, did they not
+ fabricate unequivocal evidence against them, instead of satisfying themselves with what
+ appears to us far from conclusive? Why did they encumber their tale with incidents,
+ which, if they did not really occur, could serve <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span>only to damage it, inasmuch as we, at this
+ distance of time, can argue that they are impossible and absurd? How is it, moreover,
+ that the absurdity was not patent to contemporaries, and was not urged by those who had
+ every reason to mislike and mistrust the party in power?</p>
+
+ <p>Considerations such as these undoubtedly deserve all attention, and must be fully
+ weighed, but while they avail to establish a certain presumption in favour of the
+ official story, I cannot but think that the sum of probabilities tells strongly the
+ other way. It must be remembered that three centuries ago the intrinsic likelihood or
+ unlikelihood of a tale did not go for much, and the accounts of plots in particular
+ appear to have obtained general credence in proportion as they were incredible, as the
+ case of Squires a few years earlier, and of Titus Oates somewhat later, sufficiently
+ testify. It is moreover as difficult for us to enter into the crooked and complex
+ methods of action which commended themselves to the statesmen of the period, as to
+ appreciate the force of the cumbrous and abusive harangues which earned for Sir Edward
+ Coke the character of an incomparable pleader. On the other hand, it appears certain
+ that they who had so long played the game must have understood it best, and, whatever
+ else may be said of them, they always contrived to win. In regard of Father Garnet, for
+ example, we may think the evidence adduced by the prosecution quite insufficient, but
+ none the less it in fact availed not only to send him to the gallows, but to brand him
+ in popular estimation for generations, and even for centuries, as the arch-traitor to
+ whose machinations the whole enterprise was due. <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>In the case of some individuals
+ obnoxious to the government, it seems evident that downright forgery was actually
+ practised.</p>
+
+ <p>The question of Father Garnet's complicity, though usually considered as the one
+ point in connection with the Plot requiring to be discussed, is not treated in the
+ following pages. It is doubtless true that to prove the conspiracy to have been a trick
+ of State, is not the same thing as proving that he was not entangled in it; but, at the
+ same time, the first point, if it can be established, will deprive the other of almost
+ all its interest. Nevertheless, Father Garnet's case will still require to be fully
+ treated on its own merits, but this cannot be done within the limits of such an inquiry
+ as the present. It is not by confining our attention to one isolated incident in his
+ career, nor by discussing once again the familiar documents connected therewith, that
+ we can form a sound and satisfactory judgment about him. For this purpose, full
+ consideration must be given to what has hitherto been almost entirely ignored, the
+ nature and character of the man, as exhibited especially during the eighteen years of
+ his missionary life in England, during most of which period he acted as the superior of
+ his brother Jesuits. There exist abundant materials for his biography, in his official
+ and confidential correspondence, preserved at Stonyhurst and elsewhere, and not till
+ the information thus supplied shall have been duly utilized will it be possible to
+ judge whether the part assigned to him by his enemies in this wild and wicked design
+ can, even conceivably, represent the truth. It may, I trust, be possible at no distant
+ date to attempt this work, but it is not possible now, and to introduce this
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span>topic into our
+ present discussion would only confuse the issue which is before us.</p>
+
+ <p>Except in one or two instances, I have judged it advisable, for the sake of
+ clearness, to modernize the spelling of documents quoted in the text. In the notes they
+ are usually given in their original form.</p>
+
+ <p>I have to acknowledge my indebtedness in many particulars to Mr. H.W. Brewer, who
+ not only contributes valuable sketches to illustrate the narrative, but has furnished
+ many important notes and suggestions, based upon his exhaustive knowledge of ancient
+ London. I have to thank the Marquis of Salisbury for permission to examine MSS. in the
+ Hatfield collection, and his lordship's librarian, Mr. Gunton, for information supplied
+ from the same source. Through the courtesy of the Deputy-Keeper of the Public Records,
+ every facility has been afforded me for consulting the precious documents contained in
+ the "Gunpowder Plot Book." The Dean of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, has kindly given
+ me access to an important MS. in the College Library; and I have been allowed by the
+ Rector of Stonyhurst to retain in my hands Father Greenway's MS. history of the Plot
+ during the whole period of my work. The proprietors of the <i>Daily Graphic</i> have
+ allowed me to use two sketches of the interior of "Guy Faukes' Cellar," and one of his
+ lantern, originally prepared by Mr. Brewer for that journal.<span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><a name="FN1" id="FN1"></a><a href="#FN1A"><sup>[1]</sup></a> 1894.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><a name="FN2" id="FN2"></a><sup><a href="#FN2A">[2]</a></sup> Some of
+ these have been partially set forth in a series of six articles appearing in <i>The
+ Month</i>, December 1894&mdash;May, 1895.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"><small><small>CHAP.</small></small></td>
+
+ <td class="td80j"></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><small><small>PAGE</small></small></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">I.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The State of the Question</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">Disclosure of the Plot&mdash;Arrest of Guy Faukes&mdash;Flight
+ of his associates&mdash;Their abortive insurrection&mdash;Their fate&mdash;The
+ crime charged on Catholics in general&mdash;Garnet and other Jesuits proclaimed as
+ the ringleaders&mdash;Capture of Garnet&mdash;Efforts to procure evidence against
+ him&mdash;His execution&mdash;Previous history of the Plot as traditionally
+ narrated; Proceedings and plans of the conspirators&mdash;Manner of the
+ discovery.<br />
+ <span class="c4">Reasons for suspecting the truth of this history&mdash;Previous
+ plots originated or manipulated by the government&mdash;Suspicious circumstances
+ respecting the Gunpowder Plot in particular&mdash;Essential points of the
+ inquiry.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">II.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Persons Concerned</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury&mdash;His character variously
+ estimated&mdash;Discreditable incidents of his career&mdash;Contemporary judgments
+ of him&mdash;His unpopularity&mdash;His political difficulties largely dissipated
+ in consequence of the Plot.<br />
+ <span class="c4">His hatred of and hostility towards the Catholics&mdash;Their
+ numbers and importance&mdash;Their hopes from King James, and their
+ disappointment&mdash;The probability that some would have recourse to
+ violence&mdash;The conspirators known as men likely to seek such a
+ remedy&mdash;Their previous history&mdash;Difficulties and contradictions in regard
+ of their character.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg
+ xii]</a></span>III.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Opinion of Contemporaries and
+ Historians</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">The government at once suspected of having contrived or
+ fomented the Plot&mdash;Persistence of these suspicions, to which historians for
+ more than a century bear witness&mdash;No fresh information accounts for their
+ disappearance.</td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">IV.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Traditional Story</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">The old House of Lords and its surroundings&mdash;House hired
+ by the conspirators&mdash;They attempt to dig a mine beneath the Peers'
+ Chamber&mdash;Difficulties and improbabilities of the account&mdash;The "Cellar"
+ hired&mdash;Its position and character&mdash;The gunpowder bought and
+ stored&mdash;Further problems concerning it&mdash;The conspirators'
+ plans&mdash;Contradictions respecting them&mdash;Their wild and absurd
+ character&mdash;Impossibility of the supposition that the proceedings escaped the
+ notice of the government.</td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">V.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Government Intelligence
+ Department</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">Evidence that the government were fully aware of what was in
+ progress&mdash;Various intelligence supplied to them&mdash;Cecil's uneasiness on
+ account of the spread of Catholicity, and the king's communication with the
+ pope&mdash;His evident determination to force on James a policy of
+ intolerance&mdash;He intimates that a great move is about to be made, and
+ acknowledges to information concerning the conspirators and their schemes&mdash;His
+ political methods illustrated.</td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">VI.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The "Discovery"</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">Importance of the letter received by Lord
+ Monteagle&mdash;Extraordinary prominence given to it&mdash;Monteagle's
+ character&mdash;He receives the letter&mdash;Suspicious circumstances connected
+ with its arrival&mdash;It is shown to Cecil&mdash;Hopeless contradictions of the
+ official narrative as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg
+ xiii]</a></span> to what followed&mdash;Impossibility of ascertaining what actually
+ occurred&mdash;The French version of the story&mdash;The conduct of the government
+ at variance with their own professions&mdash;Their inexplicable delay in making the
+ discovery&mdash;They take no precautions against the recurrence of danger&mdash;The
+ mystery of the gunpowder&mdash;Incredibility of the official narration.</td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">VII.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Percy, Catesby, and Tresham</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">Probability that the government had an agent among the
+ conspirators&mdash;Suspicious circumstances regarding Percy&mdash;His private
+ life&mdash;His alleged intercourse with Cecil&mdash;His death.<br />
+ <span class="c4">Catesby and Tresham likewise accused of secret dealings with
+ Cecil&mdash;Catesby's falsehood towards his associates and Father
+ Garnet&mdash;Tresham's strange conduct after the discovery&mdash;His mysterious
+ death.</span><br />
+ <span class="c4">Alleged positive evidence against the government.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">VIII.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Government's Case</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">A monopoly secured for the official narrative, which is
+ admittedly untruthful&mdash;Suspicions suggested by such a course, especially in
+ such a case&mdash;The confessions of Faukes and Winter, on which this narrative is
+ based, deserve no credit&mdash;Nor does the evidence of Bates against
+ Greenway&mdash;Indications of foul play in regard of Robert Winter&mdash;The case
+ of Owen, Baldwin and Cresswell; assertions made respecting them of which no proof
+ can be produced&mdash;Efforts to implicate Sir Walter Raleigh and
+ others&mdash;Falsification of evidence&mdash;The service of forgers employed.<br />
+ <span class="c4">Catholic writers have drawn their accounts from the sources
+ provided by the government.</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiv" id=
+ "Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c">IX.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Sequel</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhi">Cecil well informed as to the real nature of the conspiracy,
+ and apprehends no danger from it&mdash;At once turns it to account by promoting
+ anti-Catholic legislation&mdash;Honour and popularity resulting to him&mdash;Ruin
+ of the Earl of Northumberland&mdash;Cecil's manifesto&mdash;His alleged attempt to
+ start a second plot.<br />
+ <span class="c4">The popular history of the Plot, and how it was
+ circulated&mdash;Singular suitability of the Fifth of November for the
+ "Discovery."</span><br />
+ <span class="c4">Summary of the argument.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix A. Notes on the
+ Illustrations</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix B. Sir Everard Digby's letter to
+ Salisbury</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_245">245</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix C. The Question of
+ Succession</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix D. The Spanish Treason</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix E. Site of Percy's
+ Lodging</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix F. Enrolment of
+ Conspirators</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix G. Henry Wright the
+ Informer</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_254">254</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix H. Monteagle's Letter to King
+ James</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix I. Epitaph on Peter
+ Heiwood</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix K. The Use of Torture</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix L. Myths and Legends of the
+ Plot</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix M. Memorial Inscriptions in the
+ Tower</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_264">264</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Appendix N. Guy Faukes' Published
+ Confession</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_268">268</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td90lni"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10c"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>LIST OF
+ ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r"></td>
+
+ <td class="td80j"></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><small><small>PAGE</small></small></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">1.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Medal Commemorative of the Gunpowder
+ Plot</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><i><a href="#image2">Title-page</a></i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">2.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">The Gunpowder Plot I.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><i><a href="#image1">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">3.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class=
+ "smcap">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;II.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image12">90</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">4.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni">
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;III.</td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image22">215</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">5.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni">
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;IV.</td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image23">227</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">6.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class=
+ "smcap">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;V.</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image24">229</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">7.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image16">136</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">8.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Monteagle and Letter</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image14">115</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">9.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Arrest of Faukes</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image15">125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">10.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Guy Faukes' Lantern</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image17">139</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">11.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Group of Conspirators</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image3">3</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">12.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Thomas Percy</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image18">149</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">13.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Houses of Parliament in 1605</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image4">56-7</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">14.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Ground Plan of the Same</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image6">59</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">15.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">House of Lords in 1807</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image7">61</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">16.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Interior of House of Lords,
+ 1755</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image13">97</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">17.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Interior of "Cellar"</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image8">71</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">18.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Arches from "Cellar"</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image10">75</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">19.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Vault under Painted Chamber</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image9">73</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">20.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Cell adjoining Painted Chamber</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image11">83</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">21.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Facsimile of part of Winter's Confession,
+ Nov. 23</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image19">168</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">22.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Signatures of Faukes and
+ Oldcorne</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image20">173</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="td10r">23.</td>
+
+ <td class="td80jni"><span class="smcap">Facsimile of part of Faukes' Confession of
+ Nov. 9</span></td>
+
+ <td class="td10r"><a href="#image21">199</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="c5">"Quis h&aelig;c posteris sic narrare poterit, ut facta non ficta esse
+ videantur?"</p>
+
+ <p class="c5">"Ages to come will be in doubt whether it were a fact or a fiction."</p>
+
+ <p class="right c6">Sir Edw. Coke on the trial of the Conspirators.</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="WHAT_WAS_THE_GUNPOWDER_PLOT" id="WHAT_WAS_THE_GUNPOWDER_PLOT"></a>WHAT WAS
+ THE GUNPOWDER PLOT?</h2>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE STATE OF THE QUESTION.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">On</span> the morning of Tuesday, the 5th of
+ November, 1605, which day was appointed for the opening of a new Parliamentary session,
+ London rang with the news that in the course of the night a diabolical plot had been
+ discovered, by which the king and legislature were to have been destroyed at a blow. In
+ a chamber beneath the House of Lords had been found a great quantity of gunpowder, and
+ with it a man, calling himself John Johnson, who, finding that the game was up, fully
+ acknowledged his intention to have fired the magazine while the royal speech was being
+ delivered, according to custom, overhead, and so to have blown King, Lords, and Commons
+ into the air. At the same time, he doggedly refused to say who were his accomplices, or
+ whether he had any.</p>
+
+ <p>This is the earliest point at which the story of the Gunpowder Plot can be taken up
+ with any certainty. Of what followed, at least as to the main outlines, we <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>are sufficiently well informed.
+ Johnson, whose true name was presently found to be Guy, or Guido, Faukes,<sup><a name=
+ "FN3A" id="FN3A"></a><a href="#FN3">[3]</a></sup> proved, it is true, a most obstinate
+ and unsatisfactory witness, and obstinately refused to give any evidence which might
+ incriminate others. But the actions of his confederates quickly supplied the
+ information which he withheld. It was known that the "cellar" in which the powder was
+ found, as well as a house adjacent, had been hired in the name of one Thomas Percy, a
+ Catholic gentleman, perhaps a kinsman, and certainly a dependent, of the Earl of
+ Northumberland. It was now discovered that he and others of his acquaintance had fled
+ from London on the previous day, upon receipt of intelligence that the plot seemed at
+ least to be suspected. Not many hours later the fugitives were heard of in
+ Warwickshire, Worcestershire, and Staffordshire, the native counties of several amongst
+ them, attempting to rally others to their desperate fortunes, and to levy war against
+ the crown. For this purpose they forcibly seized cavalry horses<sup><a name="FN4A" id=
+ "FN4A"></a><a href="#FN4">[4]</a></sup> at Warwick, and arms at Whewell Grange, a seat
+ of Lord Windsor's. These violent proceedings having raised the country behind them,
+ they were pursued by the sheriffs with what forces could be got together, and finally
+ brought to bay at Holbeche, in Staffordshire, the residence of one Stephen Littleton, a
+ Catholic gentleman.</p>
+
+ <p>There proved to have been thirteen men in all who had undoubtedly been participators
+ in the treason. Of these Faukes, as we have seen, was already in the <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>hands of justice. Another,
+ Francis Tresham, had not fled with his associates, but remained quietly, and without
+ attempting concealment, in London, even going to the council and offering them his
+ services; after a week he was taken into custody. The eleven who either betook
+ themselves to the country, or were already there, awaiting the issue of the enterprise,
+ and prepared to co-operate in the rising which was to be its sequel, were Robert
+ Catesby, Thomas Percy, Robert and Thomas Winter, John and Christopher Wright, John
+ Grant, Robert Keyes, Ambrose Rokewood, Sir Everard Digby,and Thomas Bates. All were
+ Catholics, and all, with the exception of Bates, Catesby's servant, were "gentlemen of
+ blood and name," some of them, notably Robert Winter, Rokewood, Digby, and Tresham,
+ being men of ample fortune.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image3" id="image3"></a><img src="images/image3.png" width="600" height=
+ "316" alt="THE CONSPIRATORS, FROM A PRINT PUBLISHED AT AMSTERDAM." title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">the conspirators, from a print published at
+ amsterdam.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>On Friday, November 8th, three days after the discovery, Sir Richard Walsh, sheriff
+ of Worcestershire, attacked Holbeche. Catesby, Percy, and the two Wrights were killed
+ or mortally wounded in the assault. The others were taken prisoners on the spot or in
+ its neighbourhood, with the exception of Robert Winter, who, accompanied by their host,
+ Stephen Littleton, contrived to elude capture for upwards of two months, being at last
+ apprehended, in January, at Hagley Hall, Worcestershire. All the prisoners were at once
+ taken up to London, and being there confined, were frequently and diligently examined
+ by the council, to trace, if possible, farther ramifications of the conspiracy, and
+ especially to inculpate the Catholic clergy.<sup><a name="FN5A" id="FN5A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN5">[5]</a></sup> Torture, it is evident, was employed with this object.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, on November 9th, King James addressed to his Parliament a speech, wherein
+ he declared that the abominable crime which had been intended was the direct result of
+ Catholic principles, Popery being "the true mystery of iniquity." In like manner
+ Chichester, the Lord Deputy in Ireland, was informed by Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, his
+ Majesty's Secretary of State, that the Plot was an "abominable practice of Rome and
+ Satan,"<sup><a name="FN6A" id="FN6A"></a><a href="#FN6">[6]</a></sup> while the monarch
+ himself sent word to Sir John Harington that "these designs were not formed by a few,"
+ that "the whole legion of Catholics were consulted," that "the priests were to
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>pacify their
+ consciences, and the Pope confirm a general absolution for this glorious
+ deed."<sup><a name="FN7A" id="FN7A"></a><a href="#FN7">[7]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Then follows an interval during which we know little of the course of events which
+ were proceeding in the seclusion of the council-room and torture-chamber; but on
+ December 4th we find Cecil complaining that he could obtain little or no evidence
+ against the really important persons: "Most of the prisoners," he writes,<sup><a name=
+ "FN8A" id="FN8A"></a><a href="#FN8">[8]</a></sup> "have wilfully forsworn that the
+ priests knew anything in particular, and obstinately refuse to be accusers of them,
+ yea, what torture soever they be put to."</p>
+
+ <p>On January 15th, 1605-6, a proclamation was issued declaring that the Jesuit
+ fathers, John Gerard, Henry Garnet, and Oswald Greenway, or Tesimond, were proved to
+ have been "peculiarly practisers" in the treason, and offering a reward for their
+ apprehension. On the 21st of the same month Parliament met, having been prorogued
+ immediately after the king's speech of November 9th, and four days later an Act was
+ passed for the perpetual solemnization of the anniversary of the projected crime, the
+ preamble whereof charged its guilt upon "Many malignant and devilish papists, jesuits,
+ and seminary priests, much envying the true and free possession of the Gospel by the
+ nation, under the greatest, most learned, and most religious monarch who had ever
+ occupied the throne."<sup><a name="FN9A" id="FN9A"></a><a href="#FN9">[9]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In consequence of this Act, was introduced into the Anglican liturgy the celebrated
+ Fifth of November service, in the collect of which the king, royal family, <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>nobility, clergy, and commons
+ are spoken of as having been "by Popish treachery appointed as sheep to the slaughter,
+ in a most barbarous and savage manner, beyond the examples of former ages;" while the
+ day itself was marked in the calendar as the "Papists' Conspiracy."</p>
+
+ <p>It will thus be seen that the Powder Plot was by this time officially stigmatized as
+ the work of the Catholic body in general, and in particular of their priests; thus
+ acquiring an importance and a significance which could not be attributed to it were it
+ but the wild attempt of a few turbulent men. As a natural corollary we find Parliament
+ busily engaged upon measures to insure the more effectual execution of the penal
+ laws.<sup><a name="FN10A" id="FN10A"></a><a href="#FN10">[10]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>On January 27th the surviving conspirators, Robert and Thomas Winter, Faukes, Grant,
+ Rokewood, Keyes, Digby, and Bates,<sup><a name="FN11A" id="FN11A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN11">[11]</a></sup> were put upon their trial. In the indictment preferred against
+ them, it was explicitly stated that the Plot was contrived by Garnet, Gerard, Greenway,
+ and other Jesuits, to whose traitorous persuasions the prisoners at the bar had
+ wickedly yielded. All were found guilty, Digby, Robert Winter, Grant, and Bates being
+ executed at the west end of St. Paul's Church, on January the 30th, and the rest on the
+ following day in Old Palace Yard.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>On the very day upon which the first company suffered, Father Garnet, whose
+ hiding-place was known, and who had been closely invested for nine days, was captured,
+ in company with another Jesuit, Father Oldcorne. The latter, though never charged with
+ knowledge of the plot, was put to death for having aided and abetted Garnet in his
+ attempt to escape. Garnet himself, being brought to London, was lodged first in the
+ Gatehouse and afterwards in the Tower.</p>
+
+ <p>As we have seen, he had already been proclaimed as a traitor, and "particular
+ practiser" in the conspiracy, and had moreover been officially described as the head
+ and front of the treason. Of the latter charge, after his capture, nothing was ever
+ heard. Of his participation, proofs, it appeared, still remained to be discovered, for
+ on the 3rd of March Cecil still spoke of them as in the future.<sup><a name="FN12A" id=
+ "FN12A"></a><a href="#FN12">[12]</a></sup> In order to obtain the required evidence of
+ his complicity, Garnet was examined three-and-twenty times before the council, and, in
+ addition, various artifices were practised which need not now be detailed. On the 28th
+ of March, 1606, he was brought to trial, and on May 3rd he was hanged at St. Paul's.
+ The Gunpowder Conspirators were thenceforth described in government publications as
+ "Garnet, a Jesuit, and his confederates."</p>
+
+ <p>Such is, in outline, the course of events which followed the discovery of November
+ 5th, all circum<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg
+ 8]</a></span>stances being here omitted which are by possibility open to dispute.</p>
+
+ <p>It will probably be maintained, as our best and most circumspect historians appear
+ to have assumed, that we are in possession of information enabling us to construct a
+ similar sketch of what preceded and led up to these events,&mdash;whatever obscurity
+ there may be regarding the complicity of those whose participation would invest the
+ plot with the significance which has been attributed to it. If it were indeed but the
+ individual design of a small knot of men, acting for themselves and of themselves,
+ then, though they were all Catholics, and were actuated by a desire to aid the Catholic
+ cause, the crime they intended could not justly be charged upon the body of their
+ co-religionists. It would be quite otherwise if Catholics in general were shown to have
+ countenanced it, or even if such representative men as members of the priesthood were
+ found to have approved so abominable a project, or even to have consented to it, or
+ knowingly kept silence regarding it. Of the complicity of Catholics in general or of
+ their priesthood as a body there is no proof whatever, nor has it ever been seriously
+ attempted to establish such a charge. As to the three Jesuits already named, who alone
+ have been seriously accused, there is no proof, the sufficiency of which may not be
+ questioned. But as to the fact that they who originated the Plot were Catholics, that
+ they acted simply with the object of benefiting their Church, and that the nation most
+ narrowly escaped an appalling disaster at their hands, can there be any reasonable
+ doubt? Is not the account of their proceedings, to be read in any work on the
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>subject, as
+ absolutely certain as anything in our history?</p>
+
+ <p>This account is as follows. About a year after the accession of James
+ I.,<sup><a name="FN13A" id="FN13A"></a><a href="#FN13">[13]</a></sup> when it began to
+ be evident that the hopes of toleration at his hands, which the Catholics had
+ entertained, were to be disappointed, Robert Catesby, a man of strong character, and
+ with an extraordinary power of influencing others, bethought him in his wrath of this
+ means whereby to take summary vengeance at once upon the monarch and the legislators,
+ under whose cruelty he himself and his fellows were groaning. The plan was proposed to
+ John Wright and Thomas Winter, who approved it. Faukes was brought over from the Low
+ Countries, as a man likely to be of much service in such an enterprise. Shortly
+ afterwards Percy joined them,<sup><a name="FN14A" id="FN14A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN14">[14]</a></sup> and somewhat later Keyes and Christopher Wright were added to
+ their number.<sup><a name="FN15A" id="FN15A"></a><a href="#FN15">[15]</a></sup> All the
+ associates were required to take an oath of secrecy,<sup><a name="FN16A" id=
+ "FN16A"></a><a href="#FN16">[16]</a></sup> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id=
+ "Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>and to confirm it by receiving Holy Communion.<sup><a name=
+ "FN17A" id="FN17A"></a><a href="#FN17">[17]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>These are the seven "gentlemen of blood and name," as Faukes describes them, who had
+ the main hand in the operations which we have to study. At a later period six others
+ were associated with them, Robert Winter, elder brother of Thomas, and Grant, both
+ gentlemen of property, Bates, Catesby's servant, and finally, Rokewood, Digby, and
+ Tresham, all rich men, who were brought in chiefly for the sake of their wealth, and
+ were enlisted when the preparations for the intended explosion had all been completed,
+ in view of the rising which was to follow.<sup><a name="FN18A" id="FN18A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN18">[18]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Commencing operations about the middle of December, 1604, these confederates first
+ endeavoured to dig a mine under the House of Lords, and afterwards <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>hired a large room,
+ described as a cellar, situated beneath the Peers' Chamber, and in this stored a
+ quantity of gunpowder, which Faukes was to fire by a train, while the King, Lords, and
+ Commons, were assembled above.</p>
+
+ <p>Their enemies being thus destroyed, they did not contemplate a revolution, but were
+ resolved to get possession of one of the king's sons, or, failing that, of one of his
+ daughters, whom they would proclaim as sovereign, constituting themselves the guardians
+ of the new monarch. They also contrived a "hunting match" on Dunsmoor heath, near
+ Rugby, which was to be in progress when the news of the catastrophe in London should
+ arrive; the sportsmen assembled for which would furnish, it was hoped, the nucleus of
+ an army.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, as we are assured&mdash;and this is the crucial point of the whole
+ story&mdash;the government of James I. had no suspicion of what was going on, and,
+ lulled in false security, were on the verge of destruction, when a lucky circumstance
+ intervened. On October 26th, ten days before the meeting of Parliament, a Catholic
+ peer, Lord Monteagle, received an anonymous letter, couched in vague and incoherent
+ language, warning him to absent himself from the opening ceremony. This document
+ Monteagle at once took to the king's prime minister, Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury,
+ who promptly divined its meaning and the precise danger indicated, although he allowed
+ King James to fancy that he was himself the first to interpret it, when it was shown to
+ him five days later.<sup><a name="FN19A" id="FN19A"></a><a href="#FN19">[19]</a></sup>
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>Not for four
+ other days were active steps taken, that is, till the early morning of the fatal Fifth.
+ Then took place the discovery of which we have already heard.</p>
+
+ <p>Such is, in brief, the accepted version of the history, and of its substantial
+ correctness there is commonly assumed to be no room for reasonable doubt. As Mr.
+ Jardine writes,<sup><a name="FN20A" id="FN20A"></a><a href="#FN20">[20]</a></sup> "The
+ outlines of the transaction were too notorious to be suppressed or disguised; that a
+ design had been formed to blow up the Parliament House, with the King, the Royal
+ Family, the Lords and Commons, and that this design was formed by Catholic men and for
+ Catholic purposes, could never admit of controversy or concealment." In like manner,
+ while acknowledging that in approaching the question of Father Garnet's complicity, or
+ that of other priests, we find ourselves upon uncertain ground, Mr. Gardiner has no
+ hesitation in declaring that "the whole story of the plot, as far as it relates to the
+ lay conspirators, rests upon indisputable evidence."<sup><a name="FN21A" id=
+ "FN21A"></a><a href="#FN21">[21]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless there appear to be considerations, demanding more attention than they
+ have hitherto received, which forbid the supposition that, in regard of what is most
+ vital, this official story can possibly be true; while the extreme care with which it
+ has obviously been elaborated, suggests the conclusion that it was intended to disguise
+ facts, to the concealment of which the government of the day attached supreme
+ importance.</p>
+
+ <p>As has been said, the cardinal point of the tale, as <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>commonly told, is that the Plot was a secret
+ and dangerous conspiracy, conducted with so much craft as to have baffled detection,
+ but for a lucky accident; that the vigilance of the authorities was completely at
+ fault; and that they found themselves suddenly on the very brink of a terrible
+ catastrophe of which they had no suspicion.<sup><a name="FN22A" id="FN22A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN22">[22]</a></sup> If, on the contrary, it should appear that they had ample
+ information of what was going on, while feigning absolute ignorance; that they
+ studiously devised a false account of the manner in which it came to their knowledge;
+ and that their whole conduct is quite inconsistent with that sense of imminent danger
+ which they so loudly professed&mdash;the question inevitably suggests itself as to
+ whether we can rely upon the authenticity of the opening chapters of a history, the
+ conclusion of which has been so dexterously manipulated.</p>
+
+ <p>A French writer has observed<sup><a name="FN23A" id="FN23A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN23">[23]</a></sup> that the plots undertaken under Elizabeth and James I. have this
+ feature in common, that they proved, one and all, extremely opportune for those against
+ whom they were directed. To this law the Gunpowder Plot was no exception. Whatever be
+ the true history of its origin, it certainly placed in the hands of the king's chief
+ minister a most effective weapon for the enforcement of his favourite <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>policy, and very materially
+ strengthened his own position. Without doubt the sensational manner of its "discovery"
+ largely contributed to its success in this respect; and if this were ingeniously
+ contrived for such a purpose, may it not be that a like ingenuity had been employed in
+ providing the material destined to be so artistically utilized?</p>
+
+ <p>There can be no question as to the wide prevalence of the belief that previous plots
+ had owed their origin to the policy of the statesmen who finally detected them, a
+ belief witnessed to by Lord Castlemaine,<sup><a name="FN24A" id="FN24A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN24">[24]</a></sup> who declares that "it was a piece of wit in Queen Elizabeth's
+ days to draw men into such devices," and that "making and fomenting plots was then in
+ fashion; nor can it be denied that good grounds for such an opinion were not lacking".
+ The unfortunate man Squires had been executed on the ridiculous charge that he had come
+ over from Spain in order to poison the pommel of Queen Elizabeth's saddle. Dr. Parry,
+ we are informed by Bishop Goodman, whose verdict is endorsed by Mr.
+ Brewer,<sup><a name="FN25A" id="FN25A"></a><a href="#FN25">[25]</a></sup> was put to
+ death by those who knew him to be guiltless in their regard, they having themselves
+ employed him in the business for which he suffered. Concerning Babington's famous plot,
+ it is absolutely certain that, whatever its origin, it was, almost from the first,
+ fully known to Walsingham, through whose hands passed the correspondence between the
+ conspirators, and who assiduously worked the enterprise, in order to turn it to the
+ destruction of the Queen of Scots. As to Lopez, the Jewish physician, it is impossible
+ not to concur in the verdict <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg
+ 15]</a></span>that his condemnation was at least as much owing to political intrigue as
+ to the weight of evidence.<sup><a name="FN26A" id="FN26A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN26">[26]</a></sup> Concerning this period Mr. Brewer says: "The Roman Catholics
+ seem to have made just complaints of the subtle and unworthy artifices of Leicester and
+ Walsingham, by whom they were entrapped into the guilt of high treason. 'And verily,'
+ as [Camden] expresses it, there were at this time crafty ways devised to try how men
+ stood affected; counterfeit letters were sent in the name of the Queen of Scots and
+ left at papists' houses; spies were sent up and down the country to note people's
+ dispositions and lay hold of their words; and reporters of vain and idle stories were
+ credited and encouraged."<sup><a name="FN27A" id="FN27A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN27">[27]</a></sup> Under King James,<sup><a name="FN28A" id="FN28A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN28">[28]</a></sup> as Bishop Goodman declares, the priest Watson was hanged for
+ treason by those who had employed him.<sup><a name="FN29A" id="FN29A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN29">[29]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It must farther be observed that the particular Plot which is our subject was
+ stamped with certain features more than commonly suspicious. Even on the face of
+ things, as will be seen from the summary already given, it was steadily utilized from
+ the first for a purpose <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg
+ 16]</a></span>which it could not legitimately be made to serve. That the Catholics of
+ England, as a body, had any connection with it there is not, nor ever appeared to be,
+ any vestige of a proof; still less that the official superiors of the Church, including
+ the Pope himself, were concerned in it. Yet the first act of the government was to lay
+ it at the door of all these, thus investing it with a character which was, indeed,
+ eminently fitted to sustain their own policy, but to which it was no-wise entitled.
+ Even in regard of Father Garnet and his fellow Jesuits, whatever judgment may now be
+ formed concerning them, it is clear that it was determined to connect them with the
+ conspiracy long before any evidence at all was forthcoming to sustain the charge. The
+ actual confederates were, in fact, treated throughout as in themselves of little or no
+ account, and as important only in so far as they might consent to incriminate those
+ whom the authorities wished to be incriminated.</p>
+
+ <p>The determined manner in which this object was ever kept in view, the unscrupulous
+ means constantly employed for its attainment, the vehemence with which matters were
+ asserted to have been proved, any proof of which was never even seriously
+ attempted&mdash;in a word, the elaborate system of falsification by which alone the
+ story of the conspiracy was made to suit the purpose it so effectually served, can
+ inspire us with no confidence that the foundation upon which such a superstructure was
+ erected, was itself what it was said to be.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, when we examine into the details supplied to us as to the
+ progress of the affair, we find that much of what the conspirators are said
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>to have done is
+ well-nigh incredible, while it is utterly impossible that if they really acted in the
+ manner described, the public authorities should not have had full knowledge of their
+ proceedings. We also find not only that the same authorities, while feigning ignorance
+ of anything of the kind, were perfectly well aware that these very conspirators had
+ something in hand, but that long before the "discovery," in fact, at the very time when
+ the conspiracy is said to have been hatched, their officials were working a Catholic
+ plot, by means of secret agents, and even making arrangements as to who were to be
+ implicated therein.</p>
+
+ <p>These are, in brief, some of the considerations which point to a conclusion utterly
+ at variance with the received version of the story, the conclusion, namely, that, for
+ purposes of State, the government of the day either found means to instigate the
+ conspirators to undertake their enterprise, or, at least, being, from an early stage of
+ the undertaking, fully aware of what was going on, sedulously nursed the insane scheme
+ till the time came to make capital out of it. That the conspirators, or the greater
+ number of them, really meant to strike a great blow is not to be denied, though it may
+ be less easy to assure ourselves as to its precise character; and their guilt will not
+ be palliated should it appear that, in projecting an atrocious crime, they were
+ unwittingly playing the game of plotters more astute than themselves. At the same time,
+ while fully endorsing the sentiment of a Catholic writer,<sup><a name="FN30A" id=
+ "FN30A"></a><a href="#FN30">[30]</a></sup> that they who suffer themselves to be drawn
+ into a plot like fools, deserve to be hanged for it like <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>knaves, it is impossible not to agree with
+ another when he writes:<sup><a name="FN31A" id="FN31A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN31">[31]</a></sup> "This account does not excuse the conspirators, but lays a heavy
+ weight upon the devils who tempted them beyond their strength."</p>
+
+ <p>The view thus set forth will perhaps be considered unworthy of serious discussion,
+ and it must be fully admitted, that there can be no excuse for making charges such as
+ it involves, unless solid grounds can be alleged for so doing. That any such grounds
+ are to be found historians of good repute utterly deny. Mr. Hallam roundly
+ declares:<sup><a name="FN32A" id="FN32A"></a><a href="#FN32">[32]</a></sup> "To deny
+ that there was such a plot, or, which is the same thing, to throw the whole on the
+ contrivance and management of Cecil, as has sometimes been done, argues great
+ effrontery in those who lead, and great stupidity in those who follow." Similarly, Mr.
+ Gardiner,<sup><a name="FN33A" id="FN33A"></a><a href="#FN33">[33]</a></sup> while
+ allowing that contemporaries accused Cecil of inventing the Plot, is content to dismiss
+ such a charge as "absurd."</p>
+
+ <p>Whether it be so or not we have now to inquire.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN3" id="FN3"></a><a href="#FN3A">[3]</a></sup> So he
+ himself always wrote it.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN4" id="FN4"></a><a href="#FN4A">[4]</a></sup> Also
+ described as "Great Horses," or "Horses for the great Saddle."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN5" id="FN5"></a><a href="#FN5A">[5]</a></sup> "The
+ great object of the Government now was to obtain evidence against the
+ priests."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Gardiner</span>, <i>History of England</i>, i.
+ 267. Ed. 1883.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN6" id="FN6"></a><a href="#FN6A">[6]</a></sup> See his
+ despatch in reply. <i>Irish State Papers</i>, vol. 217, 95. Cornwallis received
+ Cecil's letter on November 22nd.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN7" id="FN7"></a><a href="#FN7A">[7]</a></sup> See
+ Harington's account of the king's message, <i>Nug&aelig; Antiqu&aelig;</i>, i.
+ 374.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN8" id="FN8"></a><a href="#FN8A">[8]</a></sup> To Favat.
+ (Copy) Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, fol. 625.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN9" id="FN9"></a><a href="#FN9A">[9]</a></sup> Statutes:
+ Anno 3<sup>o</sup> Jacobi, c. 1.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN10" id="FN10"></a><a href="#FN10A">[10]</a></sup> This
+ work was taken in hand by the Commons, when, in spite of the alarming circumstances
+ of the time, they met on November 5th, and was carried on at every subsequent
+ sitting. The Lords also met on the 5th, but transacted no business. <i>Journals of
+ Parliament.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN11" id="FN11"></a><a href="#FN11A">[11]</a></sup>
+ Tresham had died in the Tower, December 22nd. Although he had not been tried, his
+ remains were treated as those of a traitor, his head being cut off and fixed above
+ the gates of Northampton (<i>Dom. James I.</i> xvii. 62.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN12" id="FN12"></a><a href="#FN12A">[12]</a></sup> "That
+ which remaineth is but this, to assure you that ere many daies you shall hear that
+ Father Garnet ... is layd open for a principall conspirator even in the particular
+ Treason of the Powder."&mdash;<i>To Sir Henry Bruncard, P.R.O. Ireland</i>, vol. 218,
+ March 3rd, 1605-6. Also (Calendar) <i>Dom. James I.</i> xix. 10.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN13" id="FN13"></a><a href="#FN13A">[13]</a></sup> In
+ Lent, 1603-4. Easter fell that year on April 8th.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN14" id="FN14"></a><a href="#FN14A">[14]</a></sup>
+ "About the middle of Easter Term."&mdash;<i>Thomas Winter's declaration</i>, of
+ November 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN15" id="FN15"></a><a href="#FN15A">[15]</a></sup>
+ "Keyes, about a month before Michaelmas."&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i> About Christopher Wright
+ there is much confusion, Faukes (November 17th, 1605) implying that he was introduced
+ before Christmas, and Thomas Winter (November 23rd, 1605) that it was about a
+ fortnight after the following Candlemas, <i>i.e.</i>, about the middle of
+ February.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN16" id="FN16"></a><a href="#FN16A">[16]</a></sup> The
+ form of this oath is thus given in the official account: "You shall swear by the
+ blessed Trinity, and by the Sacrament you now propose to receive, never to disclose
+ directly or indirectly, by word or circumstance, the matter that shall be proposed to
+ you to keep secret, nor desist from the execution thereof until the rest shall give
+ you leave." It is a singular circumstance that the form of this oath, which was
+ repeated in official publications, with an emphasis itself inexplicable, occurs in
+ only one of the conspirators' confessions, viz., the oft-quoted declaration of T.
+ Winter, November 23rd, 1605. This&mdash;as we shall see, a most suspicious
+ document&mdash;was one of the two selected for publication, on which the traditional
+ history of the plot depends. Curiously enough, however, the oath, with sundry other
+ matters, was omitted from the published version of the confession.</p>
+
+ <p>[Published in the "King's Book:" copy, or draft, for publication, in the Record
+ Office: original at Hatfield. Copy of original Brit. Mus. Add. MSS., 6178, 75.]</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN17" id="FN17"></a><a href="#FN17A">[17]</a></sup> T.
+ Winter says: "Having upon a primer given each other the oath of secrecy, in a chamber
+ where no other body was, we went after into the next room and heard mass, and
+ received the blessed Sacrament upon the same."&mdash;<i>Declaration</i>, November
+ 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN18" id="FN18"></a><a href="#FN18A">[18]</a></sup> Digby
+ was enlisted "about Michaelmas, 1605;" Rokewood about a month before the 5th of
+ November. Tresham gives October 14th as the date of his own initiation.
+ <i>Examination</i>, November 13th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN19" id="FN19"></a><a href="#FN19A">[19]</a></sup> This
+ is clear from a comparison of Cecil's private letter to Cornwallis and others
+ (Winwood, <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 170), with the official account published in the
+ <i>Discourse of the manner of the Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN20" id="FN20"></a><a href="#FN20A">[20]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 3.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN21" id="FN21"></a><a href="#FN21A">[21]</a></sup>
+ <i>History of England</i>, i. 269 (1883).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN22" id="FN22"></a><a href="#FN22A">[22]</a></sup> "We
+ had all been blowne up at a clapp, if God out of His Mercie and just Reuenge against
+ so great an Abomination, had not destined it to be discovered, though very
+ miraculously, even some twelve Houres before the matter should have been put in
+ execution."&mdash;<i>Cecil to Cornwallis</i>, November 9th, 1605. Winwood,
+ <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 170.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN23" id="FN23"></a><a href="#FN23A">[23]</a></sup> M.
+ l'Abb&eacute; Destombes, <i>La pers&eacute;cution en Angleterre sous le r&egrave;gne
+ d'Elizabeth</i>, p. 176.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN24" id="FN24"></a><a href="#FN24A">[24]</a></sup>
+ <i>Catholique Apology</i>, third edition, p. 403.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN25" id="FN25"></a><a href="#FN25A">[25]</a></sup>
+ Goodman's <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 121.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN26" id="FN26"></a><a href="#FN26A">[26]</a></sup> Mr.
+ Sidney Lee, <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>, <i>sub nom.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN27" id="FN27"></a><a href="#FN27A">[27]</a></sup>
+ Goodman's <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 121. Ed. J.S. Brewer.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN28" id="FN28"></a><a href="#FN28A">[28]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, p. 64.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN29" id="FN29"></a><a href="#FN29A">[29]</a></sup> Of
+ this affair,&mdash;the "Bye" and the "Main,"&mdash;Goodman says, "[This] I did ever
+ think to be an old relic of the treasons in Q. Elizabeth's time, and that George
+ Brooks was the contriver thereof, who being brother-in-law to the Secretary, and
+ having great wit, small means, and a vast expense, did only try men's allegiance, and
+ had an intent to betray one another, but were all taken napping and so involved in
+ one net. This in effect appears by Brooks' confession; and certainly K. James ... had
+ no opinion of that treason, and therefore was pleased to pardon all save only Brooks
+ and the priests."&mdash;<i>Court of King James</i>, i. 160.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN30" id="FN30"></a><a href="#FN30A">[30]</a></sup> <i>A
+ plain and rational account of the Catholick Faith</i>, etc. Rouen, 1721, p. 200.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN31" id="FN31"></a><a href="#FN31A">[31]</a></sup> Dodd,
+ <i>Church History of England</i>, Brussels, 1739, i. 334.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN32" id="FN32"></a><a href="#FN32A">[32]</a></sup>
+ <i>Constitutional History</i>, i. 406, note, Seventh Edition. In the same note the
+ historian, discussing the case of Father Garnet, speaks of "the damning circumstance
+ that he was taken at Hendlip in concealment along with the other conspirators." He
+ who wrote thus can have had but a slight acquaintance with the details of the
+ history. None of the conspirators, except Robert Winter, who was captured at Hagley
+ Hall, were taken in concealment, and none at Hendlip, where there is no reason to
+ suppose they ever were. Father Garnet was discovered there, nearly three months
+ later, in company with another Jesuit, Father Oldcorne, on the very day when the
+ conspirators were executed in London, and it was never alleged that he had ever, upon
+ any occasion, been seen in company with "the other conspirators."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN33" id="FN33"></a><a href="#FN33A">[33]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, i. 255, note.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE PERSONS CONCERNED.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">At</span> the period with which we have to deal the
+ chief minister of James I. was Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury,<sup><a name="FN34A" id=
+ "FN34A"></a><a href="#FN34">[34]</a></sup> the political heir of his father, William
+ Cecil, Lord Burghley,<sup><a name="FN35A" id="FN35A"></a><a href="#FN35">[35]</a></sup>
+ and of Walsingham, his predecessor in the office of secretary. It is clear that he had
+ inherited from them ideas of statesmanship of the order then in vogue, and from nature,
+ the kind of ability required to put these successfully in practice. Sir Robert Naunton
+ thus describes him:<sup><a name="FN36A" id="FN36A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN36">[36]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"This great minister of state, and the staff of the Queen's declining age, though
+ his little crooked person<sup><a name="FN37A" id="FN37A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN37">[37]</a></sup> could not provide any great supportation, yet <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>it carried thereon a head
+ and a headpiece of vast content, and therein, it seems, nature was so diligent to
+ complete one, and the best, part about him, as that to the perfection of his memory and
+ intellectuals, she took care also of his senses, and to put him in <i>Lynceos
+ oculos</i>, or to pleasure him the more, borrowed of Argus, so to give him a perfective
+ sight. And for the rest of his sensitive virtues, his predecessor had left him a
+ receipt, to smell out what was done in the Conclave; and his good old father was so
+ well seen in the mathematicks, as that he could tell you throughout Spain, every part,
+ every ship, with their burthens, whither bound, what preparation, what impediments for
+ diversion of enterprises, counsels, and resolutions." The writer then proceeds to give
+ a striking instance to show "how docible was this little man."</p>
+
+ <p>Of his character, as estimated by competent judges, his contemporaries, we have very
+ different accounts. Mr. Gardiner, who may fairly be chosen to represent his apologists,
+ speaks thus:<sup><a name="FN38A" id="FN38A"></a><a href="#FN38">[38]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"Although there are circumstances in his life which tell against him, it is
+ difficult to read the whole of the letters and documents which have come down to us
+ from his pen, without becoming gradually convinced of his honesty of intention. It
+ cannot be denied that he was satisfied with the ordinary morality of his <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>time, and that he thought it
+ no shame to keep a State secret or to discover a plot by means of a falsehood. If he
+ grasped at power as one who took pleasure in the exercise of it, he used it for what he
+ regarded as the true interests of his king and country. Nor are we left to his own acts
+ and words as the only means by which we are enabled to form a judgment of his
+ character. Of all the statesmen of the day, not one has left a more blameless character
+ than the Earl of Dorset. Dorset took the opportunity of leaving upon record in his
+ will, which would not be read till he had no longer injury or favour to expect in this
+ world, the very high admiration in which his colleague was held by him."</p>
+
+ <p>This, it must be allowed, is a somewhat facile species of argument. Though wills are
+ not formally opened until after the testators' deaths, it is not impossible for their
+ contents to be previously communicated to others, when there is an object for so
+ doing.<sup><a name="FN39A" id="FN39A"></a><a href="#FN39">[39]</a></sup> But, however
+ this may be, it can scarcely be said that the weight of evidence tends in this
+ direction. Not to mention the fact that, while enjoying the entire confidence of Queen
+ Elizabeth, Cecil was engaged in a secret correspondence with King James, which she
+ would have regarded as treasonable&mdash;and which he so carefully concealed that for a
+ century afterwards and more it was not suspected&mdash;there remains the other
+ indubitable fact, that while similarly trusted by James, and while all affairs of State
+ were entirely in his hands, he was in receipt of a secret pension from the King of
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg
+ 22]</a></span>Spain,<sup><a name="FN40A" id="FN40A"></a><a href="#FN40">[40]</a></sup>
+ the very monarch any communication with whom he treated as treason on the part of
+ others.<sup><a name="FN41A" id="FN41A"></a><a href="#FN41">[41]</a></sup> It is certain
+ that the Earl of Essex, when on his trial, asserted that Cecil had declared the Spanish
+ Infanta to be the rightful heir to the crown, and though the secretary vehemently
+ denied the imputation, he equally repudiated the notion that he favoured the King of
+ Scots.<sup><a name="FN42A" id="FN42A"></a><a href="#FN42">[42]</a></sup> We know,
+ moreover, that one who as Spanish Ambassador had dealings with him, pronounced him to
+ be a venal traitor, who was ready to sell his soul for money,<sup><a name="FN43A" id=
+ "FN43A"></a><a href="#FN43">[43]</a></sup> while another intimated<sup><a name="FN44A"
+ id="FN44A"></a><a href="#FN44">[44]</a></sup> that <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>it was in his power to have charged him with
+ "unwarrantable practices." Similarly, we hear from the French minister of the ingrained
+ habit of falsehood which made it impossible for the English secretary to speak the
+ truth even to friends;<sup><a name="FN45A" id="FN45A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN45">[45]</a></sup> and, from the French Ambassador, of the resolution imputed to
+ the same statesman, to remove from his path every rival who seemed likely to jeopardize
+ his tenure of power.<sup><a name="FN46A" id="FN46A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN46">[46]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>What was the opinion of his own countrymen, appeared with startling emphasis when,
+ in 1612, the Earl died. On May 22nd we find the Earl of Northampton writing to
+ Rochester that the "little man" is dead, "for which so many rejoice, and so few even
+ seem to be sorry."<sup><a name="FN47A" id="FN47A"></a><a href="#FN47">[47]</a></sup>
+ Five days later, Chamberlain, writing<sup><a name="FN48A" id="FN48A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN48">[48]</a></sup> to his friend Dudley Carleton, to announce the same event, thus
+ expresses himself: "As the case stands it was best that he gave over the world, for
+ they say his friends fell from him apace, and some near about him, and however he had
+ fared <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>with his
+ health, it is verily thought he would never have been himself again in power and
+ credit. I never knew so great a man so soon and so openly censured, for men's tongues
+ walk very liberally and freely, but how truly I cannot judge." On June 25th he again
+ reports: "The outrageous speeches against the deceased Lord continue still, and there
+ be fresh libels come out every day, and I doubt his actions will be hardly censured in
+ the next parliament, if the King be not the more gracious to repress them." Moreover,
+ his funeral was attended by few or none of the gentry, and those only were present
+ whose official position compelled them. His own opinion Chamberlain expresses in two
+ epigrams and an anagram, which, although of small literary merit, contrive clearly to
+ express the most undisguised animosity and contempt for the late minister.<sup><a name=
+ "FN49A" id="FN49A"></a><a href="#FN49">[49]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>There is abundant proof that such sentiments were not first entertained when he had
+ passed away, though, naturally, they were less openly expressed when he was alive and
+ practically all powerful. Cecil seems, in fact, to have been throughout his career a
+ lonely man, with <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg
+ 25]</a></span>no real friends and many enemies, desperately fighting for his own hand,
+ and for the retention of that power which he prized above all else, aspiring, as a
+ contemporary satirist puts it, to be "both shepherd and dog."<sup><a name="FN50A" id=
+ "FN50A"></a><a href="#FN50">[50]</a></sup> Since the accession of James he had felt his
+ tenure of office to be insecure. Goodman tells us<sup><a name="FN51A" id=
+ "FN51A"></a><a href="#FN51">[51]</a></sup> that "it is certain the king did not love
+ him;" Osborne,<sup><a name="FN52A" id="FN52A"></a><a href="#FN52">[52]</a></sup> "that
+ he had forfeited the love of the people by the hate he expressed to their darling
+ Essex, and the desire he had to render justice and prerogative arbitrary."<sup><a name=
+ "FN53A" id="FN53A"></a><a href="#FN53">[53]</a></sup> Sir Anthony Weldon speaks of
+ him<sup><a name="FN54A" id="FN54A"></a><a href="#FN54">[54]</a></sup> as <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>"Sir Robert Cecil, a very
+ wise man, but much hated in England by reason of the fresh bleeding of that universally
+ beloved Earl of Essex, and for that clouded also in the king's favour." De la Boderie,
+ the French Ambassador, tells us<sup><a name="FN55A" id="FN55A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN55">[55]</a></sup> that the nobility were exceedingly jealous of his dignity and
+ power, and<sup><a name="FN56A" id="FN56A"></a><a href="#FN56">[56]</a></sup> that he in
+ his turn was jealous of the growing influence of Prince Henry, the heir apparent, who
+ made no secret of his dislike of him. Meanwhile there were rivals who, it seemed not
+ improbable, might supplant him. One of these, Sir Walter Raleigh, had already been
+ rendered harmless on account of his connection with the "Main," the mysterious
+ conspiracy which inaugurated the reign of James. There remained the Earl of
+ Northumberland, and it may be remarked in passing that one of the effects of the
+ Gunpowder Plot was to dispose of him likewise.<sup><a name="FN57A" id=
+ "FN57A"></a><a href="#FN57">[57]</a></sup> Even the apologists of the <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>minister do not attempt to
+ deny either the fact that he was accustomed to work by stratagems and disguises, nor
+ the obloquy that followed on his death;<sup><a name="FN58A" id="FN58A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN58">[58]</a></sup> while by friends and foes alike he was compared to Ulysses of
+ many wiles.<sup><a name="FN59A" id="FN59A"></a><a href="#FN59">[59]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>But amongst those whom he had to dread, there can be no doubt that the members of
+ the Catholic <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg
+ 28]</a></span>party appeared to the secretary the most formidable. It was known on all
+ hands, nor did he attempt to disguise the fact, that he was the irreconcilable opponent
+ of any remission of the penal laws enacted for the purpose of stamping out the old
+ faith.<sup><a name="FN60A" id="FN60A"></a><a href="#FN60">[60]</a></sup> The work,
+ however, had as yet been very incompletely done. At the beginning of the reign of King
+ James, the Catholics formed at least a half, probably a majority,<sup><a name="FN61A"
+ id="FN61A"></a><a href="#FN61">[61]</a></sup> of the English people. There were amongst
+ them many noblemen, fitted to hold offices of State. Moreover, the king, who before his
+ accession had unquestionably <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg
+ 29]</a></span>assured the Catholics at least of toleration,<sup><a name="FN62A" id=
+ "FN62A"></a><a href="#FN62">[62]</a></sup> showed at his first coming a manifest
+ disposition to relieve them from the grievous persecution under which they had groaned
+ so long.<sup><a name="FN63A" id="FN63A"></a><a href="#FN63">[63]</a></sup> He remitted
+ a large part of the fines which had so grievously pressed upon all recusants, declaring
+ that he would not make merchandise of conscience, nor set a price upon
+ faith;<sup><a name="FN64A" id="FN64A"></a><a href="#FN64">[64]</a></sup> he invited to
+ his presence leading Catholics from various parts of the country, assuring them, and
+ bidding them assure their co-religionists, of his gracious intentions in their
+ regard;<sup><a name="FN65A" id="FN65A"></a><a href="#FN65">[65]</a></sup> titles of
+ honour and lucrative employments were bestowed on some of their number;<sup><a name=
+ "FN66A" id="FN66A"></a><a href="#FN66">[66]</a></sup> one professed Catholic, Henry
+ Howard, presently created Earl of Northampton, being enrolled in the Privy Council; and
+ in the first speech which he addressed to his Parliament James declared that, as to the
+ papists, he had no desire to persecute them, especially those of the laity who would be
+ quiet.<sup><a name="FN67A" id="FN67A"></a><a href="#FN67">[67]</a></sup> The immediate
+ effect <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>of this
+ milder policy was to afford evidence of the real strength of the Catholics, many now
+ openly declaring themselves who had previously conformed to the State church. In the
+ diocese of Chester alone the number of Catholics was increased by a
+ thousand.<sup><a name="FN68A" id="FN68A"></a><a href="#FN68">[68]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It is scarcely to be wondered at that men who were familiar with the political
+ methods of the age should see in all this a motive sufficient to explain a great stroke
+ for the destruction of those who appeared to be so formidable, devised by such a
+ minister as was then in power, "the statesman," writes Lord Castlemaine,<sup><a name=
+ "FN69A" id="FN69A"></a><a href="#FN69">[69]</a></sup> "who bore (as everybody knew) a
+ particular hatred to all of our profession, and this increased to hear his Majesty
+ speak a little in his first speech to the two Houses against persecution of papists,
+ whereas there had been nothing within those walls but invectives and defamations for
+ above forty years together."</p>
+
+ <p>This much is certain, that, whatever its origin, the Gunpowder Plot immensely
+ increased Cecil's influence and power, and, for a time, even his popularity, assuring
+ the success of that anti-Catholic policy with which he was identified.<sup><a name=
+ "FN70A" id="FN70A"></a><a href="#FN70">[70]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Of no less importance is it to understand the position of the Catholic body, and the
+ character of the particular Catholics who engaged in this enterprise. We have seen with
+ what hopes the advent of King James had been hailed by those who had suffered so much
+ for his mother's sake, and who interpreted in a too sanguine and trustful spirit his
+ own words and deeds. Their dream of enjoying even toleration at his hands was soon
+ rudely dispelled. After giving them the briefest of respites, the monarch, under the
+ influence, as all believed, of his council, and especially of his chief
+ minister,<sup><a name="FN71A" id="FN71A"></a><a href="#FN71">[71]</a></sup> suddenly
+ reversed his line of action and persecuted his Catholic subjects more cruelly than had
+ his predecessor, calling up the arrears of fines which they fancied had been altogether
+ remitted, ruining many in the process who had hitherto contrived to pay their
+ way,<sup><a name="FN72A" id="FN72A"></a><a href="#FN72">[72]</a></sup> and adding to
+ the sense of injury which such <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg
+ 32]</a></span>a course necessarily provoked by farming out wealthy recusants to needy
+ courtiers, "to make their profit of," in particular to the Scots who had followed their
+ royal master across the border. Soon it was announced that the king would have blood;
+ all priests were ordered to leave the realm under pain of death, and the searches for
+ them became more frequent and violent than ever. In no long time, as Goodman tells
+ us,<sup><a name="FN73A" id="FN73A"></a><a href="#FN73">[73]</a></sup> "a gentlewoman
+ was hanged only for relieving and harbouring a priest; a citizen was hanged only for
+ being reconciled to the Church of Rome; besides the penal laws were such and so
+ executed that they could not subsist." Father Gerard says:<sup><a name="FN74A" id=
+ "FN74A"></a><a href="#FN74">[74]</a></sup> "This being known to Catholics, it is easy
+ to be seen how first their hopes were turned into fears, and then their fears into full
+ knowledge that all the contrary to that they had hoped was intended and prepared for
+ them", and, as one of the victims of these proceedings wrote, "the times of Elizabeth,
+ although most cruel, were the mildest and happiest in comparison with those of King
+ James."<sup><a name="FN75A" id="FN75A"></a><a href="#FN75">[75]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In such circumstances, the Catholic body being so numerous as it was, it is not to
+ be wondered at that individuals should be found, who, smarting under their injuries,
+ and indignant at the bad faith of which they considered themselves the dupes, looked to
+ violent remedies for relief, and might without difficulty be worked upon to that
+ effect. Their case seemed far more hopeless than ever. Queen Elizabeth's quarrel with
+ Rome had been in a great degree personal; and moreover, as she had no direct heir, it
+ was confidently <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg
+ 33]</a></span>anticipated that the demise of the crown would introduce a new era. King
+ James's proceedings, on the other hand, seemed to indicate a deliberate policy which
+ there was no prospect of reversing, especially as his eldest son, should he prove true
+ to his promise, might be expected to do that zealously, and of himself, which his
+ father was held to do under the constraint of others.<sup><a name="FN76A" id=
+ "FN76A"></a><a href="#FN76">[76]</a></sup> As Sir Everard Digby warned Cecil, in the
+ remarkable letter which he addressed to him on the subject:<sup><a name="FN77A" id=
+ "FN77A"></a><a href="#FN77">[77]</a></sup> "If your Lordship and the State think fit to
+ deal severely with the Catholics, within brief space there will be massacres,
+ rebellions, and desperate attempts against the King and the State. For it is a general
+ received reason among Catholics, that there is not that expecting and suffering course
+ now to be run that was in the Queen's time, who was the last of her line, and last in
+ expectance to run violent courses against Catholics; for then it was hoped that the
+ King that now is, would have been at least free from persecuting, as his promise was
+ before his coming into this realm, and as divers his promises have been since his
+ coming. All these promises every man sees broken."<sup><a name="FN78A" id=
+ "FN78A"></a><a href="#FN78">[78]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It must likewise be remembered that if stratagems and "practices" were the
+ recognized weapons of ministers, turbulence and arms were, at this period, the
+ familiar, and indeed the only, resource of those in <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>opposition, nor did any stigma attach to their
+ employment unless taken up on the losing side. Not a little of this kind of thing had
+ been done on behalf of James himself. As is well known, he succeeded to the throne by a
+ title upon which he could not have recovered at law an acre of land.<sup><a name=
+ "FN79A" id="FN79A"></a><a href="#FN79">[79]</a></sup> Elizabeth had so absolutely
+ forbidden all discussion of the question of the succession as to leave it in a state of
+ utter confusion.<sup><a name="FN80A" id="FN80A"></a><a href="#FN80">[80]</a></sup>
+ There were more than a dozen possible competitors, and amongst these the claim of the
+ King of Scots was technically not the strongest, for though nearest in blood his claims
+ had been barred by a special Act of Parliament, excluding the Scottish line. As
+ Professor Thorold Rogers says, "For a year after his accession James, if Acts of
+ Parliament are to go for anything, was not legally King."<sup><a name="FN81A" id=
+ "FN81A"></a><a href="#FN81">[81]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless the cause of James was vigorously taken up in all directions, and
+ promoted by means which might well have been styled treason against the authority of
+ Parliament. Thus, old Sir Thomas Tresham, father of Francis Tresham, the Gunpowder
+ Conspirator, who had been an eminent sufferer for his religion, at considerable
+ personal risk, and against much resistance on the part of the local magistrates and the
+ populace, publicly proclaimed the new king at Northampton, while Francis Tresham
+ himself and his brother Lewis, with Lord Monteagle, their brother-in-law, supported the
+ Earl of Southampton in holding the Tower of London on his behalf.<sup><a name="FN82A"
+ id="FN82A"></a><a href="#FN82">[82]</a></sup> In London indeed <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>everybody took to arms as
+ soon as the queen's illness had been known; watch and ward were kept in the City; rich
+ men brought their plate and treasure from the country, and placed them where they would
+ be safest,<sup><a name="FN83A" id="FN83A"></a><a href="#FN83">[83]</a></sup> and the
+ approaches were guarded. Cecil himself related in open court, in praise of the
+ Londoners, how, when he himself, attended by most of the peers and privy councillors of
+ the kingdom, wished to enter the City to proclaim the new sovereign, they found the
+ gates closed against them till they had publicly declared that they were about to
+ proclaim James and no one else.<sup><a name="FN84A" id="FN84A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN84">[84]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In times when statesmen could approve such methods of political action, it was
+ inevitable that violent enterprises should have come to be considered the natural
+ resource of those out of power, and it is very clear that there were numerous
+ individuals, of whom no one party had the monopoly, who were ready at any moment to
+ risk everything for the cause they served, and such men, although their proclivities
+ were well known, did not suffer much in public esteem.</p>
+
+ <p>The Gunpowder Conspirators were eminently men of this stamp, and notoriously so. So
+ well was their character known, that when, in 1596, eight years before the commencement
+ of the Plot, Queen Elizabeth had been unwell, the Lords of the Council, as a
+ precautionary measure arrested some of the principal amongst them, Catesby, the two
+ Wrights, Tresham, and others, as being persons who would certainly give <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>trouble should a chance
+ occur.<sup><a name="FN85A" id="FN85A"></a><a href="#FN85">[85]</a></sup> Since that
+ time they had not improved their record. All those above-named, as well as Thomas
+ Winter, Christopher Wright, Percy, Grant, and perhaps others, had been engaged in the
+ ill-starred rebellion of Essex, on which occasion Catesby was wounded, and both he and
+ Tresham came remarkably near being hanged.<sup><a name="FN86A" id="FN86A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN86">[86]</a></sup> They had likewise been variously implicated in all the seditious
+ attempts which had since been made&mdash;Catesby and Tresham being named by Sir Edward
+ Coke as being engaged with Watson in the "Bye." Thomas Winter, Christopher Wright, and
+ Faukes, had, if we may believe the same authority, been sent to Spain on treasonable
+ embassies.<sup><a name="FN87A" id="FN87A"></a><a href="#FN87">[87]</a></sup> Grant made
+ himself very conspicuous by frequently resisting the officers of the law <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>when they appeared to search
+ his house.<sup><a name="FN88A" id="FN88A"></a><a href="#FN88">[88]</a></sup> John
+ Wright and Percy had, at least till a very recent period, been notorious bravoes, who
+ made a point of picking a quarrel with any man who was reported to be a good swordsman,
+ they being both expert with the weapon.<sup><a name="FN89A" id="FN89A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN89">[89]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It is evident that men of this stamp were not unlikely to prove restive under such
+ treatment as was meted out to the Catholics, from which moreover, as gentlemen, they
+ themselves suffered in a special degree. Lord Castlemaine remarks that loose people may
+ usually be drawn into a plot when statesmen lay gins, and that it was no hard thing for
+ a Secretary of State, should he desire any such thing, to know of turbulent and
+ ambitious spirits to be his unconscious instruments,<sup><a name="FN90A" id=
+ "FN90A"></a><a href="#FN90">[90]</a></sup> and it is obvious that no great perspicacity
+ would have been required to fix upon those who had given such evidence of their
+ disposition as had these men.</p>
+
+ <p>It must, at the same time, be confessed that the character of the plotters is one of
+ the most perplexing features of the Plot. The crime contemplated was without parallel
+ in its brutal and senseless atrocity. There had, it is true, been powder-plots before,
+ notably that which had effected the destruction of the king's own father, Lord Darnley,
+ a fact undoubtedly calculated <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg
+ 38]</a></span>to make much impression upon the timorous mind of James. But what marked
+ off our Gunpowder Plot from all others, was the wholesale and indiscriminate slaughter
+ in which it must have resulted, and the absence of any possibility that the cause could
+ be benefited which the conspirators had at heart. It was at once reprobated and
+ denounced by the Catholics of England, and by the friends and near relatives of the
+ conspirators themselves.<sup><a name="FN91A" id="FN91A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN91">[91]</a></sup> It might be supposed that those who undertook such an enterprise
+ were criminals of the deepest dye, and ruffians of a more than usually repulsive type.
+ In spite, however, of the turbulent element in their character of which we have seen
+ something, such a judgment would, in the opinion of historians, be altogether
+ erroneous. Far from their being utterly unredeemed villains, it appears, in fact, that
+ apart from the one monstrous transgression which has made them infamous, they should be
+ distinguished in the annals of crime as the least disreputable gang of conspirators who
+ ever plotted a treason. On this point we have ample evidence from those who are by no
+ means their friends. "Atrocious as their whole undertaking was," writes Mr.
+ Gardiner,<sup><a name="FN92A" id="FN92A"></a><a href="#FN92">[92]</a></sup> "great as
+ must have been the moral obliquity of their minds before they could have conceived such
+ a project, there was at least nothing mean or selfish about them. They boldly risked
+ their lives for what they honestly <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id=
+ "Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>believed to be the cause of God and of their country.
+ Theirs was a crime which it would never have entered into the heart of any man to
+ commit who was not raised above the low aims of the ordinary criminal." Similarly Mr.
+ Jardine, a still less friendly witness, tells us<sup><a name="FN93A" id=
+ "FN93A"></a><a href="#FN93">[93]</a></sup> that "several at least of the conspirators
+ were men of mild and amiable manners, averse to tumults and bloodshed, and dwelling
+ quietly amidst the humanities of domestic life," a description which he applies
+ especially to Rokewood and Digby; while of Guy Faukes himself he says<sup><a name=
+ "FN94A" id="FN94A"></a><a href="#FN94">[94]</a></sup> that, according to the accounts
+ which we hear of him, he is not to be regarded as a mercenary ruffian, ready for hire
+ to do any deed of blood; but as a zealot, misled by misguided fanaticism, who was,
+ however, by no means destitute either of piety or of humanity. Moreover, as Mr. Jardine
+ farther remarks, the conspirators as a body were of the class which we should least
+ expect to find engaged in desperate enterprises, being, as Sir E. Coke described them,
+ "gentlemen of good houses, of excellent parts, and of very competent fortunes and
+ estates," none of them, except perhaps Catesby, being in pecuniary difficulties, while
+ several&mdash;notably Robert Winter, Rokewood, Digby, Tresham, and Grant&mdash;were men
+ of large possessions. It has also been observed by a recent biographer of Sir Everard
+ Digby,<sup><a name="FN95A" id="FN95A"></a><a href="#FN95">[95]</a></sup> that, for the
+ furtherance of their projects after the explosion, the confederates were able to
+ provide a sum equal at least to &pound;75,000 of our money&mdash;a sufficient proof of
+ their worldly position.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>That men of such a class should so lightly and easily have adopted a scheme so
+ desperate and atrocious as that of "murdering a kingdom in its representatives," is
+ undoubtedly not the least incomprehensible feature of this strange story. At the same
+ time it must not be forgotten that there is another, and a very different account of
+ these men, which comes to us on the authority of a Catholic priest living in England at
+ the time,<sup><a name="FN96A" id="FN96A"></a><a href="#FN96">[96]</a></sup> who speaks
+ of the conspirators as follows:</p>
+
+ <p>"They were a few wicked and desperate wretches, whom many Protestants termed
+ Papists, although the priests and the true Catholics knew them not to be such.... They
+ were never frequenters of Catholic Sacraments with any priest, as I could ever learn;
+ and, as all the Protestant Courts will witness, not one of them was a convicted or
+ known Catholic or Recusant."<sup><a name="FN97A" id="FN97A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN97">[97]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Similarly Cornwallis, writing from Madrid,<sup><a name="FN98A" id=
+ "FN98A"></a><a href="#FN98">[98]</a></sup> reported that the king and Estate of Spain
+ were "much grieved that they being atheists and devils in their inward parts, should
+ paint their outside with Catholicism."</p>
+
+ <p>In view of evidence so contradictory, it is difficult, if not impossible, to form a
+ confident judgment as to the real character of those whose history we are attempting to
+ trace; but, leaving aside what is matter <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id=
+ "Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>of doubt, the undisputed facts of their previous career
+ appear to show unmistakably that they were just the men who would be ready to look to
+ violence for a remedy of existing evils, and to whom it would not be difficult to
+ suggest its adoption.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN34" id="FN34"></a><a href="#FN34A">[34]</a></sup> When
+ James came to the throne Cecil was but a knight. He was created Baron Cecil of
+ Essendon, May 13th, 1603; Viscount Cranborne, August 20th, 1604; Earl of Salisbury,
+ May 4th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN35" id="FN35"></a><a href="#FN35A">[35]</a></sup>
+ Robert, as the second son, did not succeed to his father's title, which devolved upon
+ Thomas, the eldest, who was created Earl of Exeter on the same day on which Robert
+ became Earl of Salisbury.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN36" id="FN36"></a><a href="#FN36A">[36]</a></sup>
+ <i>Fragmenta Regalia</i>, 37. Ed. 1642.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN37" id="FN37"></a><a href="#FN37A">[37]</a></sup> He
+ was but little above five feet in height, and, in the phrase of the time, a
+ "Crouchback." King James, who was not a man of much delicacy in such matters, was
+ fond of giving him nicknames in consequence. Cecil wrote to Sir Thomas Lake, October
+ 24th, 1605: "I see nothing y<sup>t</sup> I can doe, can procure me so much favor, as
+ to be sure one whole day what title I shall have another. For from Essenden to
+ Cranborne, from Cranborne to Salisbury, from Salisbury to Beagle, from Beagle to Thom
+ Derry, from Thom Derry to Parret which I hate most, I have been so walked, as I think
+ by y<sup>t</sup> I come to Theobalds, I shall be called Tare or Sophie." (R.O.
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xv. 105.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN38" id="FN38"></a><a href="#FN38A">[38]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, i. 92.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN39" id="FN39"></a><a href="#FN39A">[39]</a></sup> In
+ the same document James I. is spoken of as "the most judycious, learned, and rareste
+ kinge, that ever this worlde produced." (R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> xxviii. 29.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN40" id="FN40"></a><a href="#FN40A">[40]</a></sup> Digby
+ to the King, S.P., <i>Spain</i>, Aug. 8. Gardiner, <i>History</i>, ii. 216.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN41" id="FN41"></a><a href="#FN41A">[41]</a></sup> At
+ the trial of Essex, Cecil exclaimed, "I pray God to consume me where I stand, if I
+ hate not the Spaniard as much as any man living." (Bruce, <i>Introduction to Secret
+ Correspondence of Sir R. Cecil</i>, xxxiii.)</p>
+
+ <p>Of the Spanish pension Mr. Gardiner, after endeavouring to show that originally
+ Cecil's acceptance of it may have been comparatively innocent, thus continues
+ (<i>History of England</i>, i. 216): "But it is plain that, even if this is the
+ explanation of his original intentions, such a comparatively innocent connection with
+ Spain soon extended itself to something worse, and that he consented to furnish the
+ ambassadors, from time to time, with information on the policy and intentions of the
+ English Government.... Of the persistence with which he exacted payment there can be
+ no doubt whatever. Five years later, when the opposition between the two governments
+ became more decided, he asked for an increase of his payments, and demanded that they
+ should be made in large sums as each piece of information was given."</p>
+
+ <p>At the same time it appears highly probable that he was similarly in the pay of
+ France. <i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN42" id="FN42"></a><a href="#FN42A">[42]</a></sup> Queen
+ Elizabeth regarded as treasonable any discussion of the question of the
+ succession.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN43" id="FN43"></a><a href="#FN43A">[43]</a></sup>
+ Gardiner, i. 215.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN44" id="FN44"></a><a href="#FN44A">[44]</a></sup>
+ <i>Chamberlain to Carleton</i>, July 9th, 1612, R.O.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN45" id="FN45"></a><a href="#FN45A">[45]</a></sup> "Tout
+ ce que vous a dit le Comte de Salisbury touchant le mariage d'Espagne est rempli de
+ deguisements et artifices &agrave; son accoutum&eacute;e.... Toutefois, je ne veux
+ pas jurer qu'ils n&eacute;gocient plus sincerement et de meilleur foi avec lesdites
+ Espagnols qu'avec nous. Ils corromproient par trop leur naturel, s'ils le faisoient,
+ pour des gens qui ne leur scauroient gu&egrave;re de gr&eacute;."&mdash;Le
+ F&egrave;vre de la Boderie, <i>Ambassade</i>, i. 170.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN46" id="FN46"></a><a href="#FN46A">[46]</a></sup> (Of
+ the Earl of Northumberland.) "On tient le Comte de Salisbury pour principal auteur de
+ sa pers&eacute;cution, comme celui qui veut ne laisser personne en pied qui puisse
+ lui faire t&ecirc;te." De la Boderie. <i>Ibid.</i> 178.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN47" id="FN47"></a><a href="#FN47A">[47]</a></sup> R.O.
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> lxix. 56.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN48" id="FN48"></a><a href="#FN48A">[48]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i>, May 27, 1612. Bishop Goodman, no enemy of Cecil, is inclined to believe
+ that at the time of the secretary's death there was a warrant out for his arrest.
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 45.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN49" id="FN49"></a><a href="#FN49A">[49]</a></sup> The
+ first of these epigrams, in Latin, concludes thus:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">Sero, Recurve, moreris sed serio;<br />
+ Sero, jaces (bis mortuus) sed serio:<br />
+ Sero saluti public&aelig;, serio tu&aelig;.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>The second is in English:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">Whiles two RR's, both crouchbacks, stood at the helm,<br />
+ The one spilt the blood royall, the other the realm.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>A marginal note explains that these were, "Richard Duke of Gloster, and Robert
+ Earl of Salisburie;" the anagram, of which title is "A silie burs." He also styles
+ the late minister a monkey (<i>cercopithecus</i>) and hobgoblin (<i>empusa</i>).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN50" id="FN50"></a><a href="#FN50A">[50]</a></sup>
+ Osborne, <i>Traditional Memoirs</i>, p. 236 (ed. 1811).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN51" id="FN51"></a><a href="#FN51A">[51]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 44.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN52" id="FN52"></a><a href="#FN52A">[52]</a></sup>
+ <i>Traditional Memoirs</i>, 181.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN53" id="FN53"></a><a href="#FN53A">[53]</a></sup> This
+ feeling was expressed in lampoons quoted by Osborne, e.g.:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"Here lies Hobinall, our pastor while here,<br />
+ That once in a quarter our fleeces did sheare.<br />
+ For oblation to Pan his custom was thus,<br />
+ He first gave a trifle, then offer'd up us:<br />
+ And through his false worship such power he did gaine,<br />
+ As kept him o' th' mountain, and us on the plaine."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Again, he is described as</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"Little bossive Robin that was so great,<br />
+ Who seemed as sent from ugly fate,<br />
+ To spoyle the prince, and rob the state,<br />
+ Owning a mind of dismall endes,<br />
+ As trappes for foes, and tricks for friends."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="right">(<i>Ibid.</i> 236.)</p>
+
+ <p>Oldmixon (<i>History of Queen Elizabeth</i>, p. 620) says of the Earl of Essex,
+ "'Twas not likely that Cecil, whose Soul was of a narrow Size, and had no Room for
+ enlarged Sentiments of Ambition, Glory, and Public Spirit, should cease to undermine
+ a Hero, in comparison with whom he was both in Body and Mind a Piece of Deformity, if
+ there's nothing beautiful in Craft."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN54" id="FN54"></a><a href="#FN54A">[54]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court and Character of King James</i>, &sect; 10.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN55" id="FN55"></a><a href="#FN55A">[55]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ambassade</i>, i. 58.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN56" id="FN56"></a><a href="#FN56A">[56]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> 401.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN57" id="FN57"></a><a href="#FN57A">[57]</a></sup>
+ Against Northumberland nothing was proved (<i>vide</i> de la Boderie,
+ <i>Ambassade</i>, i. 178), except that he had admitted Thomas Percy amongst the royal
+ pensioners without exacting the usual oath. He in vain demanded an open trial, but
+ was prosecuted in the Star Chamber, and there sentenced to a fine of &pound;30,000
+ (equal to at least ten times that sum in our money), and to be imprisoned for
+ life.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Gardiner considers that, in regard both of Raleigh and of Northumberland,
+ Cecil acted with great moderation. It must, however, be remembered that in his secret
+ correspondence with King James, before the death of the queen, he had strenuously
+ endeavoured to poison the mind of that monarch against these his rivals. Thus he
+ wrote, December 4th, 1601 (as usual through Lord Henry Howard): "You must remember
+ that I gave you notice of the diabolical triplicity, that is, Cobham, Raleigh, and
+ Northumberland, that met every day at Durham-house, where Raleigh lies, in
+ consultation, which awaked all the best wits of the town ... to watch what chickens
+ they could hatch out of these cockatrice eggs that were daily and nightly sitten on."
+ (<i>Secret Correspondence of Sir Robert Cecil with James VI., King of Scotland</i>,
+ Edinburgh, 1766, p. 29.) Coming after this, the speedy ruin of all these men appears
+ highly suspicious.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN58" id="FN58"></a><a href="#FN58A">[58]</a></sup> Sir
+ Walter Cope in his <i>Apology</i> (Gutch, <i>Collectanea Curiosa</i>, i. No. 10)
+ says: "When living, the world observed with all admiration and applause; no sooner
+ dead, but it seeketh finally to suppress his excellent parts, and load his memory
+ with all imputations of corruption."</p>
+
+ <p>Among such charges are enumerated "His Falsehood in Friendship.&mdash;That he
+ often made his friends fair promises, and underhand laid rubs to hinder their
+ preferment.&mdash;The secret passage of things I know not.... Great Counsellors have
+ their private and their publique ends...." etc.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN59" id="FN59"></a><a href="#FN59A">[59]</a></sup> Lord
+ Castlemaine after mentioning the chief features of the Gunpowder Plot, goes on: "But
+ let it not displease you, if we ask whether Ulysses be no better known?"
+ (<i>Catholique Apology</i>, p. 30.)</p>
+
+ <p>Francis Herring in his Latin poem, <i>Pietas Pontificia</i> (published 1606),
+ speaking of Monteagle (called "Morleius," from his father's title), who took the
+ celebrated letter to Cecil, writes thus:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"Morleius Regis de consultoribus unum,<br />
+ (Quem norat veteri nil quicquam cedere Ulyssi,<br />
+ Juditio pollentem acri, ingenioque sagaci)<br />
+ Seligit, atque illi Rem totam ex ordine pandit."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN60" id="FN60"></a><a href="#FN60A">[60]</a></sup> This
+ is so evident that it appears unnecessary to occupy space with proofs in detail. De
+ la Boderie remarks (<i>Ambassade</i>, i. 71) on the extraordinary rancour of the
+ minister against Catholics, and especially against Jesuits, and that "he wishes to
+ destroy them everywhere." Of this a remarkable confirmation is afforded by the
+ instructions given to Sir Thomas Parry when he was sent as ambassador, "Leiger," to
+ Paris, in 1603, at the head of which stood these extraordinary articles:</p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>"To intimate to the French king the jealousy conceived in England upon the
+ revocation of the Jesuits, against former edicts.</li>
+
+ <li>"To inform the French king that the English were disgusted at the maintenance
+ allowed to the French king's prelates and clergy, to priests and Jesuits that
+ passed out of his dominions into England, Scotland, and Ireland, to do bad
+ offices." (P.R.O. <i>France</i>, bundle 132, f. 314.)</li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN61" id="FN61"></a><a href="#FN61A">[61]</a></sup>
+ Jardine, <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 5. Strype says of the time of Elizabeth: "The
+ faction of the Catholics in England is great, and able, if the kingdom were divided
+ into three parts, to make two of them." (<i>Annals</i>, iii. 313, quoted by Butler,
+ <i>Historical Memoirs</i>, ii. 177.)</p>
+
+ <p>At the execution of Father Oldcorne, 1606, a proof was given of their numbers
+ which is said to have alarmed the king greatly. The Father having from the scaffold
+ invited all Catholics to pray with him, almost all present uncovered.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN62" id="FN62"></a><a href="#FN62A">[62]</a></sup> Of
+ this there can be no doubt, in spite of James's subsequent denial. Father Garnet
+ wrote to Parsons (April 16th, 1603): "There hath happened a great alteration by the
+ death of the Queen. Great fears were, but all are turned into greatest security, and
+ a golden time we have of unexpected freedom abroade.... The Catholicks have great
+ cause to hope for great respect, in that the nobility all almost labour for it, and
+ have good promise thereof from his Majesty." (Stonyhurst MSS. <i>Anglia</i>, iii.
+ 32.)</p>
+
+ <p>Goodman says: "And certainly they [the Catholics] had very great promises from
+ him." (<i>Court of King James</i>, i. 86.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN63" id="FN63"></a><a href="#FN63A">[63]</a></sup> "The
+ Penal Laws, a code as savage as any that can be conceived since the foundation of the
+ world."&mdash;Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. (<i>To Lord Mayor Knill</i>, Nov. 9,
+ 1892.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN64" id="FN64"></a><a href="#FN64A">[64]</a></sup>
+ Gardiner, i. 100.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN65" id="FN65"></a><a href="#FN65A">[65]</a></sup>
+ Jardine, <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, 18.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN66" id="FN66"></a><a href="#FN66A">[66]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid</i>. 20.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN67" id="FN67"></a><a href="#FN67A">[67]</a></sup>
+ Gardiner, i. 166.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN68" id="FN68"></a><a href="#FN68A">[68]</a></sup>
+ Green, <i>History of the English People</i>, iii. 62. Mr. Green adds: "Rumours of
+ Catholic conversions spread a panic which showed itself in an Act of the Parliament
+ of 1604 confirming the statutes of Elizabeth; and to this James gave his assent. He
+ promised, indeed, that the statute should remain inoperative." In May, 1604, the
+ Catholics boasted that they had been joined by 10,000 converts. (Gardiner,
+ <i>Hist</i>. i. 202.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN69" id="FN69"></a><a href="#FN69A">[69]</a></sup>
+ <i>Catholique Apology</i>, 404.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN70" id="FN70"></a><a href="#FN70A">[70]</a></sup>
+ Salisbury, in reward of his services on this occasion, received the Garter, May 20th,
+ 1606, and was honoured on the occasion with an almost regal triumph.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the proceedings subsequent to the Plot we are told: "In passing these laws for
+ the security of the Protestant Religion, the Earl of Salisbury exerted himself with
+ distinguished zeal and vigour, which gained him great love and honour from the
+ kingdom, as appeared in some measure, in the universal attendance on him at his
+ installation with the Order of the Garter, on the 20th of May, 1606, at Windsor."
+ (Birch, <i>Historical View</i>, p. 256.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN71" id="FN71"></a><a href="#FN71A">[71]</a></sup> This
+ belief is so notorious that one instance must suffice as evidence for it. A paper of
+ informations addressed to Cecil himself, April, 1604, declares that the Catholics
+ hoped to see a good day yet, and that "his Majesty would suffer a kinde of
+ Tolleracyon, for his inclynacyon is good, howsoever the Councell set out his
+ speeches." (S.P.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> vii. 86.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN72" id="FN72"></a><a href="#FN72A">[72]</a></sup> Mr.
+ Gardiner (<i>Hist.</i> i. 229, note) says that arrears were never demanded in the
+ case of the fine of &pound;20 per lunar month for non-attendance at the parish
+ church. Father Gerard, however, a contemporary witness, distinctly states that they
+ were. (<i>Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot</i>, ed. Morris, p. 62.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN73" id="FN73"></a><a href="#FN73A">[73]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 100.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN74" id="FN74"></a><a href="#FN74A">[74]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narrative</i>, p. 46.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN75" id="FN75"></a><a href="#FN75A">[75]</a></sup>
+ Stonyhurst MSS., <i>Anglia</i>, iii. 103.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN76" id="FN76"></a><a href="#FN76A">[76]</a></sup> Of
+ the Prince of Wales it was prophesied:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"The eighth Henry did pull down Monks and their cells,<br />
+ The ninth will pull down Bishops and their bells."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN77" id="FN77"></a><a href="#FN77A">[77]</a></sup>
+ Concerning this letter see Appendix B, <i>Digby's Letter to Salisbury</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN78" id="FN78"></a><a href="#FN78A">[78]</a></sup> R.O.
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvii. 10.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN79" id="FN79"></a><a href="#FN79A">[79]</a></sup>
+ Hallam, <i>Constitutional Hist.</i> i. 392 (3rd ed.).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN80" id="FN80"></a><a href="#FN80A">[80]</a></sup> See
+ Appendix C, <i>The Question of Succession</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN81" id="FN81"></a><a href="#FN81A">[81]</a></sup>
+ <i>Agriculture and Prices</i>, v. 5.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN82" id="FN82"></a><a href="#FN82A">[82]</a></sup>
+ Jardine, <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 17.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN83" id="FN83"></a><a href="#FN83A">[83]</a></sup>
+ Gardiner, <i>Hist.</i> i. 84.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN84" id="FN84"></a><a href="#FN84A">[84]</a></sup> Trial
+ of Father Garnet (Cobbett's <i>State Trials</i>, ii. 243).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN85" id="FN85"></a><a href="#FN85A">[85]</a></sup>
+ Camden, the historian, to Sir R. Cotton, March 15th, 1596. (Birch, <i>Original
+ Letters</i>, 2nd series, iii. p. 179.) Various writers erroneously suppose this
+ transaction to have occurred in March, 1603, on occasion of Elizabeth's last illness.
+ The correct date, 1596, given by Sir Henry Ellis, is supplied by a statement
+ contained in the letter, that this was her Majesty's "climacterick year," that is,
+ her sixty-third, this number, as the multiple of the potent factors seven and nine,
+ being held of prime importance in human life. Elizabeth was born in 1533.</p>
+
+ <p>From Garnet's examination of March 14th, 1605-6 (<i>Dom. James I.</i> xix. 44), we
+ learn that Catesby was at large at the time of the queen's demise.</p>
+
+ <p>For Cecil's description of the men, see Winwood's <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 172.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN86" id="FN86"></a><a href="#FN86A">[86]</a></sup>
+ Catesby purchased his life for a fine of 4,000 marks, and Tresham of 3,000. Mr.
+ Jessopp says that the former sum is equivalent at least to &pound;30,000 at the
+ present day. (<i>Dict. Nat. Biog., Catesby</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN87" id="FN87"></a><a href="#FN87A">[87]</a></sup> But
+ see Appendix D, <i>The Spanish Treason</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN88" id="FN88"></a><a href="#FN88A">[88]</a></sup>
+ Father Gerard says of him that "he paid them [the pursuivants] so well for their
+ labour not with crowns of gold, but with cracked crowns sometimes, and with dry blows
+ instead of drink and other good cheer, that they durst not visit him any more unless
+ they brought store of help with them." (<i>Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot</i>, p.
+ 86.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN89" id="FN89"></a><a href="#FN89A">[89]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 57.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN90" id="FN90"></a><a href="#FN90A">[90]</a></sup>
+ <i>Catholique Apology</i>, p. 403.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN91" id="FN91"></a><a href="#FN91A">[91]</a></sup>
+ <i>E.g.</i>, by Mr. Talbot of Grafton, father-in-law of Robert Winter, who drove
+ their envoys away with threats and reproaches (Jardine, <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p.
+ 112), and by Sir Robert Digby, of Coleshill, cousin to Sir Everard, who assisted in
+ taking prisoners. (R.O. <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 42.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN92" id="FN92"></a><a href="#FN92A">[92]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, i. 263.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN93" id="FN93"></a><a href="#FN93A">[93]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 151.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN94" id="FN94"></a><a href="#FN94A">[94]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 38.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN95" id="FN95"></a><a href="#FN95A">[95]</a></sup>
+ <i>Life of a Conspirator, by one of his Descendants</i>, p. 150.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN96" id="FN96"></a><a href="#FN96A">[96]</a></sup>
+ <i>English Protestants' Plea and Petition for English Priests and Papists.</i> The
+ author of this book (published 1621) describes himself as a priest who has been for
+ many years on the English mission. His title indicates that he draws his arguments
+ from Protestant sources.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN97" id="FN97"></a><a href="#FN97A">[97]</a></sup> P.
+ 56.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN98" id="FN98"></a><a href="#FN98A">[98]</a></sup>
+ November 25th, 1605, <i>Stowe MSS.</i> 168, 61.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE OPINION OF CONTEMPORARIES AND HISTORIANS.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">We</span> have now for so long a period been
+ accustomed to accept the official story regarding the Gunpowder Plot, that most readers
+ will be surprised to hear that at the time of its occurrence, and for more than a
+ century afterwards, there were, to say the least, many intelligent men who took for
+ granted that in some way or other the actual conspirators were but the dupes and
+ instruments of more crafty men than themselves, and in their mad enterprise unwittingly
+ played the game of ministers of State.</p>
+
+ <p>From the beginning the government itself anticipated this, as is evidenced by the
+ careful and elaborate account of the whole affair drawn up on the 7th of November,
+ 1605&mdash;two days after the "discovery"&mdash;seemingly for the benefit of the Privy
+ Council.<sup><a name="FN99A" id="FN99A"></a><a href="#FN99">[99]</a></sup> This
+ important document, which is in the handwriting of Levinus Munck, Cecil's secretary,
+ with numerous and significant emendations from the hand of Cecil himself, speaks,
+ amongst other things, of the need of circumspection, "considering how apt the world is
+ nowadays to think all providence and intelligences to <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>be but practices." The result did not falsify
+ the expectation. Within five weeks we find a letter written from London to a
+ correspondent abroad,<sup><a name="FN100A" id="FN100A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN100">[100]</a></sup> wherein it is said: "Those that have practical experience of
+ the way in which things are done, hold it as certain that there has been foul play, and
+ that some of the Council secretly spun the web to entangle these poor gentlemen, as did
+ Secretary Walsingham in other cases," and it is clear that the writer has but recorded
+ an opinion widely prevalent. To this the government again bear witness, for they found
+ it advisable to issue an official version of the history, in the <i>True and Perfect
+ Relation</i>, and the <i>Discourse of the Manner of the Discovery of the Gunpowder
+ Plot</i>, the appearance of which was justified expressly on the ground that "there do
+ pass from hand to hand divers uncertain, untrue, and incoherent reports and relations,"
+ and that it is very important "for men to understand the birth and growth of the said
+ abominable and detestable conspiracy." The accounts published with this object are, by
+ the common consent of historians, flagrantly untruthful and untrustworthy.<sup><a name=
+ "FN101A" id="FN101A"></a><a href="#FN101">[101]</a></sup> <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>We likewise find Secretary
+ Cecil writing to instruct Sir E. Coke, the Attorney-General, as to his conduct of the
+ case against the conspirators, in view of the "lewd" reports current in regard of the
+ manner in which it had been discovered.<sup><a name="FN102A" id="FN102A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN102">[102]</a></sup> The same minister, in the curious political manifesto which he
+ issued in connection with the affair,<sup><a name="FN103A" id="FN103A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN103">[103]</a></sup> again bears witness to the same effect, when he declares that
+ the papists, after the manner of Nero, were throwing the blame of their crime upon
+ others.</p>
+
+ <p>Clearly, however, it was not to the papists alone that such an explanation commended
+ itself. The Puritan Osborne<sup><a name="FN104A" id="FN104A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN104">[104]</a></sup> speaks of the manner in which the "discovery" was managed as
+ "a neat device of the Treasurer's, he being very plentiful in such plots." Goodman,
+ Anglican Bishop of Gloucester, another contemporary, is even more explicit. After
+ describing the indignation of the Catholics when they found themselves deceived in
+ their hopes at the hands of James, he goes on: "The great statesman had intelligence of
+ all this, and because he would show his service to the State, he would first contrive
+ and then discover a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg
+ 45]</a></span>treason, and the more odious and hateful the treason were, his service
+ would be the greater and the more acceptable."<sup><a name="FN105A" id=
+ "FN105A"></a><a href="#FN105">[105]</a></sup> Another notable witness is quoted by the
+ Jesuit Father Martin Grene, in a letter to his brother Christopher, January 1st,
+ 1665-6:<sup><a name="FN106A" id="FN106A"></a><a href="#FN106">[106]</a></sup> "I have
+ heard strange things, which, if ever I can make out, will be very pertinent: for
+ certain, the late Bishop of Armagh, Usher, was divers times heard to say, that if
+ papists knew what he knew, the blame of the Gunpowder Treason would not lie on them."
+ In like manner we find it frequently asserted on the authority of Lord Cobham and
+ others,<sup><a name="FN107A" id="FN107A"></a><a href="#FN107">[107]</a></sup> that King
+ James himself, when he had time to realize the truth of the matter, was in the habit of
+ speaking of the Fifth of November as "Cecil's holiday."</p>
+
+ <p>Such a belief must have been widely entertained, otherwise it could not have been
+ handed on, as it was, for generations. It is not too much to say that historians for
+ almost a century and a half, if they did not themselves favour the theory of the
+ government's complicity, at least bore witness how widely that idea prevailed. Thus, to
+ confine ourselves at present to Protestant writers, Sanderson,<sup><a name="FN108A" id=
+ "FN108A"></a><a href="#FN108">[108]</a></sup> acknowledging that the secretary was
+ accused of having manipulated the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id=
+ "Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>transaction, says no word to indicate that he repudiates
+ such a charge. Welwood<sup><a name="FN109A" id="FN109A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN109">[109]</a></sup> is of opinion that Cecil was aware of the Plot long before the
+ "discovery," and that the famous letter to Monteagle was "a contrivance of his own."
+ Oldmixon writes<sup><a name="FN110A" id="FN110A"></a><a href="#FN110">[110]</a></sup>
+ "notwithstanding the general joy, ... there were some who insinuated that the Plot was
+ of the King's own making, or that he was privy to it from first to last."
+ Carte<sup><a name="FN111A" id="FN111A"></a><a href="#FN111">[111]</a></sup> does not
+ believe that James knew anything of it, but considers it "not improbable" that Cecil
+ was better informed. Burnet<sup><a name="FN112A" id="FN112A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN112">[112]</a></sup> complains of the impudence of the papists of his day, who
+ denied the conspiracy, and pretended it was an artifice of the minister's "to engage
+ some desperate men into a plot, which he managed so that he could discover it when he
+ pleased." Fuller<sup><a name="FN113A" id="FN113A"></a><a href="#FN113">[113]</a></sup>
+ bears witness to the general belief, but considers it inconsistent with the well-known
+ piety of King James. Bishop Kennet, in his Fifth of November sermon at St. Paul's, in
+ 1715, talks in a similar strain. So extreme, indeed, does the incredulity and
+ uncertainty appear to have been, that the Puritan Prynne<sup><a name="FN114A" id=
+ "FN114A"></a><a href="#FN114">[114]</a></sup> is inclined to suspect Bancroft, the
+ Archbishop of Canterbury, of having been engaged in the conspiracy; while one of the
+ furious zealots who followed the lead of Titus Oates, mournfully testified that there
+ were those in his day who looked upon the Powder Treason "as upon a romantic
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>story, or a
+ politic invention, or a State trick," giving no more credence to it than to the
+ histories of the "Grand Cyrus, or Guy of Warwick, or Amadis de Gaul,"&mdash;or, as we
+ should now say, Jack the Giant Killer.</p>
+
+ <p>The general scope and drift of such suspicions are well indicated by Bevil Higgons,
+ "This impious design," he writes<sup><a name="FN115A" id="FN115A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN115">[115]</a></sup> of the Plot, "gave the greatest blow to the Catholic interest
+ in England, by rendering that religion so odious to the people. The common opinion
+ concerning the discovery of the Plot, by a letter to the Lord Mounteagle, has not been
+ universally allowed to be the real truth of the matter, for some have affirmed that
+ this design was first hammered in the forge of Cecil, who intended to have produced
+ this plot in the time of Queen Elizabeth, but prevented by her death he resumed his
+ project in this reign, with a design to have so enraged the nation as to have expelled
+ all Roman Catholics, and confiscated their estates. To this end, by his secret
+ emissaries, he enticed some hot-headed men of that persuasion, who, ignorant whence the
+ design first came, heartily engaged in this execrable Powder Treason.... Though this
+ account should not be true," he continues, "it is certain that the Court of England had
+ notice of this Plot from France and Italy long before the pretended discovery; upon
+ which Cecil ... framed that letter to the Lord Mounteagle, with a design to make the
+ discovery seem the more miraculous, and at the same time magnify the judgment of the
+ king, who by his deep penetration was to have the honour of unravelling so ambiguous
+ and dark a riddle."</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>It may be added that amongst modern historians who have given special attention to
+ this period, several, though repudiating the notion that Cecil originated the Plot, are
+ strongly of opinion that as to the important episode of the "discovery," the
+ traditional story is a fabrication. Thus, Mr. Brewer<sup><a name="FN116A" id=
+ "FN116A"></a><a href="#FN116">[116]</a></sup> declares it to be quite certain that
+ Cecil had previous knowledge of the design, and that the "discovery" was a fraud.
+ Lodge<sup><a name="FN117A" id="FN117A"></a><a href="#FN117">[117]</a></sup> is of the
+ same opinion, and so is the author of the <i>Annals of England</i>.<sup><a name=
+ "FN118A" id="FN118A"></a><a href="#FN118">[118]</a></sup> Jardine<sup><a name="FN119A"
+ id="FN119A"></a><a href="#FN119">[119]</a></sup> inclines to the belief that the
+ government contrived the letter to Monteagle in order to conceal the means by which
+ their information had in reality been obtained. Mr. Gardiner, though dismissing the
+ idea as "absurd," acknowledges that his contemporaries accused Cecil of inventing the
+ whole Plot.<sup><a name="FN120A" id="FN120A"></a><a href="#FN120">[120]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>So much for the testimony of Protestants. As for those who had to suffer in
+ consequence of the affair, there is no need to multiply testimonies. Lord Castlemaine
+ tells us<sup><a name="FN121A" id="FN121A"></a><a href="#FN121">[121]</a></sup> that
+ "the Catholics of England, who knew Cecil's ways of acting and their own innocence,
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>suspected him
+ from the beginning, as hundreds still alive can testify." Father Henry More, S.J., a
+ contemporary, speaks to the same effect.<sup><a name="FN122A" id="FN122A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN122">[122]</a></sup> Father John Gerard, who was not only a contemporary, but one
+ of those accused of complicity, intimates<sup><a name="FN123A" id="FN123A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN123">[123]</a></sup> his utter disbelief of the official narrative concerning the
+ discovery, and his conviction that those who had the scanning of the redoubtable letter
+ were "well able in shorter time and with fewer doubts to decipher a darker riddle and
+ find out a greater secret than that matter was." One Floyde, a spy, testified in
+ 1615<sup><a name="FN124A" id="FN124A"></a><a href="#FN124">[124]</a></sup> to having
+ frequently heard various Jesuits say, that the government were aware of the Plot
+ several months before they thought fit to "discover" it.</p>
+
+ <p>The Catholic view is expressed with much point and force by an anonymous writer of
+ the eighteenth century:<sup><a name="FN125A" id="FN125A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN125">[125]</a></sup> "I shall touch briefly upon a few particulars relating to this
+ Plot, for the happy discovery whereof an anniversary holiday has now been kept for
+ above a hundred years. Is it out of pure gratitude to God the nation is so particularly
+ devout on this occasion? If so, it is highly commendable: for we ought to thank God for
+ all things, and therefore I cannot deny but there is all the reason in the world to
+ give him solemn thanks, for that the king and Parliament never were in any danger of
+ being hurt by the Powder Plot.... I am far from denying the Gunpowder Plot. Nay, I
+ believe as firmly that Catesby, with twelve more popish associates, had <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>a design to blow up K.
+ James, as I believe that the father of that same king was effectually blown up by the
+ Earls of Murray, Morton, Bothwell, and others of the Reformed Church of Scotland.
+ However ... I humbly conceive I may say the king and Parliament were in no danger of
+ being hurt by it, and my reason is because they had not less a man than the prime
+ minister of state for their tutelar angel; a person deeply read in politics; who had
+ inherited the double spirit of his predecessor Walsingham, knew all his tricks of
+ legerdemain, and could as seasonably discover plots as contrive them.... This much at
+ least is certain, that the letter written to my Lord Mounteagle, by which the Plot was
+ discovered, had not a fool, but a very wise sophister for its author: for it was so
+ craftily worded, that though it was mysterious enough on the one hand to prevent a full
+ evidence that it was written on purpose to discover the Plot, yet it was clear enough
+ on the other to be understood with the help of a little consideration, as the event
+ soon showed. Indeed, when it was brought to Secretary Cecil, he, poor gentleman, had
+ not penetration enough to understand the meaning of it, and said it was certainly
+ written by a madman. But there, I fear, he wronged himself. For the secretary was no
+ madman. On the contrary, he had too much wit to explain it himself, and was too refined
+ a politician to let slip so favourable an occasion of making his court to the king, who
+ was to have the compliment made him of being the only Solomon wise enough to unfold
+ this dark mystery. Which while his Majesty was doing with a great deal of ease, the
+ secretary was all the while at his elbow admiring and applauding his <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>wonderful sagacity.... So
+ that, in all probability, the same man was the chief underhand contriver and discoverer
+ of the Plot; and the greatest part of the bubbles concerned in it were trapanned into
+ it by one who took sure care that none but themselves should be hurt by it.... But be
+ that as it will, there is no doubt but that they who suffer themselves to be drawn into
+ a plot like fools, deserve to be hanged for it like knaves."</p>
+
+ <p>The opinion of Dodd, the historian, has already been indicated, which in another
+ place he thus emphasizes and explains:<sup><a name="FN126A" id="FN126A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN126">[126]</a></sup> "Some persons in chief power suspecting the king would be very
+ indulgent to Catholics, several stratagems were made use of to exasperate him against
+ them, and cherishing the Gunpowder Plot is thought to be a masterpiece in this
+ way."<sup><a name="FN127A" id="FN127A"></a><a href="#FN127">[127]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It would not be difficult to continue similar citations, but enough has now been
+ said to show that it is nothing new to charge the chief minister of James I. with
+ having fostered the conspiracy for his own purposes, or even to have actually set it
+ a-going. It appears perfectly clear that from the first there were <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>not a few, and those not
+ Catholics only, who entertained such a belief, and that the facts of the case are
+ inadequately represented by historians, who imply, like Mr. Jardine, that such a theory
+ was first broached long afterwards, and adopted by Catholics alone.<sup><a name=
+ "FN128A" id="FN128A"></a><a href="#FN128">[128]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It is moreover apparent that if in recent times historians have forgotten that such
+ a view was ever held, or consider it too preposterous for serious discussion, this is
+ not because fuller knowledge of the details of the conspiracy have discredited it. The
+ official version of the story has remained in possession of the field, and it has
+ gradually been assumed that this must substantially be true. In consequence, as it
+ seems, writers of history, approaching the subject with this conviction, have failed to
+ remark many points suggested even by the documentary evidence at our disposal, and
+ still more emphatically by the recorded facts, which cannot but throw grave doubt upon
+ almost every particular of the traditional account, while making it impossible to
+ believe that, as to what is most essential, the Plot was in reality what has for so
+ long been supposed. That long before the "discovery" the Plot must have been, and in
+ fact was, known to the government; that this knowledge was artfully dissimulated, in
+ order to make political capital <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id=
+ "Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>out of it; that for the same purpose the sensational
+ circumstances of its discovery were deliberately arranged; and that there are grave
+ reasons for suspecting the beginnings of the desperate enterprise, as well as its
+ catastrophe, to have been dexterously manipulated for State purposes;&mdash;such are
+ the conclusions, the evidence for which will now be considered.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN99" id="FN99"></a><a href="#FN99A">[99]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 129. Printed in <i>Arch&aelig;ologia</i>, xii. 202*.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN100" id="FN100"></a><a href="#FN100A">[100]</a></sup>
+ R.O. <i>Roman Transcripts</i> (Bliss), No. 86, December 10th, 1605 (Italian).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN101" id="FN101"></a><a href="#FN101A">[101]</a></sup>
+ Mr. Jardine writes (<i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. p. 235), "<i>The True and Perfect
+ Relation</i> ... is certainly not deserving of the character which its title imports.
+ It is not <i>true</i>, because many occurrences on the trial are wilfully
+ misrepresented; and it is not <i>perfect</i>, because the whole evidence, and many
+ facts and circumstances which must have happened, are omitted, and incidents are
+ inserted which could not by possibility have taken place on the occasion. It is
+ obviously a false and imperfect relation of the proceedings; a tale artfully garbled
+ and misrepresented, like many others of the same age, to serve a State purpose, and
+ intended and calculated to mislead the judgment of the world upon the facts of the
+ case." Of the <i>Discourse</i> he speaks in similar terms. (<i>Ibid.</i>, p. 4.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN102" id="FN102"></a><a href="#FN102A">[102]</a></sup>
+ R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> xix. 94. Printed by Jardine, <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii.
+ 120 (note).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN103" id="FN103"></a><a href="#FN103A">[103]</a></sup>
+ <i>Answere to certaine Scandalous Papers, scattered abroad under colour of a Catholic
+ Admonition.</i> (Published in January, 1605-6.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN104" id="FN104"></a><a href="#FN104A">[104]</a></sup>
+ <i>Traditional Memoirs</i>, 36. Of this writer Lord Castlemaine says, "He was born
+ before this plot, and was also an inquisitive man, a frequenter of company, of a
+ noted wit, of an excellent family, and as Protestant a one as any in the whole
+ nation."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN105" id="FN105"></a><a href="#FN105A">[105]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i> (1839), i. 102.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN106" id="FN106"></a><a href="#FN106A">[106]</a></sup>
+ Stonyhurst MSS., <i>Anglia</i>, v. 67.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN107" id="FN107"></a><a href="#FN107A">[107]</a></sup>
+ <i>E.g.</i>, in the <i>Advocate of Conscience Liberty</i> (1673), p. 225.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN108" id="FN108"></a><a href="#FN108A">[108]</a></sup>
+ <i>History of Mary Queen of Scots and James I.</i>, p. 334. Bishop Kennet, in his
+ Fifth of November Sermon, 1715, boldly declares that Sanderson speaks not of Cecil
+ the statesman, but of Cecil "a busy Romish priest" (and, he might have added, a paid
+ government spy). The assertion is utterly and obviously false.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN109" id="FN109"></a><a href="#FN109A">[109]</a></sup>
+ <i>Memoirs</i>, p. 22.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN110" id="FN110"></a><a href="#FN110A">[110]</a></sup>
+ <i>History of England, Royal House of Stuart</i>, p. 27.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN111" id="FN111"></a><a href="#FN111A">[111]</a></sup>
+ <i>General History of England</i>, iii. 757.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN112" id="FN112"></a><a href="#FN112A">[112]</a></sup>
+ <i>History of His Own Times</i>, i. 11.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN113" id="FN113"></a><a href="#FN113A">[113]</a></sup>
+ <i>Church History</i>, Book X. &sect; 39.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN114" id="FN114"></a><a href="#FN114A">[114]</a></sup>
+ <i>Antipathie of the English Lordly Prelacie, to the regall Monarchie and Civill
+ Unity</i>, p. 151.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN115" id="FN115"></a><a href="#FN115A">[115]</a></sup>
+ <i>A Short View of the English History</i>, p. 296.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN116" id="FN116"></a><a href="#FN116A">[116]</a></sup>
+ Note to <i>Fuller's Church History</i>, x. &sect; 39, and to the <i>Student's
+ Hume</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN117" id="FN117"></a><a href="#FN117A">[117]</a></sup>
+ <i>Illustrations</i>, iii. 172.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN118" id="FN118"></a><a href="#FN118A">[118]</a></sup>
+ Parker and Co. This author says of Cecil and his rival Raleigh, "Both were
+ unprincipled men, but Cecil was probably the worst. He is suspected not only of
+ having contrived the strange plot in which Raleigh was involved, but of being privy
+ to the proceedings of Catesby and his associates, though he suffered them to remain
+ unmolested, in order to secure the forfeiture of their estates" (p. 338).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN119" id="FN119"></a><a href="#FN119A">[119]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 68.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN120" id="FN120"></a><a href="#FN120A">[120]</a></sup>
+ <i>History of England</i>, i. 254, note.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN121" id="FN121"></a><a href="#FN121A">[121]</a></sup>
+ <i>Catholique Apology</i>, p. 412.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN122" id="FN122"></a><a href="#FN122A">[122]</a></sup>
+ <i>Hist. Prov. Angl. S.J.</i>, p. 310.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN123" id="FN123"></a><a href="#FN123A">[123]</a></sup>
+ <i>Condition of Catholics under James I.</i>, p. 100.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN124" id="FN124"></a><a href="#FN124A">[124]</a></sup>
+ R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i>, lxxxi. 70, August 29th, 1615.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN125" id="FN125"></a><a href="#FN125A">[125]</a></sup>
+ <i>A Plain and Rational Account of the Catholick Faith</i>, Rouen, 1721, p. 197.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN126" id="FN126"></a><a href="#FN126A">[126]</a></sup>
+ <i>Certamen utriusque Ecclesi&aelig;</i>, James I.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN127" id="FN127"></a><a href="#FN127A">[127]</a></sup>
+ The author of the <i>English Protestants' Plea</i> (1621) says: "Old stratagems and
+ tragedies of Queene Elizabeth's time must needs be renewed and playde againe, to
+ bring not only the Catholikes of England, but their holy religion into obloquy" (p.
+ 56).</p>
+
+ <p>Peter Talbot, Bishop of Dublin, in the <i>Polititian's Catechisme</i> (1658)
+ writes: "That Cecil was the contriver, or at least the fomenter of [the Plot,] was
+ testified by one of his own domestick Gentlemen, who advertised a certain Catholike,
+ by name Master Buck, two months before, of a wicked designe his Master had against
+ Catholikes" (p. 94).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN128" id="FN128"></a><a href="#FN128A">[128]</a></sup> A
+ writer, signing himself "Architect," in an article describing the old palace of
+ Westminster (<i>Gentleman's Magazine</i>, July, 1800, p. 627), having occasion to
+ mention the Gunpowder Plot, observes: "This Plot is now pretty well understood not to
+ have been hatched by the Papists, but by an inveterate foe of the Catholicks of that
+ day, the famous minister of James.... All well-informed persons at present laugh at
+ the whole of this business."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE TRADITIONAL STORY.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">The</span> history of the Gunpowder Plot prior to its
+ discovery, as related with much circumstantiality by the government of the day, has, in
+ all essential particulars, been accepted without demur by the great majority of modern
+ writers. We have already seen that those who lived nearer to the period in question
+ were less easily convinced; it remains to show that the internal evidence of the story
+ itself is incompatible with its truthfulness.</p>
+
+ <p>The point upon which everything turns is the secret, and therefore dangerous,
+ character of the conspiracy, which, as we are told, completely eluded the vigilance of
+ the authorities, and was on the very verge of success before even a breath of suspicion
+ was aroused, being balked only by a lucky accident occurring at the eleventh hour, in a
+ manner fitly described as miraculous.</p>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, however, many plain and obvious considerations combine to show
+ that such an account cannot be true. It is not easy to believe that much which is said
+ to have been done by the conspirators ever occurred at all. It is clear that, if such
+ things did occur, they can by no possibility have escaped observation. There is
+ evidence that the government knew of the Plot long before they suddenly "discovered"
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>it. Finally, the
+ story of the said "discovery," and the manner in which it took place, is plainly not
+ only untrue, but devised to conceal the truth; while the elaborate care expended upon
+ it sufficiently indicates how important it was held that the truth should be
+ concealed.</p>
+
+ <p>There are, moreover, arguments, which appear to deserve consideration, suggesting
+ the conclusion that the Plot was actually set on foot by the secret instigation of
+ those who designed to make it serve their ends, as in fact it did. For our purpose,
+ however, it is not necessary to insist greatly upon these. It will be enough to show
+ that, whatever its origin, the conspiracy was, and must have been, known to those in
+ power, who, playing with their infatuated dupes, allowed them to go on with their mad
+ scheme, till the moment came to strike with full effect; thus impressing the nation
+ with a profound sense of its marvellous deliverance, and winning its confidence for
+ those to whose vigilance and sagacity alone that deliverance appeared due.</p>
+
+ <p>That we may rightly follow the details of the story told to us, we must in the first
+ place understand the topography of the scene of operations, which, with the aid of the
+ illustrations given, will not be difficult.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image4" id="image4"></a><img src="images/image4.png" width="600" height=
+ "345" alt="HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT IN THE TIME OF JAMES I." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">houses of parliament in the time of James
+ i.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image5" id="image5"></a><img src="images/image5.png" width="600" height=
+ "361" alt="Index. Parliament Houses in the time of James I." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">Index. Parliament Houses in the time of James
+ I.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td><span class="smcap">a.</span> The House of Lords.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">b.</span> Chamber under the House of Lords, called "Guy Faukes'
+ Cellar."<br />
+ <span class="smcap">c.</span> The Prince's Chamber.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">d.</span> The Painted Chamber.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">e.</span> The "White Hall" or Court of Requests.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">f.</span> The House of Commons (formerly St. Stephen's
+ Chapel).<br />
+ <span class="smcap">g.</span> Westminster Hall.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">h.</span> St. Stephen's Cloisters, converted into houses for
+ the Tellers of the Exchequer.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">i.</span> Garden of the Old Palace (afterwards called "Cotton
+ Garden").<br />
+ <span class="smcap">j.</span> House built on the site of the Chapel of "Our Lady of
+ the Pew" (called later "Cotton House").<br />
+ <span class="smcap">k k k.</span> Houses built upon ruins of the walls of the Old
+ Palace.</td>
+
+ <td><span class="smcap">l.</span> Vault under the Painted Chamber.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">m.</span> Yard or Court into which a doorway opened from Guy
+ Faukes' Cellar.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">n.</span> Passage leading from the same Yard or Court into
+ Parliament Place.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">o.</span> Parliament Place.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">p.</span> Parliament Stairs (formerly called "The Queen's
+ Bridge").<br />
+ <span class="smcap">q q.</span> The River Thames.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">r.</span> Old Palace Yard.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">s.</span> Westminster Abbey.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">t.</span> St. Margaret's Church.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">u</span> <span class="smcap">v</span> <span class=
+ "smcap">w.</span> Buildings of the Old Palace, called "Heaven" (or "Paradise"),
+ "Hell," and "Purgatory."<br />
+ <span class="smcap">x.</span> New Palace Yard.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">y.</span> Bell Tower of St. Stephen's.<br />
+ <span class="smcap">z.</span> The Speaker's Garden.</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>The old House of Lords<sup><a name="FN129A" id="FN129A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN129">[129]</a></sup> was a chamber occupying the first floor of a building which
+ stood about fifty yards from the left bank of the Thames, to which it was parallel, the
+ stream at this point running almost due north. Beneath the Peers' Chamber, on the
+ ground floor, was a large room, which plays an important part in our history. This had
+ originally served as the palace kitchen,<sup><a name="FN130A" id="FN130A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN130">[130]</a></sup> and though commonly described as a "cellar" or a "vault" was
+ in reality neither, for it stood on the level of the ground outside, and had a flat
+ ceiling, formed by the beams which supported the flooring of the Lords' apartment
+ above.<sup><a name="FN131A" id="FN131A"></a><a href="#FN131">[131]</a></sup> It ran
+ beneath the said Peers' Chamber from end to end, and measured 77 feet in length, by 24
+ feet 4 inches in width.</p>
+
+ <p>At either end, the building abutted upon another running transversely to it; that on
+ the north being the "Painted Chamber," probably erected by Edward the Confessor, and
+ that on the south the "Prince's <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id=
+ "Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>Chamber," assigned by its architectural features to the
+ reign of Henry III. The former served as a place of conference for Lords and
+ Commons,<sup><a name="FN132A" id="FN132A"></a><a href="#FN132">[132]</a></sup> the
+ latter as the robing-room of the Lords. The royal throne stood at the south end of the
+ House, near the Prince's Chamber.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image6" id="image6"></a><img src="images/image6.png" width="600" height=
+ "495" alt="GROUND PLAN OF THE SCENE OF ACTION." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">ground plan of the scene of action.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Originally the Parliament Chamber and the "cellar" beneath it were lighted by large
+ windows on both sides; subsequently, houses raised against it <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>blocked these up, and the
+ Lords were supplied with light by dormers constructed in the roof. The walls of their
+ apartment were then hung with tapestry, representing the defeat of the Spanish Armada.
+ Although precise information on the point is not easy to obtain, it would appear that
+ this did not occur till a period later than that with which we are
+ concerned.<sup><a name="FN133A" id="FN133A"></a><a href="#FN133">[133]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Such was the position to be attacked. As a first step, the conspirators resolved to
+ hire a house in the immediate neighbourhood, to serve them as a base of operations.
+ Thomas Percy was selected to appear as the principal in this part of the business, for,
+ being one of the king's pensioners, he had frequently to be in attendance at Court, and
+ might naturally wish to have a lodging close at hand. The house chosen was one, or
+ rather a part of one,<sup><a name="FN134A" id="FN134A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN134">[134]</a></sup> standing near the Prince's Chamber, and on the side towards
+ the river.<sup><a name="FN135A" id="FN135A"></a><a href="#FN135">[135]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In treating for the lease of this tenement Percy seems to have conducted himself in
+ a manner altogether different from what we might have expected of one whose object
+ required him, above all, to avoid <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id=
+ "Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>attracting notice. He appears, in fact, to have made the
+ greatest possible ado about the business. The apartments were already let to one
+ Ferrers, who was unwilling to give them up, and Percy eventually succeeded in his
+ purpose, after not only "long suit by himself," but also "great intreaty of Mr.
+ Carleton, Mr. Epsley, and other gentlemen belonging to the Earl of
+ Northumberland."<sup><a name="FN136A" id="FN136A"></a><a href="#FN136">[136]</a></sup>
+ These gentlemen were never said to have been privy to the Conspiracy, and one of them,
+ the well-known Dudley Carleton, afterwards Viscount Dorchester, was not only at this
+ time secretary to Sir <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg
+ 62]</a></span>Thomas Parry, the Ambassador in France, but was "patronised" by Cecil
+ himself.<sup><a name="FN137A" id="FN137A"></a><a href="#FN137">[137]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image7" id="image7"></a><img src="images/image7.png" width="600" height=
+ "477" alt="THE OLD HOUSE OF LORDS, FROM THE EAST OR RIVER SIDE, SHOWING THE GARDEN."
+ title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">the old house of lords, from
+ the east or river side, showing the garden.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Neither does the house appear to have been well suited to serve the purposes for
+ which it was taken. Speed tells us,<sup><a name="FN138A" id="FN138A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN138">[138]</a></sup> and he is confirmed by Bishop Barlow of Lincoln,<sup><a name=
+ "FN139A" id="FN139A"></a><a href="#FN139">[139]</a></sup> that it was let out to
+ tenants only when Parliament was not assembled, and during a session formed part of the
+ premises at the disposal of the Lords, whom it served as a withdrawing room. As the
+ Plot was, of necessity, to take effect during a session,<sup><a name="FN140A" id=
+ "FN140A"></a><a href="#FN140">[140]</a></sup> when the place would thus be in other
+ hands, it is very hard to understand how it was intended that the final and all
+ important operation should be conducted.</p>
+
+ <p>The bargain for the house was concluded May 24th, 1604,<sup><a name="FN141A" id=
+ "FN141A"></a><a href="#FN141">[141]</a></sup> but the proposed operations were delayed
+ till a much later date, by a circumstance which clearly shows the public nature of the
+ premises, and that the lease obtained conferred no exclusive right of occupation. The
+ question of a union with Scotland, for which King James was very anxious, was at the
+ time being agitated, and commissioners having been appointed to discuss it, this very
+ house was placed at their disposal for their meetings. Consequently the <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>summer and autumn passed
+ without any farther steps being taken by the conspirators.</p>
+
+ <p>At last, in December, they were free to take in hand the extraordinary scheme they
+ had matured. This was, starting from a cellar of Percy's house,<sup><a name="FN142A"
+ id="FN142A"></a><a href="#FN142">[142]</a></sup> to dig thence an underground mine to
+ the foundations of the Parliament House, and through them; and then to construct
+ within, beneath the Peers' Chamber itself, a "concavity" large enough to contain the
+ amount of powder requisite for their purpose. On December 11th, 1604, they commenced
+ operations,<sup><a name="FN143A" id="FN143A"></a><a href="#FN143">[143]</a></sup> and
+ in a fortnight, that is by Christmas, they had tunnelled from their starting-point to
+ the wall they had to breach; and that this first operation was of no small magnitude,
+ especially for men who had never before handled pick or shovel,<sup><a name="FN144A"
+ id="FN144A"></a><a href="#FN144">[144]</a></sup> is shown by the fact that what they
+ contrived to do in so short a time was quoted as evidence of the extraordinary zeal
+ they displayed in their nefarious enterprise.<sup><a name="FN145A" id=
+ "FN145A"></a><a href="#FN145">[145]</a></sup> Having rested a little, for <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>the Christmas holidays, they
+ began upon the wall, which presented an unexpected obstacle. They found that it was not
+ only "very hard to beat through," but, moreover, nine feet thick, though since, as we
+ shall see, they never penetrated to the other side, it is not clear how they were able
+ to measure it.<sup><a name="FN146A" id="FN146A"></a><a href="#FN146">[146]</a></sup> Up
+ to this point but five persons had engaged in the work, Catesby, Percy, Thomas Winter,
+ John Wright, and Faukes. In consequence however of the difficulties now experienced,
+ Keyes was called in to their aid. He had already been initiated in the Plot, and
+ appointed to take charge of the powder, which was being accumulated and stored in a
+ house hired for the purpose across the Thames, at Lambeth. It was therefore necessary
+ to bring over the powder with him, which amounted at this time to twenty barrels, and
+ was placed either in Percy's lodging itself, or in an outhouse belonging to it. About
+ the same time Christopher Wright was also initiated and took his share of the
+ labour.<sup><a name="FN147A" id="FN147A"></a><a href="#FN147">[147]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>The gang thus composed laboured upon the wall from the beginning of January, 1604-5,
+ to the middle of March,<sup><a name="FN148A" id="FN148A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN148">[148]</a></sup> by which time they had succeeded in getting <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>only half way through. While
+ the others worked, Faukes stood on sentry to warn them of any danger.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, it must be asked how proceedings so remarkable could have escaped the
+ notice, not only of the government, but of the entire neighbourhood. This, it must be
+ remembered, was most populous. There were people living in the very building, a part of
+ which sheltered the conspirators. Around, were thickly clustered the dwellings of the
+ keeper of the Wardrobe, auditors and tellers of the Exchequer, and other such
+ officials.<sup><a name="FN149A" id="FN149A"></a><a href="#FN149">[149]</a></sup> There
+ were tradespeople and workmen constantly employed close to the spot where the work was
+ going on; while the public character of the place makes it impossible to suppose that
+ tenants such as Percy and his friends, who were little better than lodgers, could claim
+ the exclusive use of anything beyond the rooms they rented&mdash;even when allowed the
+ use of these&mdash;or could shut against the neighbours and visitors in general the
+ precincts of so much frequented a spot.</p>
+
+ <p>How, then, did they dispose of the mass of soil dug out in making a tunnel through
+ which barrels and hogsheads were to be conveyed? No man who has had practical
+ experience of the unexpected quantity of earth which comes out of the most <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>insignificant excavation,
+ will be likely to rest satisfied with the explanation officially given, that it was
+ sufficiently concealed by being hidden beneath the turf in the little garden
+ adjoining.<sup><a name="FN150A" id="FN150A"></a><a href="#FN150">[150]</a></sup> What,
+ moreover, was done with the great stones that came out of the foundations? Of these
+ there must have been on hand at least some sixty cubic feet, probably much more, and
+ they, at any rate, can scarcely have been stowed away beneath the turf.</p>
+
+ <p>What, above all, of the noise made during the space of a couple of months, in
+ assaulting a wall "very hard to beat through"? It is a matter of common observation how
+ sound travels in the ground, and every stroke of the pick upon the stone must have been
+ distinctly heard for more than a hundred yards all around, constituting a public
+ nuisance. Meanwhile, not only were there people living close by on every side, but men
+ were constantly at work right over the heads of the diggers, and only a few feet from
+ them: yet we are required to believe that neither these nor any others had any notion
+ that anything unusual was going on.</p>
+
+ <p>Neither is it easy to understand how these amateurs contrived to do so much without
+ a catastrophe. To make a tunnel through soft earth is a very delicate operation,
+ replete with unlooked-for difficulties. To shore up the roof and sides there must,
+ moreover, have been required a large quantity of the "framed timber" of which Speed
+ tells us, and the provision and importation of this must have been almost as hard to
+ keep dark as the exportation of the earth and stones. A <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>still more critical operation is that of
+ meddling with the foundations of a house&mdash;especially of an old and heavy
+ structure&mdash;which a professional craftsman would not venture upon except with
+ extreme care, and the employment of many precautions of which these light-hearted
+ adventurers knew nothing. Yet, recklessly breaking their way out of one building, and
+ to a large extent into another, they appear to have occasioned neither crack nor
+ settlement in either.</p>
+
+ <p>We are by no means at the end of our difficulties. According to the tale told by
+ Faukes,<sup><a name="FN151A" id="FN151A"></a><a href="#FN151">[151]</a></sup> all the
+ seven miners "lay in Percy's house," never showing themselves while the work was in
+ progress. This circumstance, to say nothing of the storage of powder barrels and
+ timber, seems to imply that the premises were spacious and commodious. We learn,
+ however, on the unimpeachable evidence of Mrs. Whynniard's servant,<sup><a name=
+ "FN152A" id="FN152A"></a><a href="#FN152">[152]</a></sup> that the house afforded
+ accommodation only for one person at a time, so that when Percy came there to spend the
+ night, Faukes, who passed for his man, had to lodge out. This suggests another
+ question. Percy's pretext for laying in so much fuel was that he meant to bring up his
+ wife to live there. But how could this be under such conditions?</p>
+
+ <p>Still more serious is another problem. When the mining operations were commenced, in
+ December, 1604, Parliament was appointed to meet on the 7th of February following, by
+ which time, as is evident, the preparations of the conspirators could not have been
+ completed. While they were working, however, news came that the session was to be
+ postponed till October. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg
+ 68]</a></span>This information the conspirators appear to have received quite casually
+ before Christmas, for it is said that on the strength of it, they thought they could
+ afford to take a holiday.<sup><a name="FN153A" id="FN153A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN153">[153]</a></sup> Early in January they were again at work,<sup><a name="FN154A"
+ id="FN154A"></a><a href="#FN154">[154]</a></sup> and they continued their operations
+ thenceforth, without any circumstance intervening to interrupt or alarm them, of which
+ we hear anything either from themselves or from subsequent writers. Nevertheless, it is
+ quite certain that the Lords actually met on February 7th&mdash;that is while the
+ mining operations were going on&mdash;and not only went through the ceremony of
+ prorogation, but transacted some little business besides, Lord Denny being introduced
+ and his writ of summons read.<sup><a name="FN155A" id="FN155A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN155">[155]</a></sup> It is equally incomprehensible <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>that the miners should have known nothing of
+ so startling an occurrence, or that knowing of it they should never have made the
+ slightest mention thereof. It is even more difficult to explain how the Peers thus
+ assembled, and their attendants, could have failed to remark the mine, then actually
+ open, in premises belonging to themselves, or any suspicious features of earth, stones,
+ timber, or barrels.</p>
+
+ <p>The difficulties presented by the stubborn nature of the foundation-wall proved
+ well-nigh insuperable, but, as is observed by Father Greenway,<sup><a name="FN156A" id=
+ "FN156A"></a><a href="#FN156">[156]</a></sup> one still more grave awaited the diggers
+ had they succeeded in making their way through. The "concavity" to be excavated within,
+ to contain the large number of powder barrels required for their purpose, would have
+ involved engineering work of the most hazardous kind, and heavily laden as the floor
+ above proved to be, it must, according to all rules of calculation, have collapsed,
+ when thus undermined. But at this juncture, when the wall had been half pierced, a
+ circumstance occurred, not less extraordinary than others we have considered, to change
+ the whole plan of operations.</p>
+
+ <p>All this time, ridiculous as is the supposition, the conspirators appear to have
+ been ignorant of the existence of the "cellar," and to have fancied that they were
+ working their way immediately beneath the Chamber of the Peers.<sup><a name="FN157A"
+ id="FN157A"></a><a href="#FN157">[157]</a></sup> If such a circumstance be <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>incredible, the consequences
+ must be borne by the narrative of which it forms an essential feature. That it is
+ incredible can hardly be questioned. The so-called "cellar," as we have seen, was a
+ large and conspicuous room above ground. There are reasons for believing that it served
+ habitually as a passage between the different parts of the palace. It appears certain
+ that some of the conspirators, Percy in particular, as being one of his Majesty's
+ pensioners, must have frequently been in the House of Lords itself, and therefore have
+ known where it was; and clearly men of their position were able to attend there when
+ they chose.<sup><a name="FN158A" id="FN158A"></a><a href="#FN158">[158]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>The manner in which they came at last to discover the "cellar" is thus related by
+ Mr. Jardine:<sup><a name="FN159A" id="FN159A"></a><a href="#FN159">[159]</a></sup> "One
+ morning, while working upon the wall, they suddenly heard a rushing noise in a cellar,
+ nearly above their heads. At first they imagined that they had been discovered; but
+ Fawkes being despatched to reconnoitre, found that one Bright, to whom the cellar
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>belonged, was
+ selling off his coals<sup><a name="FN160A" id="FN160A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN160">[160]</a></sup> in order to remove, and that the noise proceeded from this
+ cause. Fawkes <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg
+ 72]</a></span>carefully surveyed the place, which proved to be a large vault, situated
+ immediately below the House of Lords, and extremely convenient for the purpose they had
+ in view.... Finding that the cellar would shortly become vacant, the conspirators
+ agreed that it should be hired in Percy's name, under the pretext that he wanted it for
+ his own coals and wood. This was accordingly done, and immediate possession was
+ obtained."<sup><a name="FN161A" id="FN161A"></a><a href="#FN161">[161]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image8" id="image8"></a><img src="images/image8.png" width="600" height=
+ "737" alt="CELLAR UNDER HOUSE OF LORDS." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">cellar under house of lords.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It is obvious that Mr. Bright's men must on this, as presumably upon many previous
+ occasions, have been at work among the coals, while the miners were hammering at the
+ foundations beneath them, and yet have been as little aware of what was going on as
+ were the others of the existence of the "cellar." It must, farther, be noted that the
+ hiring of this receptacle was, in fact, by no means so easy a matter as the accounts
+ ordinarily given would lead us to suppose. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id=
+ "Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>Faukes, in the narrative on which the whole history of this
+ episode has been based, is made to say that he found that the coals were a-selling, and
+ the cellar was to be let, whereupon Percy went and hired it. Mrs. Whynniard, however,
+ tells us that the cellar was not to let, and that Bright had not the disposal of the
+ lease, but one Skinner, and that Percy "laboured very earnestly" before he succeeded in
+ obtaining it.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image9" id="image9"></a><img src="images/image9.png" width="600" height=
+ "415" alt=
+ "VAULT, EAST END OF PAINTED CHAMBER, ERRONEOUSLY STYLED &quot;GUY FAUKES' CELLAR.&quot;"
+ title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">vault, east end of painted
+ chamber, erroneously styled "guy faukes' cellar."</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But, whatever the circumstances and manner of the transaction, it appears that at
+ Lady-day, 1605, this chamber came into the hands of those who were to make it so
+ famous; whereupon, we are told, they resolved to abandon the mine, and use this
+ ready-made <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg
+ 74]</a></span>cavity for their purposes. To it, accordingly, they transferred their
+ powder, the barrels, by subsequent additions, being increased to thirty-six, and the
+ amount to nine or ten thousand pounds.<sup><a name="FN162A" id="FN162A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN162">[162]</a></sup> The casks were covered with firewood, 500 faggots and 3,000
+ billets being brought in by hired porters and piled up by Faukes, to whose charge, in
+ his assumed character of Percy's servant, the cellar was committed. It is stated in
+ Winter's long declaration on this subject,<sup><a name="FN163A" id=
+ "FN163A"></a><a href="#FN163">[163]</a></sup> that the barrels were thus completely
+ hidden, "because we might have the house free, to suffer anyone to enter that would,"
+ and we find it mentioned by various writers subsequently, that free ingress was
+ actually allowed to the public. Thus we read<sup><a name="FN164A" id=
+ "FN164A"></a><a href="#FN164">[164]</a></sup> of "the deep <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span><span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>cunning [of the
+ conspirators] in throwing open the vault, as if there had been nothing to conceal;"
+ while another writer<sup><a name="FN165A" id="FN165A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN165">[165]</a></sup> tells us, "The place was hired by Percy; 36 barrels of
+ gunpowder were lodged in it; the whole covered up with billets and faggots; the doors
+ of the cellar boldly flung open, and everybody admitted, as though it contained nothing
+ dangerous." On the top of the barrels were likewise placed "great bars of iron and
+ massy stones," in order "to make the breach the greater."</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image10" id="image10"></a><img src="images/image10.png" width="600" height=
+ "407" alt="ARCHES FROM THE &quot;CELLAR&quot; UNDER THE HOUSE OF LORDS." title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">arches from the "cellar" under the house of
+ lords.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We may here pause to review the extraordinary story to which we have been listening.
+ A group of men, known for as dangerous characters as any in England, men, in Cecil's
+ own words,<sup><a name="FN166A" id="FN166A"></a><a href="#FN166">[166]</a></sup> "spent
+ in their fortunes," "hunger-starved for innovations," "turbulent spirits," and "fit for
+ all alterations," take a house within the precincts of a royal palace, and close to the
+ Upper House of Parliament, dig a mine, hammer away for over two months at the wall,
+ acquire and bring in four tons of gunpowder, storing it in a large and conspicuous
+ chamber immediately beneath that of the Peers, and covering it with an amount of fuel
+ sufficient for a royal establishment&mdash;and meanwhile those responsible for the
+ government of the country have not even the faintest suspicion of any possible danger.
+ "Never," it is said,<sup><a name="FN167A" id="FN167A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN167">[167]</a></sup> "was treason more secret, or ruin more apparently inevitable,"
+ while the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg
+ 77]</a></span>Secretary of State himself declared<sup><a name="FN168A" id=
+ "FN168A"></a><a href="#FN168">[168]</a></sup> that such ruin was averted only by the
+ direct interposition of Heaven, in a manner nothing short of miraculous.</p>
+
+ <p>It must be remembered that the government thus credited with childlike and culpable
+ simplicity, was probably the most suspicious and inquisitive that ever held power in
+ this country, for its tenure whereof it trusted mainly to the elaborate efficiency of
+ its intelligence department. Of a former secretary, Walsingham, Parsons wrote that he
+ "spent infinite upon spyery,"<sup><a name="FN169A" id="FN169A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN169">[169]</a></sup> and there can be no doubt that his successor, now in office,
+ had studied his methods to good purpose. "He," according to a panegyrist,<sup><a name=
+ "FN170A" id="FN170A"></a><a href="#FN170">[170]</a></sup> "was his craft's master in
+ foreign intelligence and for domestic affairs," who could tell at any moment what ships
+ there were in every port of Spain, their burdens, their equipment, and their
+ destination. We are told<sup><a name="FN171A" id="FN171A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN171">[171]</a></sup> that he could discover the most secret business transacted in
+ the Papal Court before it was known to the Catholics in England. He could intercept
+ letters written from Paris to Brussels, or from Rome to Naples.<sup><a name="FN172A"
+ id="FN172A"></a><a href="#FN172">[172]</a></sup> What was his activity at home is
+ sufficiently evidenced by the reports furnished by his numerous agents concerning
+ everything done throughout the country, in particular by Recusants; whereof we shall
+ see more, in connection with this particular <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78"
+ id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>affair. That those so remarkably wide-awake in regard of
+ all else should have been blind and deaf to what was passing at their own doors appears
+ altogether incredible.</p>
+
+ <p>More especially do difficulties connect themselves with the gunpowder itself. Of
+ this, according to the lowest figure given us, there were over four tons.<sup><a name=
+ "FN173A" id="FN173A"></a><a href="#FN173">[173]</a></sup> How, we may ask, could half a
+ dozen men, "notorious Recusants," and bearing, moreover, such a character as we have
+ heard, without attracting any notice, and no question being asked, possess themselves
+ of such a quantity of so dangerous a material?<sup><a name="FN174A" id=
+ "FN174A"></a><a href="#FN174">[174]</a></sup> How large was the amount may be estimated
+ from the fact that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg
+ 79]</a></span>it was more than a quarter of what, in 1607, was delivered from the royal
+ store, for all purposes, and was equal to what was thought sufficient for Dover Castle,
+ while there was no more in the four fortresses of Arcliffe, Walmer, Deal, and Camber
+ together.<sup><a name="FN175A" id="FN175A"></a><a href="#FN175">[175]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>The twenty barrels first procured were first, as we have seen, stored beyond the
+ Thames, at Lambeth, whence they had to be ferried across the river, hauled up the much
+ frequented Parliament Stairs, carried down Parliament Place, as busy a quarter as any
+ in the city of Westminster, and into the building adjoining the Parliament House, or
+ the "cellar" beneath the same. All this, we are to suppose, without attracting
+ attention or remark.<sup><a name="FN176A" id="FN176A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN176">[176]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>The conspirators, while making these material preparations, were likewise busy in
+ settling their plan of action when the intended blow should have been struck. It was by
+ no means their intention to attempt a revolution. Their quarrel was purely personal
+ with King James, his Council, and his Parliament, and, these being removed, they
+ desired to continue the succession in its legitimate course, and to seat on the throne
+ the nearest heir who might be available for the purpose; placing the new sovereign,
+ however, under such tutelage as should insure the inauguration of a right course of
+ policy. The details of the scheme were of as lunatic a character as the rest of the
+ business. The confederates would have wished to possess themselves of Prince Henry, the
+ king's eldest son; <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg
+ 81]</a></span>but as he would probably accompany his father to the opening of
+ Parliament, and so perish, their desire was to get hold of his brother, the Duke of
+ York, afterwards Charles I., then but five years old. It was, however, possible that he
+ too might go to Parliament, and otherwise it might not improbably be impossible to get
+ possession of him: in which case they were prepared to be satisfied with the Princess
+ Elizabeth,<sup><a name="FN177A" id="FN177A"></a><a href="#FN177">[177]</a></sup> or
+ even with her infant sister Mary, for whom, as being English born, a special claim
+ might be urged.</p>
+
+ <p>Such was the project in general. When we come to details, we are confronted, as
+ might be anticipated, with statements impossible to reconcile. We are
+ told,<sup><a name="FN178A" id="FN178A"></a><a href="#FN178">[178]</a></sup> that Percy
+ undertook to seize and carry off Duke Charles; and again,<sup><a name="FN179A" id=
+ "FN179A"></a><a href="#FN179">[179]</a></sup> that, despairing of being able to lay
+ hands upon him, they resolved "to serve themselves with the Lady Elizabeth," and that
+ Percy was one of those who made arrangements for seizing her;<sup><a name="FN180A" id=
+ "FN180A"></a><a href="#FN180">[180]</a></sup> and again, that having learnt that Prince
+ Henry was not to go to the House, they determined to surprise him, "and leave the young
+ Duke alone;"<sup><a name="FN181A" id="FN181A"></a><a href="#FN181">[181]</a></sup> and
+ once more, that they never entered into any consultation or formed any project whatever
+ as to the succession.<sup><a name="FN182A" id="FN182A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN182">[182]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Still more serious are the contradictions on another point. We are told, on the one
+ hand, that a proclamation was drawn up for the inauguration of the new
+ sovereign&mdash;whoever this was<sup><a name="FN183A" id="FN183A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN183">[183]</a></sup>&mdash;and, on the other, that the associates were resolved not
+ to avow the explosion to be their work until they should see how the country took it,
+ or till they had gathered a sufficient force,<sup><a name="FN184A" id=
+ "FN184A"></a><a href="#FN184">[184]</a></sup> and accordingly that they had no more
+ than a project of a proclamation to be issued in due season. But, again, it is
+ said<sup><a name="FN185A" id="FN185A"></a><a href="#FN185">[185]</a></sup> that Catesby
+ on his way out of town, after the event, was to proclaim the new monarch at Charing
+ Cross, though it is equally hard to understand, either how he was to know which of the
+ plans had succeeded, and who that monarch was to be,&mdash;whether a king or a
+ queen,&mdash;or what effect such proclamation by an obscure individual like himself was
+ expected to produce; or how this, or indeed any item in the programme was compatible
+ with the incognito of the actors in the great tragedy.</p>
+
+ <p>Amid this hopeless tangle one point alone is perfectly clear. Whatever was the
+ scheme, it was absolutely insane, and could by no possibility have succeeded. As Mr.
+ Gardiner says:<sup><a name="FN186A" id="FN186A"></a><a href="#FN186">[186]</a></sup>
+ "With the advantage of having an infant sovereign in their hands, with a little money
+ and a few horses, these sanguine dreamers fancied that they would have the whole of
+ England at their feet."</p>
+
+ <p>Such is in outline the authorized version of the history concerning what Father John
+ Gerard styles <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg
+ 84]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg
+ 83]</a></span>"this preposterous Plot of Powder;" and preposterous it undoubtedly
+ appears to be in more senses than he intended. It is, in the first place, almost
+ impossible to believe that the important and dramatic episode of the mine ever, in
+ fact, occurred. We have seen something of the difficulties against accepting this part
+ of the story, which the circumstantial evidence suggests. When, on the other hand, we
+ ask upon what testimony it rests, it is a surprise to find that for so prominent and
+ striking an incident we are wholly dependent upon two documents, published by the
+ government, a confession of Thomas Winter and another of Faukes, both of which present
+ features rendering them in the highest degree suspicious. Amongst the many confessions
+ and declarations made by the conspirators in general, and these individuals in
+ particular, these two alone describe the mining operations.<sup><a name="FN187A" id=
+ "FN187A"></a><a href="#FN187">[187]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c8">
+ <a name="image11" id="image11"></a><img src="images/image11.png" width="510" height=
+ "800" alt=
+ "CELL IN STAIRCASE TURRET, S.E. CORNER, PAINTED CHAMBER, OFTEN CALLED &quot;GUY FAUKES' CELL.&quot;"
+ title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">cell in staircase turret, s.e.
+ corner, painted chamber, often called "guy faukes' cell."</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>On the other hand, it is somewhat startling to find no less a person than the Earl
+ of Salisbury himself ignorant or oblivious of so remarkable a circumstance. In Thomas
+ Winter's lodging was found the agreement between Percy and Ferrers for the lease of the
+ house, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>which was
+ taken, as has been said, in May, 1604. This is still preserved, and has been endorsed
+ by Cecil, "The bargaine between Percy and Ferrers for the bloody sellar...." But this
+ contract had nothing to do with the "bloody sellar," which was not rented till ten
+ months later. Again, writing November 9th, 1605, to Cornwallis and Edmondes, Cecil
+ says: "This Percy had about a year and a half ago hired a part of Vyniard's house in
+ the old Palace, from whence he had access into this vault to lay his wood and coal, and
+ as it seemeth now [had] taken this place of purpose to work some mischief in a fit
+ time." When this was written the premises had been for four days in the hands of the
+ government. It is clearly impossible that the remains of the mine, had they existed,
+ should not have been found, and equally so that Cecil should not have alluded to the
+ overwhelming evidence they afforded as to the intention of Percy and his associates to
+ "work some mischief," but should, again, have connected the tenancy of the house only
+ with the "cellar."</p>
+
+ <p>It will, moreover, be found by investigators that when exceptional stress is laid on
+ any point by Sir E. Coke, the Attorney General, a <i>prima facie</i> case against the
+ genuine nature of the evidence in regard of that point is thereby established. In his
+ speech on the trial of the conspirators we find him declaring that, "If the cellar had
+ not been hired, the mine work could hardly, or not at all, have been discovered, for
+ the mine was neither found nor suspected until the danger was past, and the capital
+ offenders apprehended, and by themselves, upon examination, confessed." That is to say,
+ the government could not, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg
+ 86]</a></span>though provided with information that there was a powder-mine under the
+ Parliament House, have discovered this extraordinary piece of engineering; and
+ moreover, after its abandonment, the traces of the excavation were so artfully hidden
+ as to elude observation till the prisoners drew attention to them. Such assertions
+ cannot possibly be true; but they might serve to meet the objection that no one had
+ seen the mine.</p>
+
+ <p>We likewise find that in his examination of November 5th, Faukes is made to say: "He
+ confesseth that about Christmas last [1604], he brought in the nighttime Gunpowder
+ <i>to the cellar under the upper house of Parliament</i>," that is some three months
+ before the cellar was hired. Moreover, the words italicised have been added as an
+ interlineation, apparently by Cecil himself. Evidently when this was done the mine was
+ still undiscovered.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet more remarkable is the fact that it would appear to have remained undiscovered
+ ever afterwards, and that no marks seem to have been left upon the wall which had been
+ so roughly handled. It is certainly impossible to find any record that such traces were
+ observed when the building was demolished, though they could scarcely have failed to
+ attract attention and interest. On this subject we have the important evidence of Mr.
+ William Capon, who carefully examined every detail connected with the old palace, and
+ evidently had the opportunity of studying the foundations of the House of Lords when,
+ in 1823, that building was removed.<sup><a name="FN188A" id="FN188A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN188">[188]</a></sup> He does, indeed, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id=
+ "Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>mention what he conceives to be the traces of the
+ conspirators' work, of which he gives the following description:</p>
+
+ <p>"Adjoining the south end of the Cellar, or more properly the ancient Kitchen, to the
+ west, was a small room separated only by a stone doorway, with a pointed head, and with
+ very substantial masonry joined to the older walls.... At the North side [of this]
+ there had been an opening, a doorway of very solid thick stonemasonry, through which
+ was a way seemingly forced through by great violence.... In 1799 it was asserted that
+ this was always understood to have been the place where the conspirators broke into the
+ vault which adjoined that called Guy Vaux's cellar."<sup><a name="FN189A" id=
+ "FN189A"></a><a href="#FN189">[189]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>But against such a supposition there are three fatal objections. (1) This places the
+ conspirators on the wrong side of the house, for they most certainly worked from the
+ east, or river side, not from the west.<sup><a name="FN190A" id="FN190A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN190">[190]</a></sup> (2) It makes the mine above ground instead of below. (3) The
+ conspirators never broke into the cellar at all, but hired it in the ordinary way of
+ business.</p>
+
+ <p>Such considerations as the above may well make us sceptical in regard to the mine,
+ and if this element of the story, upon which so much stress has always been laid, prove
+ to be untrustworthy, it must needs follow that grave suspicion will be cast upon the
+ rest.</p>
+
+ <p>There are, likewise, various problems in connection with the "cellar," especially as
+ concerns the means of ingress to it, and its consequent privacy or publicity.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>(<i>a</i>) Faukes says (November 6th, 1605) that about the middle of Lent of that
+ year Percy caused "a new dore" to be made into it, "that he might have a neerer way out
+ of his own house into the cellar."</p>
+
+ <p>This seems to imply that Percy took the cellar for his firewood when there was no
+ convenient communication between it and his house. Moreover it is not very easy to
+ understand how a tenant under such conditions as his was allowed at discretion to knock
+ doors through the walls of a royal palace. Neither did the landlady say anything of
+ this door-making, when detailing what she knew about Percy's proceedings.</p>
+
+ <p>(<i>b</i>) In some notes by Sir E. Coke,<sup><a name="FN191A" id=
+ "FN191A"></a><a href="#FN191">[191]</a></sup> it is said: "The powder was first brought
+ into Percy's house, and lay there in a low room new built, and could not have been
+ conveyed into the cellar by the old door but that all the street must have seen it; and
+ therefore he caused a new door out of his house into the cellar to be made, where
+ before there had been a grate of iron."</p>
+
+ <p>This, it must be confessed, looks very like an afterthought to explain away a
+ difficulty, but failing to do so. When the door is said to have been made, the powder
+ was already on the premises, having been brought there in sight of the whole street and
+ the river. It could hardly, in so small a tenement, escape the observation of the
+ workmen,<sup><a name="FN192A" id="FN192A"></a><a href="#FN192">[192]</a></sup> while
+ the operations of these latter in breaking through the wall <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>would have served yet
+ farther to attract the attention of the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+ <p>(<i>c</i>) We are told by Faukes and others, that either he or Percy always kept the
+ key, and that marks were made to indicate whether anyone had entered the place in their
+ absence.</p>
+
+ <p>(<i>d</i>) On the other hand, to say nothing of Winter's declaration that the
+ confederates so arranged as to leave the cellar free for all to enter who would, Lord
+ Salisbury informed Sir Thomas Parry<sup><a name="FN193A" id="FN193A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN193">[193]</a></sup> that the captors of Faukes entered through "another door,"
+ which clearly did not require to be opened by him; while as to the ordinary door,
+ whichever this was, the "King's Book" itself plainly intimates, in the account of the
+ chamberlain's visit, that Whynniard, the landlord, was able to open it when he
+ chose.</p>
+
+ <p>The "other door" spoken of by Cecil, a most important feature of the chamber, is
+ nowhere else mentioned.<sup><a name="FN194A" id="FN194A"></a>[<a href=
+ "#FN194">194]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It appears certain that the conspirators really had a plot in hand, that they
+ fancied themselves to be about to strike a great blow, and that by means of gunpowder;
+ but what was the precise nature of their plans and preparations it is not so easy to
+ determine. Farther discussion of these particulars must be deferred to a later chapter.
+ Meanwhile, according to the accepted history, when they had stored their powder there
+ was nothing more to do but to await the assembling <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>of the intended victims. Parliament stood
+ prorogued till October 3rd, and was afterwards further adjourned till the fateful 5th
+ of November. That they might not excite suspicion, the confederates separated, most of
+ them retiring to their country seats, and Faukes going over to Flanders.<sup><a name=
+ "FN195A" id="FN195A"></a><a href="#FN195">[195]</a></sup> In his absence Percy kept the
+ key of the cellar, and, according to Faukes,<sup><a name="FN196A" id=
+ "FN196A"></a><a href="#FN196">[196]</a></sup> laid in more powder and wood while he
+ himself was absent.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg
+ 90]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c9">
+ <a name="image12" id="image12"></a><img src="images/image12.png" width="536" height=
+ "800" alt="THE POWDER PLOT. II." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">the powder plot. ii.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It is not easy to understand what became of the cellar during this long interval,
+ and apparently it was left in great measure, with its compromising contents, to take
+ care of itself, for Percy, amongst other places, went with Catesby to Bath to take the
+ waters.<sup><a name="FN197A" id="FN197A"></a><a href="#FN197">[197]</a></sup> If the
+ premises were of so public a nature as the testimony of Winter and others would imply,
+ it appears impossible that they should have remained all this time sealed up, or that
+ these astute and crafty plotters should with a light heart have ignored the probability
+ that they would be visited and inspected. As Father Greenway observes,<sup><a name=
+ "FN198A" id="FN198A"></a><a href="#FN198">[198]</a></sup> it can hardly be supposed
+ that the landlord<sup><a name="FN199A" id="FN199A"></a><a href="#FN199">[199]</a></sup>
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>had not a
+ duplicate key, while Cecil himself, in his letter to Sir Thomas Parry, plainly
+ indicates that access to the cellar could freely be procured independently of the
+ conspirators. We can only say that the conduct of the confederates in this particular
+ appears to have been quite in keeping with their method of conspiring secretly as we
+ have already seen it, and undoubtedly one more difficulty is thus opposed to the
+ supposition that their enterprise was chiefly dangerous on account of the clandestine
+ and dexterous manner in which it was conducted.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN129" id="FN129"></a><a href="#FN129A">[129]</a></sup>
+ The name "old House of Lords" is somewhat ambiguous, being variously applicable to
+ three different buildings:</p>
+
+ <p class="ni">(i.) That here described, which continued to be used till the Irish
+ Union, <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1800.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni">(ii.) The "Court of Requests," or "White Hall," used from 1800 till the
+ fire of 1834.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni">(iii.) The "Painted Chamber," which, having been repaired after the
+ said fire, became the place of assembly for the Lords, as did the Court of Requests
+ for the Commons.</p>
+
+ <p>The original House of Lords was demolished in 1823 by Sir John Soane, who on its
+ site erected his Royal Gallery. (See Brayley and Britton, <i>History of the Palace of
+ Westminster</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN130" id="FN130"></a><a href="#FN130A">[130]</a></sup>
+ The authority for this is the Earl of Northampton, who at Father Garnet's trial
+ mentioned that it was so stated in ancient records. Remains of a buttery hatch in the
+ south wall confirmed his assertion.</p>
+
+ <p>The foundations of the building were believed to date from the time of Edward the
+ Confessor, and the style of architecture of the superstructure assigned it to the
+ early part of the thirteenth century, as likewise the "Prince's Chamber."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN131" id="FN131"></a><a href="#FN131A">[131]</a></sup>
+ Brayley and Britton, <i>History of the Palace of Westminster</i>, p. 421; J. T.
+ Smith, <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, p. 39 (where illustrations will be found);
+ <i>Gentleman's Magazine</i>, July, 1800, p. 626.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN132" id="FN132"></a><a href="#FN132A">[132]</a></sup>
+ It was here that the death warrant of Charles I. was signed.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN133" id="FN133"></a><a href="#FN133A">[133]</a></sup>
+ An old print (which states that it is taken from "a painted print in the Cottonian
+ library,") representing the two Houses assembled in presence of Queen Elizabeth, has
+ windows on both sides. The same plate, with the figure of the sovereign alone
+ changed, was made to do duty likewise for a Parliament of James I. By Hollar's time
+ (1640-77) the windows had been blocked up and the tapestry hung.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN134" id="FN134"></a><a href="#FN134A">[134]</a></sup>
+ Cecil wrote to Cornwallis, Edmondes, and others, November 9th, 1605, "This Piercey
+ had a bout a year and a half a goe hyred a parte of Vyniards house in the old
+ Palace," which appears to be Mr. Hepworth Dixon's sole authority for styling the
+ tenement "Vinegar House."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN135" id="FN135"></a><a href="#FN135A">[135]</a></sup>
+ See Appendix E, <i>Site of Percy's house</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN136" id="FN136"></a><a href="#FN136A">[136]</a></sup>
+ Evidence of Mrs. Whynniard, November 7th, 1605. Epsley is evidently the same person
+ as Hoppisley, who was examined on the 23rd of the same month.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN137" id="FN137"></a><a href="#FN137A">[137]</a></sup>
+ Birch, <i>Historical View</i>, p. 227.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN138" id="FN138"></a><a href="#FN138A">[138]</a></sup>
+ <i>Historie</i>, p. 1231.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN139" id="FN139"></a><a href="#FN139A">[139]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Treason, Harleian Miscellany</i>, iii. 121.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN140" id="FN140"></a><a href="#FN140A">[140]</a></sup>
+ At his first examination, November 5th 1605, Faukes declared that he had not been
+ sure the king would come to the Parliament House on that day, and that his purpose
+ was to have blown it up whenever his Majesty was there.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN141" id="FN141"></a><a href="#FN141A">[141]</a></sup>
+ The agreement between Percy and Ferrers is in the Record Office (<i>Gunpowder Plot
+ Book</i>, 1.) and is endorsed by Cecil, "The bargaine ... for the bloody sellar."
+ Upon this there will be more to remark later.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN142" id="FN142"></a><a href="#FN142A">[142]</a></sup>
+ Jardine, <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 42.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN143" id="FN143"></a><a href="#FN143A">[143]</a></sup>
+ The 11th of December, O.S., was at that period the shortest day, which circumstance
+ suggested to Sir E. Coke, on the trial of the conspirators, one of his characteristic
+ faceti&aelig;; he bade his hearers note "That it was in the entring of the Sun into
+ the Tropick of Capricorn, when they began their Mine; noting that by Mining they
+ should descend, and by Hanging, ascend."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN144" id="FN144"></a><a href="#FN144A">[144]</a></sup>
+ "Gentlemen not accustomed to labour or to be pioneers."&mdash;Goodman, <i>Court of
+ King James</i>, p. 103.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN145" id="FN145"></a><a href="#FN145A">[145]</a></sup>
+ "The Moles that first underwent these underminings were all grounded Schollers of the
+ Romish Schoole, and such earnest Labourers in their Vault of Villany, that by
+ Christmas Eve they had brought the worke under an entry, unto the Wall of the
+ Parliament House, underpropping still as they went the Earth with their framed
+ Timber."&mdash;Speed, <i>Historie</i>, p. 1232 (pub. 1611).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN146" id="FN146"></a><a href="#FN146A">[146]</a></sup>
+ In Barlow's <i>Gunpowder Treason</i> these foundations are stated to have been three
+ ells thick, <i>i.e.</i>, eleven and a quarter feet. <i>Harleian Miscellany</i>, iii.
+ 122.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN147" id="FN147"></a><a href="#FN147A">[147]</a></sup>
+ See Appendix F, <i>The enrolment of the Conspirators</i>, for the discrepancies as to
+ dates. T. Winter (November 23rd, 1605) says that the powder was laid "in Mr. Percy's
+ house;" Faukes, "in a low Room new builded."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN148" id="FN148"></a><a href="#FN148A">[148]</a></sup>
+ There is, as usual, hopeless contradiction between the two witnesses upon whom, as
+ will be seen, we wholly depend for this portion of the story. Faukes (November 17th,
+ 1605) makes the mining operations terminate at Candlemas. T. Winter (November 23rd)
+ says that they went on to "near Easter" (March 31st). The date of hiring the
+ "cellar," was about Lady Day (March 25th).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN149" id="FN149"></a><a href="#FN149A">[149]</a></sup>
+ The buildings of the dissolved College of St. Stephen, comprising those around the
+ House of Lords, were granted by Edward VI. to Sir Ralph Lane. They reverted to the
+ crown under Elizabeth, and were appropriated as residences for the auditors and
+ tellers of the Exchequer. The locality became so populous that in 1606 it was
+ forbidden to erect more houses.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN150" id="FN150"></a><a href="#FN150A">[150]</a></sup>
+ Jardine, <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 48.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN151" id="FN151"></a><a href="#FN151A">[151]</a></sup>
+ November 17th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN152" id="FN152"></a><a href="#FN152A">[152]</a></sup>
+ November 7th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN153" id="FN153"></a><a href="#FN153A">[153]</a></sup>
+ Winter says: "... We heard that the Parliament should be anew adjourned until after
+ Michaelmas; upon which tidings we broke off both discourse and working until after
+ Christmas" (November 23rd, 1605).</p>
+
+ <p>Lingard writes, "When a fortnight had thus been devoted to uninterrupted labour,
+ Faukes informed his associates that the Parliament was prorogued from the 7th of
+ February to the 3rd of October. They immediately separated to spend the Christmas
+ holidays at their respective homes."&mdash;<i>History</i>, vii. 47 (ed. 1883).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN154" id="FN154"></a><a href="#FN154A">[154]</a></sup>
+ Faukes, as has been said, makes the work upon the wall terminate at Candlemas. Winter
+ (<i>ut sup.</i>) says that they brought over the powder at Candlemas, that is, after
+ they had been some time engaged upon the wall, and found the need of the assistance
+ of Keyes.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN155" id="FN155"></a><a href="#FN155A">[155]</a></sup>
+ <i>Lord's Journals</i> "A<sup>o</sup> 1604(5) 2 Jac.&mdash;Memorandum quod hodierno
+ die, septimo die Februarii, A<sup>o</sup> Regis &ntilde;ri Jacobi, <i>viz.</i>
+ Angliae (etc.) 2<sup>ndo</sup>, &amp; Scotiae 38<sup>o</sup>, in quem diem prorogatum
+ fuerat hoc praesens parliamentum, convenere Proceres tam Spirituales quam Temporales,
+ quorum nomina subscribuntur."</p>
+
+ <p>Then follow twenty-nine names, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lords
+ Ellesmere (<i>Chancellor</i>), Dorset (<i>Treasurer</i>), Nottingham
+ (<i>Admiral</i>), Suffolk (<i>Chamberlain</i>), Northumberland, Cranborne (Cecil),
+ Northampton, etc. It is noted "Lords Montagu, Petre, and Gerard [all three Catholics]
+ were present, though they were none of the Commissioners."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN156" id="FN156"></a><a href="#FN156A">[156]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narrative</i> (Stonyhurst MSS.), fol. 44 b.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN157" id="FN157"></a><a href="#FN157A">[157]</a></sup>
+ This absurd supposition is obviously implied by Faukes (November 17th, 1605), and T.
+ Winter (November 23rd), in the only two accounts furnished by any of the conspirators
+ wherein the episode of the mine is mentioned. In Barlow's <i>Gunpowder Treason</i>
+ (<i>Harleian Miscellany</i>, iii. 123) it is expressly stated that the confederates
+ "came to the knowledge of the vault" only on the occasion now detailed. Tierney says
+ (Dodd's <i>Church History</i>, iv. 45, note): "At this moment an accidental noise ...
+ first acquainted them with the existence of the cellar."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN158" id="FN158"></a><a href="#FN158A">[158]</a></sup>
+ On the 3rd of October following, Thomas Winter was sent to be present at the ceremony
+ of prorogation, and to watch the demeanour of the assembled peers.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN159" id="FN159"></a><a href="#FN159A">[159]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 55. This account is based almost entirely on that of
+ Faukes, November 17th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN160" id="FN160"></a><a href="#FN160A">[160]</a></sup>
+ In his Italian version of Father Gerard's history, Father Greenway interpolates the
+ following note: "Questi non erano carboni di legno, ma una sorte di pietra negra, la
+ quale come carbone abrugia et fa un fuogo bellissimo et ottimo" (fol. 44 b).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN161" id="FN161"></a><a href=
+ "#FN161A">[161]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"These Pioneers through Piercies chamber brought<br />
+ Th' exhausted earth, great baskets full of clay;<br />
+ Thereby t' have made a mighty concave vau't,<br />
+ And of the house the ground worke tooke away:<br />
+ <span class="c10">But then at last an obstacle they finde,</span><br />
+ <span class="c10">Which to remove proud Piercy casts in 's mind.</span><br />
+ A thick stone wall their passage then did let;<br />
+ Whereby they cou'd not finish their intent.<br />
+ Then forthwith Piercy did a sellar get,<br />
+ Under that sacred house for yearly rent:<br />
+ <span class="c10">Feigning to fill 't with Char coal, Wood, &amp;
+ Beere,</span><br />
+ <span class="c10">From all suspect themselves to cloake &amp; cleere."</span></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="right"><span class="smcap">John Vicars</span>, <i>Mischeefes
+ Mysterie</i></p>
+
+ <p>This remarkable poem, published 1617, is a much expanded translation of <i>Pietas
+ Pontificia</i> (in Latin hexameter verse) by Francis Herring, which appeared in
+ 1606.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN162" id="FN162"></a><a href="#FN162A">[162]</a></sup>
+ On this point we are furnished with more than the usual amount of variety as to
+ details. Cecil, writing to the ambassadors (Cornwallis, Edmondes, etc.), says there
+ were "two hodgsheads and some 30 small barrels." The King's <i>Discourse</i> mentions
+ 36 barrels. Barclay (<i>Conspiratio Anglicana</i>) says there were over 9,000 lb. of
+ powder, in 32 barrels, and that one of extra size had been placed under the throne,
+ for treason could not without dread assail Majesty even when unarmed. The indictment
+ of the conspirators named 30 barrels and 4 hogsheads. Sir E. Coke always said 36
+ barrels. Barlow's <i>Gunpowder Treason</i> makes the extraordinary statement,
+ frequently reproduced, that "to the 20 Barrels of Powder laid in at first, they added
+ in July 20 more, and at last made up the number Thirty-six." Faukes (November 5th)
+ said that of the powder "some was put in hoggesheads, some in Barrels, and some in
+ firkins." Faukes also says that the powder was conveyed to the place in hampers. John
+ Chamberlain, writing to Dudley Carleton, November 7th, 1605, says it was carried in
+ satchels. Barlow (<i>ut sup.</i>) quotes the amount as 9,000 or 10,000 lb.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN163" id="FN163"></a><a href="#FN163A">[163]</a></sup>
+ November 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN164" id="FN164"></a><a href="#FN164A">[164]</a></sup>
+ <i>The Gunpowder Plot</i>, by L., 1805. It seems highly probable that the "cellar"
+ was used as a public passage.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN165" id="FN165"></a><a href="#FN165A">[165]</a></sup>
+ Hugh F. Martyndale, <i>A Familiar Analysis of the Calendar of the Church of
+ England</i> (November 5th). London, Effingham Wilson.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN166" id="FN166"></a><a href="#FN166A">[166]</a></sup>
+ <i>Letter to Cornwallis and Edmondes</i>, November 9th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN167" id="FN167"></a><a href="#FN167A">[167]</a></sup>
+ H.F. Martyndale, <i>ut sup.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN168" id="FN168"></a><a href="#FN168A">[168]</a></sup>
+ Letter to the Ambassadors, <i>ut sup.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN169" id="FN169"></a><a href="#FN169A">[169]</a></sup>
+ <i>An Advertisement written to a Secretarie</i>, etc. (1592), p. 13.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN170" id="FN170"></a><a href="#FN170A">[170]</a></sup>
+ Sir R. Naunton, <i>Fragmenta Regalia (Harleian Miscellany</i>, ii. 106).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN171" id="FN171"></a><a href="#FN171A">[171]</a></sup>
+ Blount to Parsons (Stonyhurst MSS.), <i>Anglia</i>, vi. 64.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN172" id="FN172"></a><a href="#FN172A">[172]</a></sup>
+ Such letters are found amongst the State Papers.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN173" id="FN173"></a><a href="#FN173A">[173]</a></sup>
+ The amount, it would seem, cannot have been less than this. A barrel of gunpowder,
+ containing four firkins, weighed 400 lb., and had the casks in the cellar all been
+ barrels, in the strict sense of the word, the amount would therefore have exceeded
+ six tons. Some of these casks, we are told, were small, but some were hogsheads. The
+ twenty barrels first laid in are described as "whole barrels." (Faukes, January 20th,
+ 1605-6.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN174" id="FN174"></a><a href="#FN174A">[174]</a></sup>
+ An interesting illustration of this point is furnished by a strange piece of evidence
+ furnished by W. Andrew, servant to Sir E. Digby. Sir Everard's office was to organize
+ the rising in the Midlands, after the catastrophe, but he apparently forgot to supply
+ himself with powder till the very eve of the appointed day. Andrew averred that on
+ the night of November 4th, his master secretly asked him to procure some powder in
+ the neighbouring town, whereupon he asked, "How much? A pound, or half a pound?" Sir
+ Everard said 200 or 300 lb. Deponent purchased one pound. (Tanner MSS. lxxv. f. 205
+ b.)</p>
+
+ <p>One Matthew Batty mentioned Lord Monteagle as having bought gunpowder.
+ (<i>Ibid.</i> v. 40.)</p>
+
+ <p>In the same collection is a copy of some notes by Sir E. Coke (f. 185 b), in which
+ the price of the powder discovered is put down as &pound;200, <i>i.e.</i> some
+ &pound;2,000 of our money.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN175" id="FN175"></a><a href="#FN175A">[175]</a></sup>
+ Gunpowder was measured by the <i>last</i> = 2,400 lb. (Tomline's <i>Law
+ Dictionary</i>.) In 1607 there were delivered out of the store 14 lasts and some
+ cwts. In 1608 the amount in various strong places is entered as: "<i>Dover
+ Castle</i>, 4 lasts; <i>Arcliffe Bullwark</i>, 1 last; <i>Walmer</i>, 1 last, 8 cwt.;
+ <i>Deal Castle</i>, 1 last; <i>Sandown Castle</i>, 2 lasts, etc.; <i>Sandgate</i>, 1
+ last; <i>Camber</i>, 1 last."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN176" id="FN176"></a><a href="#FN176A">[176]</a></sup>
+ The position and character of the "cellar" admit of no doubt, as appears from the
+ testimony of Smith's <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, Brayley and Britton's
+ <i>Ancient Palace of Westminster</i>, and Capon's notes on the same, <i>Vetusta
+ Monumenta</i>, v. They are, however, inconsistent with some circumstances alleged by
+ the government. Thus, Sir Everard Digby's complicity with "the worst part" of the
+ treason, which on several occasions he denied, is held to be established by a
+ confession of Faukes, which cannot now be found among the State Papers, but which is
+ mentioned in Sir E. Coke's speech upon Digby's arraignment, and is printed in
+ Barlow's <i>Gunpowder Treason</i>, p. 68. In Sir E. Coke's version it runs thus:
+ "Fawkes, then present at the bar, had confessed, that some time before that session,
+ the said Fawkes being with Digby at his house in the country, about which time there
+ had fallen much wet, Digby taking Fawkes aside after supper, told him he was much
+ afraid that the powder in the cellar was grown damp, and that some new must be
+ provided, lest that should not take fire."</p>
+
+ <p>Seeing, however, that the powder stood above ground, within a most substantial
+ building, and could be reached by the rain only if this should first flood the
+ Chamber of the Peers, it does not seem as if the idea of such a danger should have
+ suggested itself.</p>
+
+ <p>Another interesting point in connection with the "cellar" is that the House of
+ Lords having subsequently been removed to the Court of Requests, and afterwards to
+ the Painted Chamber, "Guy Faukes' Cellar" on each occasion accompanied the migration.
+ From Leigh's <i>New Picture of London</i> we find that in 1824-5, when the Court of
+ Requests was in use, and the old cellar had completely disappeared, Guy's Cellar was
+ still shown; while a plate given in Knight's <i>Old England</i>, and elsewhere,
+ represents a vault under the Painted Chamber, not used as the House of Lords till
+ after 1832. Such a cellar seems to have been considered a necessary appurtenance of
+ the House.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN177" id="FN177"></a><a href="#FN177A">[177]</a></sup>
+ Afterwards the Electress Palatine.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN178" id="FN178"></a><a href="#FN178A">[178]</a></sup>
+ Gardiner, <i>Hist.</i> i. 245; Lingard, vii. 59; T. Winter, November 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN179" id="FN179"></a><a href="#FN179A">[179]</a></sup>
+ Faukes, November 17th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN180" id="FN180"></a><a href="#FN180A">[180]</a></sup>
+ Harry Morgan, <i>Examination</i> (R.O.), November 12th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN181" id="FN181"></a><a href="#FN181A">[181]</a></sup>
+ T. Winter, November 23rd and 25th, 1605. As the information about Prince Henry was
+ alleged to have been communicated by Lord Monteagle, the passage has been mutilated
+ in the published version to conceal this circumstance.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN182" id="FN182"></a><a href="#FN182A">[182]</a></sup>
+ Faukes, November 5th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN183" id="FN183"></a><a href="#FN183A">[183]</a></sup>
+ Sir E. Digby, Barlow's <i>Gunpowder Treason</i>, App. 249.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN184" id="FN184"></a><a href="#FN184A">[184]</a></sup>
+ Faukes, November 17th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN185" id="FN185"></a><a href="#FN185A">[185]</a></sup>
+ Digby, <i>ut sup.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN186" id="FN186"></a><a href="#FN186A">[186]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, i. 239.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN187" id="FN187"></a><a href="#FN187A">[187]</a></sup>
+ There is also an allusion to the same in the confession of Keyes, November 30th,
+ 1605; but this document also is of a highly suspicious character. Of the seven
+ miners, none but these three were taken alive; Catesby, Percy, and the two Wrights
+ being killed in the field. Strangely enough, though Keyes may be cited as a witness
+ on this subject, on which his evidence is of such singular importance, the
+ government, for some purpose of its own, tampered with the confession of Faukes
+ wherein he is mentioned as one of the excavators, substituting Robert Winter's name
+ for his, and placing Keyes amongst those "that wrought not in the myne." See
+ Jardine's remarks on this point, <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 6.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN188" id="FN188"></a><a href="#FN188A">[188]</a></sup>
+ His detailed notes and plans are given in <i>Vetusta Monumenta</i>, vol. v.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN189" id="FN189"></a><a href="#FN189A">[189]</a></sup>
+ Page 4.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN190" id="FN190"></a><a href="#FN190A">[190]</a></sup>
+ See Appendix E, <i>Site of Percy's house</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN191" id="FN191"></a><a href="#FN191A">[191]</a></sup>
+ Tanner MSS. lxxv. &sect; 185, b.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN192" id="FN192"></a><a href="#FN192A">[192]</a></sup>
+ Faukes, November 6th, uses the same expression, "a low room new builded," which seems
+ to imply that this receptacle had been constructed since Percy came into possession
+ of the house.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN193" id="FN193"></a><a href="#FN193A">[193]</a></sup>
+ November 6th, 1605. More will be seen of the important document containing this
+ information.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN194" id="FN194"></a><a href="#FN194A">[194]</a></sup>
+ According to Smith's plan (<i>sup.</i> p. 59) there were four entrances to the
+ cellar, none of which can have been Percy's "new dore."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN195" id="FN195"></a><a href="#FN195A">[195]</a></sup>
+ We are told that Faukes was selected to take charge of the house, and perform other
+ duties which would bring him into notice, because being unknown in London he was not
+ likely to excite remark. In his declaration, November 8th, however, he gives as his
+ reason for going abroad, "lest, being a dangerous man, he should be known and
+ suspected." It is obvious that in the meantime the cellar must either have been left
+ in charge of others better known, and therefore more likely to excite suspicion, or
+ have been left unprotected.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN196" id="FN196"></a><a href="#FN196A">[196]</a></sup>
+ November 17th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN197" id="FN197"></a><a href="#FN197A">[197]</a></sup>
+ Thomas Winter, November 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN198" id="FN198"></a><a href="#FN198A">[198]</a></sup>
+ F. 66.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN199" id="FN199"></a><a href="#FN199A">[199]</a></sup>
+ This, as we have heard, was Mr. Whynniard, who unfortunately died very suddenly on
+ the morning of November 5th, on hearing of the "discovery," evidence of great
+ importance as to the hiring of the house and "cellar" being thus lost. "As for the
+ keeper of the parliament house," says Goodman, "who let out the lodgings to Percy, it
+ is said that as soon as ever he heard of the news what Percy intended, he instantly
+ fell into a fright and died; so that it could not be certainly known who procured him
+ the house, or by whose means."&mdash;<i>Court of King James</i>, i. 107.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE GOVERNMENT INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">Having</span> followed the history of the plotters
+ and their doings, to the point when everything was ready for action, we have now to
+ inquire what, in the meantime, those were about for whose destruction such notable
+ preparations were making, and whether in truth they were, as we are assured, wrapped in
+ a sense of false security, and altogether unconscious of the signs and tokens that
+ should have awakened their suspicion and alarm.</p>
+
+ <p>When, by the aid of such evidence as remains to us, we turn to examine the facts of
+ the case, we discover in them, it must be confessed, no symptoms whatever of supineness
+ or lethargy. It appears, on the contrary, that throughout the period when the
+ government are supposed to have been living in a fool's paradise, and tranquilly
+ assuming that all was well, they were in reality busily at work through their
+ emissaries and informers, prying into all the doings of the recusant Catholics,
+ receiving frequent intimation of all that was undertaken, or even projected, and,
+ apparently, regulating the main features of a treasonable conspiracy, which can have
+ been no other than the Powder Plot itself, determining, in particular, what individuals
+ should be implicated therein.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>In April, 1604, at the very time when we hear of the Plot as being hatched, a letter
+ was addressed to Sir Thomas Challoner, an official frequently mixed up with business of
+ this kind, by one Henry Wright,<sup><a name="FN200A" id="FN200A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN200">[200]</a></sup> reporting the proceedings of a subordinate agent, by name
+ Davies, whom he styles a "discoverer,"<sup><a name="FN201A" id="FN201A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN201">[201]</a></sup> then engaged in working a Catholic treason, with the special
+ object of incriminating priests. Davies has offered to "set," or mark
+ down,<sup><a name="FN202A" id="FN202A"></a><a href="#FN202">[202]</a></sup> over
+ threescore of these, but Wright has told him that so many are not required, and that he
+ will satisfy his employers if he implicate twenty, provided they be "most principal
+ Jesuits and seminary priests," and therewithal has given him thirteen or fourteen names
+ that will serve the required purpose. Davies replies, "that by God's grace he will
+ absolutely do it ere long."<sup><a name="FN203A" id="FN203A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN203">[203]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>That the treason in question was none other than the Gunpowder Plot there can be no
+ question, unless indeed we are to say that the authorities were engaged in fabricating
+ a bogus conspiracy for which there was no foundation whatever in fact. It was not the
+ way of statesmen of the period, when on the track of sedition, to relinquish the
+ pursuit till they had sifted it to the bottom, and at this juncture, especially, every
+ shred of evidence regarding Catholics and their conduct was threshed out to the
+ uttermost. In consequence, we are able to say with certainty, that <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>besides the enterprise of
+ Catesby and his associates, there was no other conspiracy of any kind on foot. We have,
+ moreover, already seen that the very same point thus by anticipation represented as all
+ important, is that which after the "discovery" every nerve was strained to establish,
+ namely, the complicity of the Catholic clergy. If we had no more than this internal
+ evidence, it would abundantly suffice to assure us that the conspiracy thus sedulously
+ watched was the same as that miraculously "discovered" a year and a half later.</p>
+
+ <p>But we are not left to such inferences alone. In March, 1606, we find Wright
+ applying to the minister for a reward on account of his services "in discovering
+ villainous practices," thus indicating that by this time those which he had been
+ tracking had been brought to light. More explicit still is a memorial presented to the
+ king, at a later date, on his behalf. This is entitled&mdash;"Touching Wright and his
+ services performed <i>in the damnable plot of the Powder treason</i>." King James is
+ reminded that Chief Justice Popham and Sir Thomas Challoner had a hand in the discovery
+ of the Powder, and this by means of information supplied by Wright, "for two years
+ space almost" before his Majesty interpreted the famous letter to Lord Monteagle, "like
+ an angel of God." This information Popham and Challoner had from time to time
+ communicated to his Majesty, "whose hand Wright hath in testimony of his services in
+ the matter."<sup><a name="FN204A" id="FN204A"></a><a href="#FN204">[204]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In the same month of April, 1604, was supplied <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>another piece of information, singularly
+ interesting and important,<sup><a name="FN205A" id="FN205A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN205">[205]</a></sup> in which were detailed the particulars of a design amongst the
+ Catholics at home and abroad. Much, in fact the bulk, of the information given, is
+ seen, in the light of our present knowledge, to be purely fictitious, affording a good
+ example of the "sophistications" which, as Cecil himself complained, his agents were
+ wont to mingle with their intelligence. The design in question was represented as being
+ of the most serious and secret nature, the papists thinking that it "must now be so
+ handled and carried as the great cause may lose no reputation, or if any suspicion
+ should grow in the state, or any come in question therefore, the main point might never
+ come to light;" the said "main point" being of course the complicity of the Catholic
+ clergy.</p>
+
+ <p>What invests this document with singular importance is the fact that we hear of it
+ again. In April, 1606, it was quoted for the benefit of Parliament by the Attorney
+ General, Sir E. Coke, and explicitly as having reference to the Gunpowder Plot, forming
+ part of the evidence adduced by him to secure the attainder of persons accused of being
+ partakers in that treason.<sup><a name="FN206A" id="FN206A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN206">[206]</a></sup> It thus affords a proof, on the authority of the government
+ itself, that eighteen months before the conspiracy was "discovered," intelligence
+ regarding it had been received and was being attended to.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c9">
+ <a name="image13" id="image13"></a><img src="images/image13.png" width="536" height=
+ "800" alt="A VIEW OF THE HOUSE OF PEERS, 1755." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">a view of the house of peers, 1755.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>This is, however, by no means the only information of which we find traces. Amongst
+ the Cecil papers at Hatfield is a letter dated December 20th, 1605, addressed to the
+ Earl of Salisbury by one Thomas Coe, who claims to have previously forwarded to his
+ Majesty "the primary intelligence of these late dangerous treasons," upon which
+ communication the historian Lodge observes,<sup><a name="FN207A" id=
+ "FN207A"></a><a href="#FN207">[207]</a></sup> "It should seem then that the famous
+ letter transmitted to James by Lord Monteagle, for the right construction of which that
+ Prince's penetration hath been so highly extolled by some historians, was not the only
+ previous intelligence communicated to him of the Gunpowder Treason."</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile the officers of the government, in all parts, appear to have been no less
+ alert than was their wont. On the 9th of January, 1604-5, for instance, Sir Thomas
+ Parry writes from Paris,<sup><a name="FN208A" id="FN208A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN208">[208]</a></sup> inclosing a note from an informer at Dieppe, concerning an
+ English Catholic returning from Italy and Spain with letters for Fathers Garnet and
+ Oldcorne, and a cipher of three lines for a lawyer at Douay, and although the messenger
+ has contrived to give him the slip, he is able to send particulars concerning his
+ personal appearance, and the locality in London where he is likely to be found. On the
+ 25th of the same month, Cecil replies to Parry<sup><a name="FN209A" id=
+ "FN209A"></a><a href="#FN209">[209]</a></sup> concerning priests and their doings, and
+ makes the valuable admission that their proceedings are always known to him by means of
+ false brethren, though, he adds, these informers always add to their intelligence
+ "sophistications" of their own, a fact which must not be lost sight of in studying the
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>reports of such
+ folk. We hear particularly of informations supplied by the priests Bagshawe and Cecil,
+ by Captain Turner, Charles Paget, and sundry others.</p>
+
+ <p>At the beginning of October, 1605, we make the acquaintance of another notable
+ informer. On the first of the month, William Willaston, then engaged on a commission in
+ France in connection with a proposed commercial treaty, writes to Cecil from
+ Paris<sup><a name="FN210A" id="FN210A"></a><a href="#FN210">[210]</a></sup> concerning
+ a Catholic design attributed chiefly to priests and Jesuits, who have assurance that
+ their friends in England, who are many and of good sort, intend "to kindle a fire in
+ many corners of our land, and a rebellion in Ireland," and that these matters be almost
+ grown to a head, "some of their fingers itching to be set to work." Willaston adds,
+ "there is a particular irreconcilable desperate malice against your Honour's person,
+ which is principally the cause I make bold to write unto your Lordship. You have yet
+ the papists in your hands, and are masters; if you let them increase and grow so
+ insolent, assuredly it will come to pass as to the King of Israel, who having
+ overthrown Benhadab ..." and so on.</p>
+
+ <p>On October 14th, Willaston again writes from Rouen<sup><a name="FN211A" id=
+ "FN211A"></a><a href="#FN211">[211]</a></sup> "about some matters pretended by our
+ Romish Catholics." The party, he says, "who" has given light into this business "is one
+ George Southwaick, well-known to many of your Lordship's followers." This Southwaick,
+ he holds to be "very honest;" he is going to England with sundry priests and others,
+ and upon landing will at once communicate with the authorities and have his comrades
+ arrested. "Southwaick <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg
+ 100]</a></span>himself," adds Willaston, "must be taken as well as the others, for he
+ desireth not to be known to have given any information against the rest. If it please
+ your Lordship to take order for his imprisonment apart, that conference privately may
+ be had with him, until such time as shall be thought fit to deliver him, he can give
+ you good directions for many matters, and may stand your honour in stead for such
+ purposes."</p>
+
+ <p>There follows a notable suggestion: "If your Lordship would be pleased to set some
+ man to win the Nuncio of the Pope his secretary in Paris, you should receive very
+ direct and sound instructions from him." The writer goes on to speak of an intended
+ rebellion in England, and the kindling of a fire there, and dutifully concludes, "God
+ grant they touch not the person of the King nor of his children."</p>
+
+ <p>On the 27th of October, nine days before the "discovery," Southwaick himself, now in
+ England, writes to Cecil,<sup><a name="FN212A" id="FN212A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN212">[212]</a></sup> urging that the impending arrest of priests and others should
+ be deferred, and that for better management of "the business, and for the better and
+ more substantial manifestation thereof," he ventures to suggest that "more scope of
+ time would make the service of more worth." Moreover, he gives warning of preparations
+ for trouble in the shires, in connection with "their plot," and finally promises, "your
+ Honour shall not only have knowledge of all such as are any way intercepted in the
+ same, but also knowledge of the end of their whole purpose, and withal be certain of
+ their meeting here in London, where I do not doubt to apprehend forty priests, with
+ many great of name, at mass, in good speed of their great intent."</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>On the morning of the 5th of November itself, evidently before receiving news that
+ the final blow had been struck, Southwaick writes to Levinus Munck, Cecil's private
+ secretary.<sup><a name="FN213A" id="FN213A"></a><a href="#FN213">[213]</a></sup> He
+ excuses himself for recent silence on the ground that he could not without prejudice to
+ "the business" have communicated with his employers. "The parties," he declares, "have
+ had, ever since I saw you, such obscure meetings, such mutable purposes, such uncertain
+ resolutions, as hath made me ride both day and night, as well in foul weather as fair,
+ omitting no opportunities, lest I should not effect what I have by the weight of my
+ credit and the engagement of my duty and reputation propounded to my honourable Lord."
+ He farther begs that nothing may be done that might disclose his true character to his
+ intended victims, and concludes by declaring that, if he be not much mistaken, he is
+ about "a singular service."</p>
+
+ <p>If such letters proved nothing more, they would abundantly serve to discredit the
+ idea that a government which conducted its operations in such a fashion could be
+ hoodwinked by such clumsy contrivances as those of the cellar and the mine.</p>
+
+ <p>Five days later,<sup><a name="FN214A" id="FN214A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN214">[214]</a></sup> Southwaick again writes to Munck, inclosing a note of the
+ priests who have had meetings in Paris, or have been written to in England. The
+ Ambassador (in Paris) will, he says, bear witness that, although unable to
+ particularize, he had given notice two months since that there was a plot brewing. He
+ adds a significant hint, the like of which we have <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>already seen: "Should I chance to be
+ apprehended, I will rest myself upon my honourable Lord."<sup><a name="FN215A" id=
+ "FN215A"></a><a href="#FN215">[215]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile the English ambassadors abroad were no less active and vigilant than the
+ informers at home, and while clearly aware that there was some danger on foot, never
+ doubted that the king's government would not be caught napping.</p>
+
+ <p>On the 9th of October, Sir Thomas Edmondes wrote to Cecil from Brussels<sup><a name=
+ "FN216A" id="FN216A"></a><a href="#FN216">[216]</a></sup> to warn him of suspicious
+ symptoms in the Low Countries; and on the following day Cecil wrote to
+ Edmondes<sup><a name="FN217A" id="FN217A"></a><a href="#FN217">[217]</a></sup>
+ expressing apprehensions of trouble from the Jesuits abroad. On the same day, October
+ 10th, Sir Thomas Parry wrote from Paris to the secretary,<sup><a name="FN218A" id=
+ "FN218A"></a><a href="#FN218">[218]</a></sup> of a petition which the Catholics were
+ preparing against the meeting of Parliament, "and some further designs upon refusal;"
+ and in another letter informed Edmondes:<sup><a name="FN219A" id="FN219A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN219">[219]</a></sup> "somewhat is at present in hand amongst these desperate
+ hypocrites, which I trust God shall divert, by the vigilant care of his Majesty's
+ faithful servants and friends abroad, and prudence of his council at home."</p>
+
+ <p>That such confidence was not misplaced is shown by Cecil's assurance to Sir Thomas
+ Parry,<sup><a name="FN220A" id="FN220A"></a><a href="#FN220">[220]</a></sup> mentioned
+ above, that the proceedings of the priests were never unknown to Government.</p>
+
+ <p>Amongst the papers at Hatfield is a curious note, <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>anonymous and undated, giving information
+ of a plot involving murder and treason, which, like the letter to Monteagle, simulates
+ rather too obviously the workmanship of an illiterate person, and artfully insinuates
+ that the design in question is undertaken in the name of religion, and chiefly favoured
+ by the priests.<sup><a name="FN221A" id="FN221A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN221">[221]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Another remarkable document is preserved in the same collection. This is a letter
+ written to Sir Everard Digby, June 11th, 1605, and treating of an otter hunt to be
+ undertaken when the hay shall be cut. It has, however, been endorsed by Salisbury,
+ "Letter written to Sir Everard Digby&mdash;Powder Treason."<sup><a name="FN222A" id=
+ "FN222A"></a><a href="#FN222">[222]</a></sup> Not only is it hard to see how the terms
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>of the
+ document lend themselves to such an interpretation, but the date at which it was
+ written was fully three months prior to Digby's initiation in the conspiracy. The idea
+ is certainly suggested that, far from being passive and indolent, the authorities were
+ sedulously seeking pretexts to entangle as many as possible of those "great of name,"
+ concerning whom we have already heard from one of their informers. This much, at any
+ rate, seems clear. Those at the centre of this complex web of espionage, to whom were
+ addressed all these informations and admonitions, cannot have been, as they protested
+ somewhat overmuch, in a state of careless inactivity, depending for security only upon
+ the protection of the Almighty, "who," as the secretary afterwards piously declared,
+ "blessed us in our slumber [and] will not forsake us now that we are
+ awake."<sup><a name="FN223A" id="FN223A"></a><a href="#FN223">[223]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>The slumber would at least appear not to have been dreamless. On the one hand, the
+ secretary was evidently much exercised by a threatened <i>rapprochement</i> between his
+ royal master and Pope Clement VIII., who, through a Scotch Catholic gentleman, Sir
+ James Lindsay, had sent a friendly message to King James, which had elicited a
+ courteous and almost cordial reply.<sup><a name="FN224A" id="FN224A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN224">[224]</a></sup> The significance of this Cecil <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>strenuously endeavoured, in a letter to the
+ Duke of Lenox,<sup><a name="FN225A" id="FN225A"></a><a href="#FN225">[225]</a></sup> to
+ explain away, and in February, 1604-5, we find him assuring the Archbishop of York with
+ an earnestness somewhat suspicious,<sup><a name="FN226A" id="FN226A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN226">[226]</a></sup> "I love not to procure or yield any toleration; a matter which
+ I well know no creature living durst propound to our religious Sovereign." For himself,
+ he thus declares: "I will be much less than I am, or rather nothing at all, before I
+ shall become an instrument of such a miserable change." Nevertheless, on the 17th of
+ April following, he was fain to acknowledge, in writing to Parry,<sup><a name="FN227A"
+ id="FN227A"></a><a href="#FN227">[227]</a></sup> that the news of Pope Clement's death
+ had much eased him in his mind.</p>
+
+ <p>It would, however, appear that the spectre of possible toleration still haunted him,
+ and that he felt it necessary to commit the king to a course of severity. In a minute
+ of September 12th, 1605, addressed to the same ambassador, which has been corrected and
+ amended with an amount of care sufficiently testifying to the importance of the
+ subject,<sup><a name="FN228A" id="FN228A"></a><a href="#FN228">[228]</a></sup> after
+ speaking of "the plots and business of the priests," and the tendency of Englishmen
+ going abroad "in this time <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg
+ 106]</a></span>of peace" to become Catholics, he thus continues: "Only this is it
+ wherein my own heart receiveth comfort, that we live under a most religious and
+ understanding Prince, who sticketh not to publish, as well in his own particular, as in
+ the form of his government, how contrary that religion is to his resolution, and how
+ far he will be from ever gracing [it]." He goes on to declare that nothing will so
+ avail to make his Majesty withdraw his countenance from any man as such "falling
+ away."</p>
+
+ <p>About the same time as this was written, we are told by a writer, almost a
+ contemporary,<sup><a name="FN229A" id="FN229A"></a><a href="#FN229">[229]</a></sup>
+ that a dependent of Cecil's warned a Catholic gentleman, by name Buck, of a "wicked
+ design" which his master had in hand against the papists.</p>
+
+ <p>On the 17th of October, more than a week before the first hint of danger is said to
+ have been breathed, we find the minister writing to Sir Thomas Edmondes, at
+ Brussels,<sup><a name="FN230A" id="FN230A"></a><a href="#FN230">[230]</a></sup> in
+ terms which certainly appear to couple together the growing danger of conversions to
+ Catholicism, of which we have heard above, and the remedy soon to be supplied by the
+ new policy which the discovery of the Plot so effectively established. He speaks of the
+ "insolencies" of the priests and Jesuits, who are doing much injury by infecting with
+ their poison "every youth that cometh amongst them;" ominously adding, "which liberty
+ must, for one cause or another, be retrenched."</p>
+
+ <p>There can be no doubt that the issue of the Gunpowder Plot was eminently calculated
+ to work such <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg
+ 107]</a></span>an effect; and even more would seem to have been anticipated from it
+ than was actually realized, for the secretary, we are told, promised King James that in
+ consequence of it not a single Jesuit should remain in England.</p>
+
+ <p>In the accounts supplied to us as to the manner of the "discovery," we obtain much
+ interesting information from the utterances of the government itself. In studying these
+ we cannot fail to notice an evident effort to reconcile two conflicting interests. On
+ the one hand, that the king and the nation should be properly impressed with a sense of
+ their marvellous deliverance, it was essential to represent the catastrophe as having
+ been imminent, which could not be unless the preparations for it had been altogether
+ unsuspected; and it was likewise desirable to magnify the divine sagacity of the
+ monarch, which had been the instrument of Providence to avert a disaster otherwise
+ inevitable. On the other hand, however, it should not be made to appear that those to
+ whose keeping the public safety was intrusted had shown themselves culpably negligent
+ or incompetent; and it had therefore to be insinuated that, after all, they were not
+ without "sufficient advertisement" of danger, and even of danger specifically connected
+ with the actual conspirators, and directed against the Parliament. But, again, lest
+ such information should appear suspiciously accurate, the actual plotters had to be
+ merged in a larger body of their co-religionists, and their design to be represented in
+ vague and general terms. At the time, no doubt, this was effective enough. Now however
+ that we know, by the light of subsequent investigations, who exactly were engaged,
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>and what was
+ in hand, it is possible to estimate these declarations at their true
+ value.<sup><a name="FN231A" id="FN231A"></a><a href="#FN231">[231]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Except with the aid of such an explanation as this, it seems impossible to
+ understand the endless inconsistencies and contradictions of the official narrative.
+ This we have in four forms, all coming to us on the highest authority, but addressed to
+ different audiences, and hopelessly at variance upon almost every point. One is that
+ given to the world as the "King's Book,"<sup><a name="FN232A" id="FN232A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN232">[232]</a></sup> containing, as Mr. Jardine tells us, the version which it was
+ desired that the general public should accept. A second was furnished by Cecil himself
+ to the ambassadors at Madrid and Brussels, and the Lord Deputy in Ireland,<sup><a name=
+ "FN233A" id="FN233A"></a><a href="#FN233">[233]</a></sup> and a third to the ambassador
+ at Paris.<sup><a name="FN234A" id="FN234A"></a><a href="#FN234">[234]</a></sup> We have
+ likewise the minute of November 7th, already mentioned as perhaps intended for the
+ information of the Privy Council, which, although it has seemingly served as the basis
+ of the story told in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg
+ 109]</a></span>"King's Book," contradicts that story in various not unimportant
+ particulars.</p>
+
+ <p>We shall afterwards have to examine in some detail the divergencies of these several
+ narratives: at present we are concerned only with the intimation which they afford of a
+ previous knowledge of the Plot on the part of the government. In the "King's
+ Book"&mdash;which was not only to be disseminated broadcast at home, but to be
+ translated and spread abroad, and, moreover, to be suited to the taste of its supposed
+ author&mdash;the preternatural acuteness of the monarch is extolled in terms of most
+ preposterous flattery, and his secretary is represented as altogether incredulous of
+ danger, and unwilling to be convinced even by his royal master's wonderful
+ interpretation of the mysterious warning. Nevertheless, not only is mention
+ parenthetically introduced of the minister's "customable and watchful care of the king
+ and State, boiling within him," of his laying up these things in his heart, "like the
+ Blessed Virgin Mary," and being unable to rest till he had followed the matter
+ farther,&mdash;but it is dexterously intimated that, for all his hardness of belief, he
+ was sufficiently well informed before the warning came to hand, and that "this accident
+ did put him in mind of divers advertisements he had received from beyond the seas,
+ wherewith he had acquainted as well the king himself, as divers of his Privy
+ Councillors, concerning some business the Papists were in, both at home and abroad,
+ making combination amongst them for some combination against this Parliament time,"
+ their object being to approach the king with a petition for toleration, "which should
+ be delivered in some such order, and so well backed, as the king should be <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>loth to refuse their
+ requests; like the sturdy beggars craving alms with one open hand, but carrying a stone
+ in the other, in case of refusal."</p>
+
+ <p>As prepared for the Privy Council, the account, though substantially the same, was
+ somewhat more explicit. The secretary was fully aware, so the Lords were told, "that
+ some practices might be doubted," and he "had, any time these three months, acquainted
+ the King, and some of his Majesty's inward Counsellors, that the priests and laymen
+ abroad and at home were full of the papists of this kingdom, seeking still to lay some
+ <i>plot</i> for procuring at this Parliament exercise of their religion."</p>
+
+ <p>In his letter to the ambassadors Cecil was able to speak more plainly, for this
+ document was not to meet the eye of James. Accordingly, he not only acknowledges that
+ on seeing the Monteagle letter he at once divined the truth, and understood all about
+ the powder, and moreover reverses the parts played by his Majesty and
+ himself&mdash;making the former incredulous in spite of what he himself could urge in
+ support of his opinion&mdash;but he goes on to give his previous information a far more
+ definite complexion: "Not but that I had sufficient advertisement that most of these
+ that now are fled [<i>i.e.</i> the conspirators]&mdash;being all notorious
+ Recusants&mdash;with many others of that kind, had a practice in hand for some stir
+ this Parliament." He, moreover, describes the plotters, in terms already cited, as
+ "gentlemen spent in their fortunes and fit for all alterations."</p>
+
+ <p>In view of all this it is quite impossible to believe the account given of
+ themselves by those who were responsible for the public safety, and to suppose that
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>they were not
+ only so neglectful of their duty, but so incredibly foolish, and so unlike themselves,
+ as to permit a gross and palpable peril to approach unnoticed. If, on the other hand,
+ as appears to be certain, the information with which they were supplied were copious
+ and minute, erring by excess far more than by defect, if, instead of lethargy and
+ carelessness, we find in their conduct, at every stage of the proceedings, evidence of
+ the extremest vigilance and of constant activity, and if they held it of prime
+ importance to disguise the facts, and were willing to incur the charge of having been
+ asleep at their posts, rather than let it be thought that they knew what they did, it
+ can scarcely be doubted that the history of the Gunpowder Plot given to the world was
+ in its essential features what they wished it to be.<sup><a name="FN235A" id=
+ "FN235A"></a><a href="#FN235">[235]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>A practical illustration of the methods freely employed by statesmen of the period
+ will serve to throw fuller light upon this portion of our inquiry. In the service of
+ the government was one Thomas Phelippes,<sup><a name="FN236A" id="FN236A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN236">[236]</a></sup> by trade a "decipherer," who was employed to "make English" of
+ intercepted letters written in cipher. His services had been largely used in connection
+ with Mary, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg
+ 112]</a></span>Queen of Scots, some of whose letters he thus interpreted, having it in
+ his power, as Mr. Tytler remarks, to garble or falsify them at pleasure.<sup><a name=
+ "FN237A" id="FN237A"></a><a href="#FN237">[237]</a></sup> Moreover, to serve the
+ purposes of his masters, as he himself acknowledges,<sup><a name="FN238A" id=
+ "FN238A"></a><a href="#FN238">[238]</a></sup> he had upon occasion forged one side of a
+ correspondence, in order to induce the person addressed to commit himself in
+ reply.<sup><a name="FN239A" id="FN239A"></a><a href="#FN239">[239]</a></sup> At the
+ time of the Gunpowder Plot, however, Phelippes had himself fallen under suspicion, on
+ account of a correspondence with Hugh Owen, of whom we shall hear elsewhere.
+ Accordingly, an attempt was made to hoist him with his own petard, and another agent,
+ named Barnes, was employed by Cecil to write a letter, as coming from Phelippes (who
+ was then in England) and carry it to Owen in Flanders in order to draw him out. At
+ Dover, however, Barnes was arrested, being mistaken for another man for whom a watch
+ was being kept. Thereupon, his papers being seized and sent to the Earl of Northampton,
+ who appears not to have been in the secret of this matter, Cecil was obliged to arrest
+ Phelippes at once, as though the letter were genuine, instead of waiting, as he had
+ intended, in order to worm out more.</p>
+
+ <p>The story of this complex and crooked business is frankly told by Cecil himself in a
+ letter to Edmondes, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg
+ 113]</a></span>English ambassador at Brussels, which, after the above abstract, will be
+ sufficiently intelligible.<sup><a name="FN240A" id="FN240A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN240">[240]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"As for Barnes, he is now returning again into Flanders, with many vows and promises
+ to continue to do good service. As he was at Dover with my pass, carrying a letter from
+ Philipps to Owen (of Barnes own handwriting, wherewith I was before acquainted), he was
+ suddenly stayed by order from the Lord Warden, upon suspicion that he was one Acton, a
+ traitor of the late conspiracy.... Whereupon, his papers and letters being sent to my
+ Lord of Northampton, I thought fit not to defer any longer the calling of Philipps into
+ question; which till then I had forborne, hoping by Barnes his means to have discovered
+ some further matter than before I could do."</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN200" id="FN200"></a><a href="#FN200A">[200]</a></sup>
+ He appears to have been no relation of John and Christopher Wright, the
+ conspirators.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN201" id="FN201"></a><a href="#FN201A">[201]</a></sup>
+ Davies was employed in other affairs of a similar nature. See <i>Dom. James I.</i>,
+ xix. 83, I (P.R.O.).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN202" id="FN202"></a><a href="#FN202A">[202]</a></sup>
+ Cf. a "setter dog."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN203" id="FN203"></a><a href="#FN203A">[203]</a></sup>
+ See the full text of Wright's letter, Appendix G.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN204" id="FN204"></a><a href="#FN204A">[204]</a></sup>
+ See the text of the memorial, Appendix G.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN205" id="FN205"></a><a href="#FN205A">[205]</a></sup>
+ Copy in the P.R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> vii. 86, and xx. 52. The informer's name is
+ given in the latter, viz., Ralph Ratcliffe.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN206" id="FN206"></a><a href="#FN206A">[206]</a></sup>
+ It was likewise cited in the interrogatories prepared for the Jesuit Thomas Strange
+ (Brit. Mus. <i>MSS. Add.</i> 6178, 74) in November, 1605, and in this case also as
+ treating of the Gunpowder Plot and no other.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN207" id="FN207"></a><a href="#FN207A">[207]</a></sup>
+ <i>Illustrations</i>, iii. 301.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN208" id="FN208"></a><a href="#FN208A">[208]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>France</i>, b. 132.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN209" id="FN209"></a><a href="#FN209A">[209]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN210" id="FN210"></a><a href="#FN210A">[210]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>France</i>, bundle 132.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN211" id="FN211"></a><a href="#FN211A">[211]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> f. 273 b.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN212" id="FN212"></a><a href="#FN212A">[212]</a></sup>
+ Hatfield MSS. 112, n. 141.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN213" id="FN213"></a><a href="#FN213A">[213]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 16.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN214" id="FN214"></a><a href="#FN214A">[214]</a></sup>
+ November 10th, 1605, <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvi. 44.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN215" id="FN215"></a><a href="#FN215A">[215]</a></sup>
+ At a later period (July 20th, 1606) we find that Southwaick ("or Southwell") had lost
+ favour and was warned by Salisbury to leave the country. "I hold him," says the Earl,
+ "to be a very impostor." (<i>To Edmondes</i>, Phillipps MS. f. 165.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN216" id="FN216"></a><a href="#FN216A">[216]</a></sup>
+ Stowe MSS., 168, 39.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN217" id="FN217"></a><a href="#FN217A">[217]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> 40.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN218" id="FN218"></a><a href="#FN218A">[218]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> 42.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN219" id="FN219"></a><a href="#FN219A">[219]</a></sup>
+ Birch, <i>Historical View</i>, p. 234.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN220" id="FN220"></a><a href="#FN220A">[220]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>France</i>, bundle 132, January 25th, 1604-5.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN221" id="FN221"></a><a href="#FN221A">[221]</a></sup>
+ "Who so evar finds this box of letars let him carry hit to the Kings magesty: my
+ mastar litel thinks I knows of this, but yn ridinge wth him that browt the letar to
+ my mastar to a Katholyk gentlemans hows anward of his way ynto lin konsher
+ [Lincolnshire], he told me al his purpos, and what he ment to do; and he beinge a
+ prest absolved me and mad me swar nevar to revel hit to ane man. I confes myself a
+ Katholyk, and do hate the protystans relygon with my hart, and yit I detest to
+ consent ethar to murdar or treson. I have blotyd out sartyn nams in the letars becas
+ I wold not have ethar my mastar or ane of his frends trobyl aboute this; for by his
+ menes I was mad a goud Katholyk, and I wod to God the King war a good Katholyk: that
+ is all the harm I wish him; and let him tak hed what petysons or suplycasons he take
+ of ane man; and I hop this box will be found by som that will giv hit to the King,
+ hit may do him good one day. I men not to com to my mastar any moe, but wil return
+ unto my contry from whens I cam. As for my nam and contry I consel that; and God make
+ the King a goud Katholyk; and let Ser Robart Sesil and my lord Cohef Gustyse lok to
+ them selvse." (Printed in Appendix to <i>Third Report of Historical MSS.
+ Commission</i>, p. 148.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN222" id="FN222"></a><a href="#FN222A">[222]</a></sup>
+ It is signed "G.D.," and was possibly written by a relation of Sir Everard's.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN223" id="FN223"></a><a href="#FN223A">[223]</a></sup>
+ To Sir H. Bruncard, March 3rd, 1605-6. P.R.O. <i>Ireland</i>, vol. 218.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN224" id="FN224"></a><a href="#FN224A">[224]</a></sup>
+ "Instructions to my trusty servant Sir James Lindsay, for answer to the lettre and
+ Commission brought by him from the Pope unto me." A<sup>o</sup> 1604. (P.R.O.
+ <i>France</i>, b. 132.)</p>
+
+ <p>In these notes the king explains that the things of greatest import cannot be
+ written, but have been imparted "by tongue" to the envoy, to be delivered to his
+ holiness. Moreover he thus charges Lindsay: "You shall assure him that I shall never
+ be forgetful of the continual proof I have had of his courtesy and long inclination
+ towards me, and especially by this his so courteous and unexpected message, which I
+ shall be careful to requite thankfully by all civil courtesies that shall be in my
+ power, the particulars whereof I remit likewise to your declaration." Besides this,
+ he protests that he will ever inviolably observe two points: first, never to
+ dissemble what he thinks, especially in matters of conscience; secondly, never to
+ reject reason when he hears it urged on the other side.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN225" id="FN225"></a><a href="#FN225A">[225]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>France</i>, b. 132.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN226" id="FN226"></a><a href="#FN226A">[226]</a></sup>
+ Lodge, <i>Illustrations</i>, iii. 262.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN227" id="FN227"></a><a href="#FN227A">[227]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>France</i>, b. 132.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN228" id="FN228"></a><a href="#FN228A">[228]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN229" id="FN229"></a><a href="#FN229A">[229]</a></sup>
+ <i>The Politician's Catechism</i>, 1658.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN230" id="FN230"></a><a href="#FN230A">[230]</a></sup>
+ Birch, <i>Historical View</i>, p. 234.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN231" id="FN231"></a><a href="#FN231A">[231]</a></sup>
+ "If the Priestes and Catholickes, so many thousands in England would have entertayned
+ it, no man can be so malicious and simple to thinke but there would have been a
+ greater assembly than fourscore [in the Midlands] to take such an action in hand, and
+ the Council could not be so winking eyed, but they would have found forth some one or
+ other culpable, which they could never do, though some of them, most powerable in it,
+ tendered and racked forth their hatred against us to the uttermost limites they could
+ extend." <i>English Protestants' plea</i>, p. 60.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN232" id="FN232"></a><a href="#FN232A">[232]</a></sup>
+ <i>Discourse of the manner of the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot.</i> Printed in the
+ Collected Works of King James, by Bishop Mountague, by Bishop Barlow, in <i>Gunpowder
+ Treason</i>, and in Cobbett's <i>State Trials</i>, as an appendix to that of the
+ conspirators.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN233" id="FN233"></a><a href="#FN233A">[233]</a></sup>
+ <i>I.e.</i>, Cornwallis, Edmondes, and Chichester. The despatch to Cornwallis is
+ printed in Winwood's <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 170.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN234" id="FN234"></a><a href="#FN234A">[234]</a></sup>
+ Sir Thoms Parry, P.R.O. <i>France</i>, bundle 132.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN235" id="FN235"></a><a href="#FN235A">[235]</a></sup>
+ Mr. Hepworth Dixon observes (<i>Her Majesty's Tower</i>, i. 352, seventh edition)
+ that a man must have been in no common measure ignorant of Cecil and Northampton who
+ could dream that such a design could escape the greatest masters of intrigue alive,
+ and that abundant evidence makes it clear that the Council were informed of the Plot
+ in almost every stage, and that their agents dogged the footsteps of those whom they
+ suspected, taking note of all their proceedings. "It was no part of Cecil's policy,"
+ adds Mr. Dixon, "to step in before the dramatic time."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN236" id="FN236"></a><a href="#FN236A">[236]</a></sup>
+ Often called Phelipps, or Philipps.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN237" id="FN237"></a><a href="#FN237A">[237]</a></sup>
+ <i>History of Scotland</i>, iii. 376, note (ed. Eadie). It was on one of these
+ letters which had been in the hands of Phelippes that Mary was convicted.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN238" id="FN238"></a><a href="#FN238A">[238]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xx. 51. April, 1606.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN239" id="FN239"></a><a href="#FN239A">[239]</a></sup>
+ In the fragment cited above, Phelippes says that Queen Elizabeth and the Earl of
+ Essex largely availed themselves of this device of his, and that "My Lord of
+ Salisbury had himself made some use of it in the Queen's time."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN240" id="FN240"></a><a href="#FN240A">[240]</a></sup>
+ February 12th, 1605-6. (Stowe MSS. 168.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE "DISCOVERY."</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">When</span> the conspirators first undertook their
+ enterprise, Parliament was appointed to meet on February 7th, 1604-5, but, as has been
+ seen, it was subsequently prorogued till October 3rd, and then again till Tuesday,
+ November 5th. On occasion of the October prorogation, the confederates employed Thomas
+ Winter to attend the ceremony in order to learn from the demeanour of the assembled
+ Peers whether any suspicion of their design had suggested this unexpected adjournment.
+ He returned to report that no symptom could be discerned of alarm or uneasiness, and
+ that the presence of the volcano underfoot was evidently unsuspected. Thus reassured,
+ his associates awaited with confidence the advent of the fatal Fifth.</p>
+
+ <p>In the interval occurred the event which forms the official link connecting the
+ secret and the public history of the Plot, namely, the receipt of the letter of warning
+ by Lord Monteagle. That the document is of supreme importance in our history cannot be
+ denied, for the government account clearly stands or falls with the assertion that this
+ was in reality the means whereby the impending catastrophe was averted. That it was so,
+ the official story proclaimed from the first with a vehemence in itself suspicious, and
+ the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>famous
+ letter was exhibited to the world with a persistence and solicitude not easy to
+ explain; being printed in the "King's Book," and in every other account of the affair;
+ while transcribed copies were sent to the ambassadors at foreign courts and other
+ public personages.<sup><a name="FN241A" id="FN241A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN241">[241]</a></sup> Had a warning really been given, in such a case, to save the
+ life of a kinsman or friend, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg
+ 116]</a></span>the circumstance, however fortunate, would scarcely have been wonderful,
+ nor can we think that the document would thus have been multiplied for inspection. If,
+ on the other hand, it had been carefully contrived for its purpose, it would not be
+ unnatural for those who knew where the weak point lay, to wish the world to be
+ convinced that there really had been a letter. It is, moreover, not easy to understand
+ the importance attributed to Monteagle's service in connection with it. To have handed
+ to the authorities such a message, evidently of an alarming nature, though he himself
+ did not professedly understand it, does not appear to have entitled him to the
+ extraordinary consideration which he in fact received. The Attorney General was
+ specially instructed, at the trial, to extol his lordship's conduct.<sup><a name=
+ "FN242A" id="FN242A"></a><a href="#FN242">[242]</a></sup> Wherever, in the confession
+ of the conspirators, his name was mentioned, it was erased, or pasted over with paper,
+ or the whole passage was omitted before publication of the document. All this is easy
+ to understand if he were the instrument employed for a critical and delicate
+ transaction, depending for success upon his discretion and reticence. On any other
+ supposition it seems inexplicable.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image14" id="image14"></a><img src="images/image14.png" width="600" height=
+ "534" alt="MONTEAGLE AND LETTER." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">monteagle and letter.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Moreover, Monteagle's services received most substantial acknowledgment in the form
+ of a grant of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg
+ 117]</a></span>&pound;700 a year,<sup><a name="FN243A" id="FN243A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN243">[243]</a></sup> equivalent, at least, to ten times that amount in money of the
+ present day.<sup><a name="FN244A" id="FN244A"></a><a href="#FN244">[244]</a></sup>
+ There still exists<sup><a name="FN245A" id="FN245A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN245">[245]</a></sup> the draft preamble of the grant making this award, which has
+ been altered and emended with an amount of care which sufficiently testifies to the
+ importance of the matter. In this it is said of the letter that by the knowledge
+ thereof "we had the first <i>and only</i> means to discover that most wicked and
+ barbarous plot"&mdash;the words italicised being added as an interlineation by Cecil
+ himself. Nevertheless, it appears certain that this is not, and cannot be, the truth;
+ indeed, historians of all shades equally discountenance the idea. Mr.
+ Jardine<sup><a name="FN246A" id="FN246A"></a><a href="#FN246">[246]</a></sup> considers
+ it "hardly credible that the letter was really the means by which the plot was
+ discovered," and inclines to the belief<sup><a name="FN247A" id="FN247A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN247">[247]</a></sup> that the whole story concerning it "was merely a device of the
+ government ... to conceal the means by which their information had been derived."
+ Similarly Mr. J.S. Brewer<sup><a name="FN248A" id="FN248A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN248">[248]</a></sup> holds it as certain that this part, at least, of the story is
+ a fiction designed to conceal the truth. Mr. Gardiner, who is less inclined than others
+ to give up the received story, thinks that, to say the least of it, it is highly
+ probable that Monteagle expected the letter before it came.<sup><a name="FN249A" id=
+ "FN249A"></a><a href="#FN249">[249]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>For a right understanding of the point it is necessary <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>to consider the character
+ of the man who plays so important a part in this episode. Lord Monteagle, the eldest
+ son of Lord Morley, ennobled under a title derived through his mother, was, in Mr.
+ Jardine's opinion,<sup><a name="FN250A" id="FN250A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN250">[250]</a></sup> "a person precisely adapted for an instrument on such an
+ occasion;" and the description appears even more applicable than was intended. He had
+ been implicated in all the doings of the turbulent section of the English
+ Catholics<sup><a name="FN251A" id="FN251A"></a><a href="#FN251">[251]</a></sup> for
+ several years, having taken part in the rising of Essex, and in the Spanish
+ negotiations, whatever they were, conducted through the instrumentality of Thomas
+ Winter. With Catesby, and others of the conspirators, he was on terms of the closest
+ and most intimate friendship, and Tresham was his brother-in-law. A letter of his to
+ Catesby is still preserved, which, in the opinion of some, affords evidence of his
+ having been actually engaged in the Powder Plot itself;<sup><a name="FN252A" id=
+ "FN252A"></a><a href="#FN252">[252]</a></sup> and Mr. Jardine, though dissenting from
+ the view that the letter proves so much, judges it not at all impossible or improbable
+ that he was in fact privy to the conspiracy. It is likewise certain that up to the last
+ moment Monteagle was on familiar terms with the plotters, to whom, a few days before
+ the final catastrophe, he imparted an important piece of information.<sup><a name=
+ "FN253A" id="FN253A"></a><a href="#FN253">[253]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>At the same time it is evident that Monteagle was in high favour at Court, as is
+ sufficiently evidenced by the fact that he was appointed to be one of the commissioners
+ for the prorogation of October 3rd, a most unusual distinction for one in his position,
+ as also by the pains taken by the government on behalf of his brother, who had shortly
+ before got himself into trouble in France.<sup><a name="FN254A" id=
+ "FN254A"></a><a href="#FN254">[254]</a></sup> A still more remarkable circumstance has
+ been strangely overlooked by historians.<sup><a name="FN255A" id="FN255A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN255">[255]</a></sup> Monteagle always passed for a Catholic, turbulent indeed and
+ prone to violence, but attached, even fanatically, to his creed, like his friend
+ Catesby and the rest. There remains, however, an undated letter of his to the
+ king,<sup><a name="FN256A" id="FN256A"></a><a href="#FN256">[256]</a></sup> in which he
+ expresses his determination to become a Protestant; and while in fulsome language
+ extolling his Majesty's zeal for his spiritual welfare, speaks with bitterness and
+ contempt of the faith which, nevertheless, he continued to profess to the end of his
+ life, and that without exciting suspicion of his deceit among the Catholics. Not only
+ must this shake our confidence <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id=
+ "Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>in the genuine nature of any transaction in which such a
+ man played a prominent part, it must likewise suggest a doubt whether others may not in
+ like manner have passed themselves off for what they were not, without arousing
+ suspicion.</p>
+
+ <p>The precise facts as to the actual receipt of the famous letter are involved, like
+ every other particular of this history, in the obscurity begotten of contradictory
+ evidence. In the published account,<sup><a name="FN257A" id="FN257A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN257">[257]</a></sup> it is stated with great precision that it was received by
+ Monteagle on Saturday, October 26th, being but ten days before the Parliament. In his
+ letter to the ambassadors abroad,<sup><a name="FN258A" id="FN258A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN258">[258]</a></sup> Cecil dates its receipt "about eight days before the
+ Parliament should have begun." In the account furnished for the benefit of the King of
+ France,<sup><a name="FN259A" id="FN259A"></a><a href="#FN259">[259]</a></sup> the same
+ authority declares that it came to hand "some four or five days before." A doubt is
+ thus unquestionably suggested as to whether the circumstances of its coming to
+ Monteagle's hands are those traditionally described: for our present purpose, however,
+ it will perhaps be sufficient to follow the story as formally told by authority in the
+ king's own book.</p>
+
+ <p>On Saturday, October 26th, ten days before the assembly of Parliament, Monteagle
+ suddenly, and without previous notice, ordered a supper to be prepared <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>at his house at Hoxton
+ "where he had not supped or lain of a twelvemonth and more before that
+ time."<sup><a name="FN260A" id="FN260A"></a><a href="#FN260">[260]</a></sup> While he
+ was at table one of his pages brought him a letter which had been given to him by a man
+ in the street, whose features he could not distinguish, with injunctions to place it in
+ his master's own hands. It is undoubtedly a singular circumstance, which did not escape
+ notice at the time, that the bearer of this missive should have thus been able to find
+ Monteagle at a spot which he was not accustomed to frequent, and the obvious inference
+ was drawn, that the arrival of the letter was expected. On this point, indeed, there is
+ somewhat more than inference to go upon, for in Fulman's MS. collection at Corpus
+ Christi College, Oxford, among some interesting notes concerning the Plot, of which we
+ shall see more, occurs the statement that "the Lord Monteagle knew there was a letter
+ to be sent to him before it came."<sup><a name="FN261A" id="FN261A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN261">[261]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Monteagle opened the letter, and, glancing at it, perceived that it bore neither
+ date nor signature, whereupon he handed it to a gentleman of his household, named Ward,
+ to read aloud, an apparently unnatural and imprudent proceeding not easy to explain,
+ but, at least, inconsistent with the conduct of one receiving an obviously important
+ communication in such mysterious circumstances. The famous epistle must be given in its
+ native form.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p class="c6">My lord out of the love i beare to some of youere frends i have a caer
+ of youer preseruacion therfor i would advyse yowe as yowe tender youer lyf to devys
+ some excuse to shift of youer attendance at this parleament for god and man hath
+ concurred to punishe the wickednes of this tyme and think not slightlye of this
+ advertisment but retyre youre self into youre contri wheare yowe may expect the event
+ in safti for thowghe theare be no apparence of anni stir yet i saye they shall
+ receyve a terrible blowe this parleament and yet they shall not seie who hurts them
+ this cowncel is not to be contemned because it maye do yowe good and can do yowe no
+ harme for the dangere is passed as soon as yowe have burnt the letter and i hope god
+ will give yowe the grace to mak good use of it to whose holy proteccion i comend
+ yowe</p>
+
+ <p>(Addressed) <i>to the ryht honorable the lord mo<span class=
+ "c11">u</span>teagle</i></p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Monteagle, though he saw little or nothing in this strange effusion, resolved at
+ once to communicate with the king's ministers, his Majesty being at the time engaged at
+ Royston in his favourite pastime of the chase, and accordingly proceeding at once to
+ town, he <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg
+ 123]</a></span>placed the mysterious document in the hands of the Earl of
+ Salisbury.<sup><a name="FN262A" id="FN262A"></a><a href="#FN262">[262]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>As to what thereafter followed and the manner in which from this clue the discovery
+ was actually accomplished, it is impossible to say more than this, that the accounts
+ handed down cannot by any possibility be true, inasmuch as on every single point they
+ are utterly and hopelessly at variance. We can do no more than set down the particulars
+ as supplied to us on the very highest authority.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">A.&mdash;<i>The account published in the "King's Book."</i></p>
+
+ <p>1. The letter was received ten days before the meeting of Parliament, <i>i.e.</i>,
+ on October 26th.</p>
+
+ <p>2. The Earl of Salisbury judged it to be the effusion of a lunatic, but thought it
+ well, nevertheless, to communicate it to the king.</p>
+
+ <p>3. This was done five days afterwards, November 1st, when, in spite of his
+ minister's incredulity, James insisted that the letter could intend nothing but the
+ blowing up of the Parliament with gunpowder, and that a search must be made, which,
+ however, should be postponed till the last moment.</p>
+
+ <p>4. Accordingly, on the afternoon of Monday, November <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>4th, the Lord Chamberlain going on a tour
+ of inspection, visited the "cellar" and found there "great store of billets, faggots,
+ and coals," and moreover, "casting his eye aside, perceived a fellow standing in a
+ corner ... Guido Fawkes the owner of that hand which should have acted that monstrous
+ tragedy." Coming back, the chamberlain reported that the provision of fuel appeared
+ extraordinary, and that as to the man, "he looked like a very tall and desperate
+ fellow."</p>
+
+ <p>5. Thereupon the king insisted that a thorough scrutiny must be made, and that
+ "those billets and coals should be searched to the bottom, it being most suspicious
+ that they were laid there only for covering of the powder." For this purpose Sir Thomas
+ Knyvet, a magistrate, was despatched with a suitable retinue.</p>
+
+ <p>6. Before his entrance to the house, Knyvet found Faukes "standing without the
+ doors, his boots and clothes on," and straightway apprehended him. Then, going into the
+ cellar, he removed the firewood and at once discovered the barrels.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">B.&mdash;<i>The Account sent by Salisbury to the Ambassadors abroad,
+ and the Deputy in Ireland, November 9th, 1605.</i></p>
+
+ <p>1. The letter was received about <i>eight</i> days before the Parliament.</p>
+
+ <p>2. Upon perusal thereof, Salisbury and Suffolk, the chamberlain, "both conceived
+ that it could not be more proper than the time of Parliament, nor by any other way to
+ be attempted than with powder, while the King was sitting in that Assembly." With this
+ interpretation <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg
+ 125]</a></span>other Lords of the Council agreed; but they thought it well not to
+ impart the matter to the king till three or four days before the session.</p>
+
+ <p>3. His Majesty was "hard of belief" that any such thing was intended, but his
+ advisers overruled him and insisted on a search, not however till the last moment.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image15" id="image15"></a><img src="images/image15.png" width="600" height=
+ "422" alt="ARREST OF GUY FAUKES." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">arrest of guy faukes.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>4. About 3 o'clock on the afternoon of Monday, November 4th, the Lord Chamberlain,
+ Suffolk, visited the cellar, and found in it only firewood and not Faukes.</p>
+
+ <p>5. The lords however insisting, in spite of the king, that the matter should be
+ probed to the bottom, Knyvet was despatched with orders to "<i>remove all the wood, and
+ so to see the plain ground underneath</i>."</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>6. Knyvet, about midnight, "going unlooked for into the vault, found that fellow
+ Johnson [<i>i.e.</i>, Faukes] <i>newly come out of the vault</i>," and seized him.
+ Then, having removed the wood, he perceived the barrels.</p>
+
+ <p class="center">C.&mdash;<i>The Account furnished by Salisbury for the information of
+ the King of France, November 6th, 1605. (Original draft, in the P.R.O.)</i></p>
+
+ <p>1. The letter was received <i>some four or five days</i> before the Parliament.</p>
+
+ <p>2. This being shown to the king and the lords, "their lordships found not good ...
+ to give much credit to it, nor yet so to contemn it as to do nothing at all."</p>
+
+ <p>3. It was accordingly determined, the night before, "to make search about that place
+ and to appoint a watch in the old Palace, to observe what persons might resort
+ thereabouts."</p>
+
+ <p>4. Sir T. Knyvet, being appointed to the charge thereof, <i>going by chance, about
+ midnight, into the vault, by another door, found Faukes within</i>. Thereupon he caused
+ some few faggots to be removed, and so discovered some of the barrels, "<i>merely, as
+ it were, by God's direction, having no other cause but a general
+ jealousy</i>."<sup><a name="FN263A" id="FN263A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN263">[263]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Never, assuredly, was a true story so hard to tell. Contradictions like these, upon
+ every single point of the narrative, are just such as are wont to betray the author of
+ a fiction when compelled to be circumstantial.</p>
+
+ <p>To say nothing of the curious discrepancies as to the date of the warning, it is
+ clearly impossible to determine the locality of Guy's arrest. The account officially
+ published in the "King's Book" says that this took place in the street. The letter to
+ the ambassadors assigns it to the cellar and afterwards to the street; that to Parry,
+ to the cellar only. Faukes himself, in his confession of November 5th, says that he was
+ apprehended neither in the street nor in the cellar, but in his own room in the
+ adjoining house. Chamberlain writes to Carleton, November 7th, that it was in the
+ cellar. Howes, in his continuation of Stowe's <i>Annals</i>, describes two arrests of
+ Faukes, one in the street, the other upstairs in his own chamber. This point, though
+ seemingly somewhat trivial, has been invested with much importance. According to the
+ time-honoured story, the baffled desperado roundly declared that had he been within
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>reach of the
+ powder when his captors appeared, he would have applied a match and involved them in
+ his own destruction. This circumstance is strongly insisted on not only in the "King's
+ Book," but also in his Majesty's speech to Parliament on November 9th, which declared,
+ "and in that also was there a wonderful providence of God, that when the party himself
+ was taken he was but new come out of his house from working, having his fire-work for
+ kindling ready in his pocket, wherewith, as he confesseth, if he been taken immediately
+ before, he was resolved to have blown up himself with his takers." We learn, however,
+ from Cecil's earliest version of the history, that Faukes was apprehended in the very
+ situation most suitable for such a purpose, "in the place itself, as he was busy to
+ prepare his things for execution," while Chamberlain adds that he was actually engaged
+ in "making his trains."</p>
+
+ <p>Far more serious, to say nothing of the episode of the chamberlain's visit, are the
+ divergencies of the several versions as to the very substance of the story. We are told
+ that King James was the first to understand and interpret the letter which had baffled
+ the sagacity of his Privy Council; that the Lords of the Council had fully interpreted
+ it several days before the king saw it; that the said lords would not credit the king's
+ interpretation; that the king would not believe their interpretation; and that neither
+ the one nor the other ever interpreted it at all; that his Majesty insisted on a search
+ being made in spite of the reluctance of his ministers; that they insisted on the
+ search in spite of the reluctance of their royal master; and that no such search was
+ ever proposed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg
+ 129]</a></span>by either; that Knyvet was despatched expressly to look for gunpowder,
+ with instructions to rummage the firewood to the bottom, leaving no cover in which a
+ barrel might lie hid; and that having no instructions to do anything of the kind, nor
+ any reason to suspect the existence of any barrels, he discovered them only by a piece
+ of luck, so purely fortuitous as to be clearly providential. On this last point
+ especially the contradictions are absolutely irreconcilable.</p>
+
+ <p>It is abundantly evident that those who with elaborate care produced these various
+ versions were not supremely solicitous about the truth of the matter, and varied the
+ tale according to the requirements of circumstances. As Mr. Jardine
+ acknowledges,<sup><a name="FN264A" id="FN264A"></a><a href="#FN264">[264]</a></sup> the
+ great object of the official accounts was to obtain credence for what the government
+ wished to be believed, or, as Father Gerard puts it,<sup><a name="FN265A" id=
+ "FN265A"></a><a href="#FN265">[265]</a></sup> these accounts were composed "with desire
+ that men should all conceive this to be the manner how the treason came to light." If
+ from time to time the details were altogether transformed, it was clearly not through
+ any abstract love of historical accuracy, but rather that there were difficulties to
+ meet and doubts to satisfy, which had to be dealt with in order to produce the desired
+ effect.</p>
+
+ <p>That, from the beginning, there was whispered disbelief, which it was held
+ all-important to silence, is sufficiently attested by Cecil himself, when, on the very
+ morrow of the discovery, he sent to Parry his first draft of the history. "Thus much,"
+ he wrote, "I have thought necessary to impart unto you in haste, to the end that you
+ may deliver as much to the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg
+ 130]</a></span>French king, for prevention of false bruits, which I know, as the nature
+ of fame is, will be <i>increased</i>,<sup><a name="FN266A" id="FN266A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN266">[266]</a></sup> perverted, and disguised according to the disposition of
+ men."</p>
+
+ <p>It does not appear why the appearance of erroneous versions of so striking an event
+ should have been thus confidently anticipated if the facts were undeniably established;
+ while, on the other hand, it is not a little remarkable that the narrative thus
+ expressly designed to establish the truth, should have been forthwith abandoned and
+ contradicted by its author in every single particular.</p>
+
+ <p>Important information upon the same point is furnished by Cecil in another letter,
+ written in the following January.<sup><a name="FN267A" id="FN267A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN267">[267]</a></sup> He undertakes to explain to his correspondent how it came to
+ pass that a circumstance of supreme importance, of which the government were fully
+ cognizant,<sup><a name="FN268A" id="FN268A"></a><a href="#FN268">[268]</a></sup> was
+ not mentioned in the official account. This he does as follows: "And although in his
+ Majesty's book there is not any mention made of them [the Jesuits], and of many
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>things else
+ which came to the knowledge of the State, yet is it but a frivolous inference that
+ thereby [they] seek to serve their turn, considering the purpose of his Majesty was not
+ to deliver unto the world all that was confessed concerning this action, <i>but so much
+ only of the manner and form of it, and the means of the discovery</i>, as might make it
+ apparent, both how wickedly it was conceived by those devilish instruments, and <i>how
+ graciously it pleased God to deal with us in such an extraordinary discovery
+ thereof</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>Turning to the details of the story which survive the struggle for existence in the
+ conflict of testimony, if any can be said to do so, there is abundant matter deserving
+ attention, albeit we may at once dismiss the time-honoured legend concerning the
+ sagacity of the British Solomon, and his marvellous interpretation of the riddling
+ phrases which baffled the perspicacity of all besides himself.<sup><a name="FN269A" id=
+ "FN269A"></a><a href="#FN269">[269]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>More important is Cecil's admission that the presence of the powder under the
+ Parliament House was at least suspected for several days before anything was done to
+ interfere with the proceedings of those who had put it there. The reasons alleged for
+ so extraordinary a course are manifestly absurd. It was resolved, he told the
+ ambassadors, "that, till the night before, nothing should be done to interrupt any
+ purpose of theirs that had any such devilish practice, but rather to suffer them to go
+ on to the end of their day." In like manner he informed the Privy Council<sup><a name=
+ "FN270A" id="FN270A"></a><a href="#FN270">[270]</a></sup> that it was determined to
+ make no earlier search, that "such <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id=
+ "Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>as had such practice in hand might not be scared before
+ they had let the matter run on to a full ripeness for discovery." It certainly appears
+ that, at least, it would have been well before the eleventh hour to institute
+ observations as to who might be coming and going about the cellar. On the other hand,
+ can it be imagined that any minister in his right senses would have allowed the
+ existence of a danger so appalling to continue so long, and have suffered a desperado
+ like Faukes to have gone on knocking about with his flint and steel and lantern in a
+ powder magazine beneath the House of Parliament? Accidents are proverbially always
+ possible, and in the circumstances described to us there would have been much more than
+ a mere possibility, for the action said to have been taken by the authorities, in
+ sending the chamberlain to "peruse" the vault, seems to have been expressly intended to
+ give the alarm; and had the conspirators been scared it would evidently have been their
+ safest plan to have precipitated the catastrophe, that in the confusion it would cause
+ they might escape. How terrible such a catastrophe would have been is indicated by
+ Father Greenway:<sup><a name="FN271A" id="FN271A"></a><a href="#FN271">[271]</a></sup>
+ "Over and above the grievous loss involved in the destruction of these ancient and
+ noble buildings, of the archives and national records, the king himself might have been
+ in peril, and other royal edifices, though situate at a distance, and undoubtedly many
+ would have perished who had come up to attend the Parliament." Moreover, the loss of
+ life in so thickly populated a spot must have been frightful, and especially amongst
+ the official classes.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Father Greenway expresses his utter disbelief in the incident of the chamberlain's
+ visit:<sup><a name="FN272A" id="FN272A"></a><a href="#FN272">[272]</a></sup> "To speak
+ my own mind," he writes, "I do not see in this portion of the story any sort of
+ probability." He adds another remark of great importance. If the Lord
+ Chamberlain,&mdash;and, we may add, Sir T. Knyvet,&mdash;could get into the cellar
+ without the assistance of Faukes, to say nothing of the "other door" which makes its
+ appearance in Cecil's first version, there is an end of the secret and hidden nature of
+ the place, and some one else must have had a key. How, then, about the months during
+ which the powder had been lying in it; during much of which time it had been,
+ apparently, left to take care of itself? Did no man ever enter and inspect it
+ before?</p>
+
+ <p>But questions far more fundamental inevitably suggest themselves. If, during ten, or
+ even during five days, a minister so astute and vigilant was willing to risk the danger
+ of an explosion, it certainly does not appear that he was much afraid of the powder, or
+ thought there was any harm in it. We have already remarked on the strangeness of the
+ circumstance that the plotters were able so easily to procure it. It may be observed
+ that they appear themselves to have <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id=
+ "Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>been disappointed with its quality, for we are
+ told<sup><a name="FN273A" id="FN273A"></a><a href="#FN273">[273]</a></sup> that late in
+ the summer they added to their store "as suspecting the former to be dank." Still more
+ remarkable, however, was the conduct of the government. Immediately upon the
+ "discovery" they instituted the most minute and searching inquiries as to every other
+ particular connected with the conspirators. We find copious evidence taken about their
+ haunts, their lodgings, and their associates: of the boatmen who conveyed them hither
+ and thither, the porters who carried billets, and the carpenters who worked for them:
+ inquiries were diligently instituted as to where were purchased the iron bars laid on
+ top of the barrels, which appear to have been considered especially dangerous; we hear
+ of sword-hilts engraved for some of the company, of three beaver hats bought by
+ another, and of the sixpence given to the boy who brought them home. But concerning the
+ gunpowder no question appears ever to have been asked, whence it came, or who furnished
+ it. Yet this would appear to be a point at least as important as the rest, and if it
+ was left in absolute obscurity, the inference is undoubtedly suggested that it was not
+ wished to have questions raised. It may be added that no mention is discoverable of the
+ augmentation of the royal stores by so notable a contribution as this would have
+ furnished.</p>
+
+ <p>Neither can it escape observation that whereas the powder was discovered only on the
+ morning<sup><a name="FN274A" id="FN274A"></a><a href="#FN274">[274]</a></sup> of
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>November 5th,
+ the peers met as usual in their chamber that very day.<sup><a name="FN275A" id=
+ "FN275A"></a><a href="#FN275">[275]</a></sup> It cannot be supposed either that four
+ tons of powder could have been so soon removed, or that the most valuable persons in
+ the State would have been suffered to expose themselves to the risk of assembling in so
+ perilous a situation.<sup><a name="FN276A" id="FN276A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN276">[276]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>However this may be, from the moment of the "discovery" the discovered gunpowder
+ disappears from history.<sup><a name="FN277A" id="FN277A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN277">[277]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image16" id="image16"></a><img src="images/image16.png" width="600" height=
+ "549" alt="DISCOVERY OF GUNPOWDER PLOT, AND COINS OF JAMES I." title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">discovery of gunpowder plot, and coins of
+ James i.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>There is another point which must be noticed. It might naturally be supposed that
+ after so narrow an escape, and in accordance with their loud protestations of alarm at
+ the proximity of a shocking calamity from which they had been so providentially
+ delivered, the official authorities would have carefully guarded against the
+ possibility of the like happening again. Their acts, however, were quite inconsistent
+ with their words, for they did nothing of the kind. For more than seventy years
+ afterwards the famous "cellar" continued to be leased in the same easy-going fashion to
+ any who chose to hire it, and continued to be the receptacle of <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>all manner of rubbish and
+ lumber, eminently suited to mask another battery. Not till the days of the mendacious
+ Titus Oates, and under the influence of the panic he had engendered, did the Peers
+ bethink themselves that a project such as that of Guy Faukes might really be a danger,
+ and command that the "cellar" should be searched.<sup><a name="FN278A" id=
+ "FN278A"></a><a href="#FN278">[278]</a></sup> This was done, in November, 1678, by no
+ less personages than Sir Christopher Wren and Sir Jonas Moore, who reported that the
+ vaults and cellars under and near the House of Lords were in such a condition that
+ there could be no assurance of safety. It was accordingly ordered that they should be
+ cleared of all timber, firewood, coals, and other materials, and that passages should
+ be made through them all, to the end that they might easily be examined. At this time,
+ and not before, was instituted the traditional searching of the cellars on the eve of
+ Parliament.<sup><a name="FN279A" id="FN279A"></a><a href="#FN279">[279]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>What then, it will be asked, really did occur? What was done by the conspirators?
+ and what by those who discovered them?</p>
+
+ <p>Truth to tell, it is difficult, or rather impossible, to answer such questions. That
+ there was a plot of some kind cannot, of course, be doubted; that it was of such a
+ nature as we have been accustomed to believe, can be affirmed only if we are willing to
+ ignore difficulties which are by no means slight. There is, doubtless, a mass of
+ evidence in support of the traditional story upon these points, but while its value has
+ yet to be discussed, there are other considerations, hitherto overlooked, which are in
+ conflict with it.</p>
+
+ <p>Something has been said of the amazing contradictions <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>which a very slight examination of the
+ official story reveals at every turn, and much more might be added under the same
+ head.<sup><a name="FN280A" id="FN280A"></a><a href="#FN280">[280]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c12">
+ <a name="image17" id="image17"></a><img src="images/image17.png" width="580" height=
+ "212" alt="&quot;GUY FAUKES' LANTERN.&quot;" title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">"guy faukes' lantern."</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>On the other hand it is clear that even as to the material facts there was not at
+ the time that unanimity which might have been expected. We have seen how anxious was
+ the Secretary of State that the French court should at once be rightly informed as to
+ all particulars. We learn, however, from Mr. Dudley <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>Carleton, then attached to the embassy at
+ Paris,<sup><a name="FN281A" id="FN281A"></a><a href="#FN281">[281]</a></sup> that in
+ spite of Cecil's promptitude he was anticipated by a version of the affair sent over
+ from the French embassy in London, giving an utterly different complexion to it.
+ According to this, the design had been, "That the council being set, and some lords
+ besides in the chamber, a barrel of gunpowder should be fired underneath them, and the
+ greater part, if not all, blown up." According to this informant, therefore, it was not
+ the Parliament House but the Council Chamber which was to have been assailed, there is
+ no mention of the king, and we have one barrel of powder instead of thirty-six. It is
+ not easy to understand how in such a matter a mistake like this could have been made,
+ for it is the inevitable tendency of men to begin by exaggerating, and not by
+ minimizing, a sudden and startling peril.<sup><a name="FN282A" id="FN282A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN282">[282]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, even this modest version of the affair was not suffered to pass
+ unchallenged. Three days later Carleton again wrote:<sup><a name="FN283A" id=
+ "FN283A"></a><a href="#FN283">[283]</a></sup> "The fire which was said to have burnt
+ our king and council, and hath been so hot these two days past in every man's mouth,
+ proves but <i>ignis fatuus</i>, or a flash of some foolish fellow's brain to abuse the
+ world; for it is now as confidently reported there was no such matter, nor anything
+ near it more than a barrel of powder found near the court."</p>
+
+ <p>It must here be observed that the scepticism thus early manifested appears never to
+ have been exorcised from the minds of French writers, many of whom, of all shades of
+ thought, continue, down to our day, to assume that the real plotters were the king's
+ government.<sup><a name="FN284A" id="FN284A"></a><a href="#FN284">[284]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Neither can we overlook sundry difficulties, again suggested by the facts of the
+ case, which make it hard to understand how the plans of the plotters can in reality
+ have been as they are represented.</p>
+
+ <p>We have already observed on the nature of the house occupied in Percy's name. If
+ this were, as Speed tells us, and as there is no reason to doubt, at <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>the service of the Peers
+ during a session, for a withdrawing-room, and if the session was to begin on November
+ 5th, how could Faukes hope not only to remain in possession, but to carry on his
+ strange proceedings unobserved, amid the crowd of lacqueys and officials with whom the
+ opening of Parliament by the Sovereign must needs have flooded the premises? How was
+ he, unobserved, to get into the fatal "cellar"?</p>
+
+ <p>This difficulty is emphasized by another. We learn, on the unimpeachable testimony
+ of Mrs. Whynniard, the landlady, that Faukes not only paid the last instalment of rent
+ on Sunday, November 3rd, but on the following day, the day immediately preceding the
+ intended explosion, had carpenters and other workfolk in the house "for mending and
+ repairing thereof."<sup><a name="FN285A" id="FN285A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN285">[285]</a></sup> To say nothing of the wonderful honesty of paying rent under
+ the circumstances, what was the sense of putting a house in repair upon Monday, which
+ on Tuesday was to be blown to atoms? And how could the practised eyes of such workmen
+ fail to detect some trace of the extraordinary and unskilled operations of which the
+ house is said to have been the theatre? If, indeed, the truth is that on the Tuesday
+ the premises were to be handed over for official use, it is easy to understand why it
+ was thought necessary to set them in order, but on no other supposition does this
+ appear comprehensible.</p>
+
+ <p>Problems, not easy to solve, connect themselves, likewise, with the actual execution
+ of the conspirators' plan. If it would have been hard for Guy Faukes to get into the
+ "cellar," how was he ever to get out of it <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id=
+ "Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>again? We are so accustomed to the idea of darkness and
+ obscurity in connection with him and his business, as perhaps to forget that his
+ project was to have been executed in the very middle of the day, about noon or shortly
+ afterwards. The king was to come in state with retinue and guards, and attended by a
+ large concourse of spectators, who, as is usual on such occasions, would throng every
+ nook and corner whence could be obtained a glimpse of the building in which the royal
+ speech was being delivered.<sup><a name="FN286A" id="FN286A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN286">[286]</a></sup> It cannot be doubted, in particular, that the open spaces
+ adjacent to the House itself would be strictly guarded, and the populace not suffered
+ to approach too near the sacred precincts, more especially when, as we have seen, so
+ many suspicions were abroad of danger to his sacred Majesty, and to the Parliament.</p>
+
+ <p>On a sudden a door immediately beneath the spot where the flower of the nation were
+ assembled, would be unlocked and opened, and there would issue there-from a man,
+ "looking like a very tall and desperate fellow," booted and spurred and equipped for
+ travel. He was to have but a quarter of an hour to save himself from the ruin he had
+ prepared.<sup><a name="FN287A" id="FN287A"></a><a href="#FN287">[287]</a></sup> What
+ possible chance was there that he would have been allowed to pass?</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>As to his further plans, we have the most extravagant and contradictory accounts,
+ some obviously fabulous.<sup><a name="FN288A" id="FN288A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN288">[288]</a></sup> According to the least incredible, a vessel was lying below
+ London Bridge ready at once to proceed to sea and carry him to Flanders; while a boat,
+ awaiting him at the Parliament stairs, was to convey him to the ship.<sup><a name=
+ "FN289A" id="FN289A"></a><a href="#FN289">[289]</a></sup> If this were so, it is not
+ clear why he equipped himself with his spurs, which, however, are authenticated by as
+ good evidence as any other feature of the story. It would also appear that, here again,
+ the plan proposed was altogether impracticable, for at the time of his projected flight
+ the tide would have been flowing,<sup><a name="FN290A" id="FN290A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN290">[290]</a></sup> and it is well known that to attempt to pass Old London Bridge
+ against it would have been like trying to row up a waterfall. Neither does it seem
+ probable that the vessel would have been able to get out of the Thames for several
+ hours, before which time all egress would doubtless have been stopped.</p>
+
+ <p>Such considerations must at least avail to make us pause before we can
+ unhesitatingly accept the traditional <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id=
+ "Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>history, even in those broad outlines which appear to be
+ best established. The main point is, however, independent of their truth. Though all be
+ as has been affirmed concerning the "cellar" and its contents, and the plan of
+ operations agreed upon by the traitors, the question remains as to the real nature of
+ the "discovery." We have seen, on the one hand, that the official narrative bristles
+ with contradictions, and, whatever be the truth, with falsehoods. On the other hand,
+ the said narrative was avowedly prepared with the object of obtaining credence for the
+ picturesque but unveracious assertion that the plotters' design was detected "very
+ miraculously, even some twelve hours before the matter should have been put in
+ execution." On the Earl of Salisbury's own admission, it had been divined almost as
+ many days previously, and it was laid open at the last moment only because he
+ deliberately chose to wait till the last moment before doing anything. No doubt a
+ dramatic feature was thus added to the business, and one eminently calculated to
+ impress the public mind: but they who insist so loudly on the miraculousness of an
+ event which they alone have invested with the character of a miracle, must be content
+ to have it believed that they knew still more than in an unguarded moment they
+ acknowledged, and arranged other things concerning the Plot than its ultimate
+ disclosure.<sup><a name="FN291A" id="FN291A"></a><a href="#FN291">[291]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN241" id="FN241"></a><a href="#FN241A">[241]</a></sup>
+ Copies were sent by Cecil to Cornwallis at Madrid, Parry at Paris, Edmondes at
+ Brussels, and Chichester at Dublin. Also by Chamberlain to Dudley Carleton.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN242" id="FN242"></a><a href="#FN242A">[242]</a></sup>
+ "Lastly, and this you must not omit, you must deliver, in commendation of my Lord
+ Mounteagle, words to show how sincerely he dealt, and how fortunately it proved that
+ he was the instrument of so great a blessing, ... because it is so lewdly given out
+ that he was once of this plot of powder, and afterwards betrayed it all to
+ me."&mdash;Cecil to Coke. (Draft in the R.O., printed by Jardine, <i>Criminal
+ Trials</i>, ii. 120.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN243" id="FN243"></a><a href="#FN243A">[243]</a></sup>
+ &pound;500 as an annuity for life, and &pound;200 per annum to him and his heirs for
+ ever in fee farm rents.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN244" id="FN244"></a><a href="#FN244A">[244]</a></sup>
+ See Thorold Rogers, <i>Agriculture and Prices</i>, v. 631, and Jessopp, <i>One
+ Generation of a Norfolk House</i>, p. 285.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN245" id="FN245"></a><a href="#FN245A">[245]</a></sup>
+ R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> xx. 56.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN246" id="FN246"></a><a href="#FN246A">[246]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 65.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN247" id="FN247"></a><a href="#FN247A">[247]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> 68.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN248" id="FN248"></a><a href="#FN248A">[248]</a></sup>
+ Note on Fuller's <i>Church History</i>, x. &sect; 39, and <i>on The Student's
+ Hume</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN249" id="FN249"></a><a href="#FN249A">[249]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, i. 251.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN250" id="FN250"></a><a href="#FN250A">[250]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 69.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN251" id="FN251"></a><a href="#FN251A">[251]</a></sup>
+ On March 13th, 1600-1, Monteagle wrote to Cecil from the Tower, "My conscience tells
+ me that I am no way gilty of these Imputations, and that mearely the blindness of
+ Ignorance lead me into these infamous errors." (Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6177).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN252" id="FN252"></a><a href="#FN252A">[252]</a></sup>
+ The letter is printed in <i>Arch&aelig;ologia</i>, xxviii. 422, by Mr. Bruce, who
+ argues from it Monteagle's complicity with the Plot. Mr. Jardine's reply is found
+ <i>ibid.</i> xxix. 80.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN253" id="FN253"></a><a href="#FN253A">[253]</a></sup>
+ According to T. Winter's famous declaration, Monteagle, within ten days before the
+ meeting of Parliament, told Catesby and the others that the Prince of Wales was not
+ going to attend the opening ceremony, wherefore they resolved to "leave the Duke
+ alone," and make arrangements to secure the elder brother.</p>
+
+ <p>The original of Winter's declaration, dated November 25th, which is at Hatfield,
+ contains these and other particulars, which are altogether omitted in a "copy" of the
+ same in the Record Office, dated, remarkably enough, on November the 23rd. It is from
+ the latter that the version in the "King's Book" was printed.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN254" id="FN254"></a><a href="#FN254A">[254]</a></sup>
+ De Beaumont to Villeroy, September 17th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN255" id="FN255"></a><a href="#FN255A">[255]</a></sup>
+ Mr. Gardiner alludes to it, <i>History</i>, i. 254 (note), but apparently attaches no
+ importance to it.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN256" id="FN256"></a><a href="#FN256A">[256]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Museum, Add. MSS. 19402 fol. 143. See the letter in full, Appendix H.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN257" id="FN257"></a><a href="#FN257A">[257]</a></sup>
+ <i>Discourse of the Manner of the Discovery</i> (the "King's Book").</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN258" id="FN258"></a><a href="#FN258A">[258]</a></sup>
+ Winwood, <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 170, etc. (November 9th). In the entry book of the
+ Earl of Salisbury's letters (Phillipps' MSS. 6297, f. 39) this is described as "being
+ the same that was sent to all his Majestie's Embassadors and Ministers abroade." To
+ Parry, however, quite a different account was furnished.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN259" id="FN259"></a><a href="#FN259A">[259]</a></sup>
+ Cecil to Sir T. Parry, P.R.O. <i>France</i>, bundle 132 (November 6th).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN260" id="FN260"></a><a href="#FN260A">[260]</a></sup>
+ Gerard, <i>Narrative</i>, p. 101.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN261" id="FN261"></a><a href="#FN261A">[261]</a></sup>
+ Vol. ii. 15. The partisans of the government at the time appear to have solved the
+ difficulty by invoking the direct guidance of Heaven:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"For thus the Lord in's all-protecting grace,<br />
+ Ten days before the Parliament began,<br />
+ Ordained that one of that most trayterous race<br />
+ Did meet the Lord Mounteagles Serving-man,<br />
+ <span class="c10">Who about Seven a clocke at night was sent</span><br />
+ <span class="c10">Upon some errand, and as thus he went,</span><br />
+ Crossing the street a fellow to him came,<br />
+ A man to him unknowen, of personage tall,<br />
+ In's hand a Letter, and he gave the same<br />
+ Unto this Serving-man, and therewithall<br />
+ <span class="c10">Did strictly charge him to take speciall heede</span><br />
+ <span class="c10">To give it into's Masters hand with speede."</span></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="right"><i>Mischeefes Mystery</i> (1617).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN262" id="FN262"></a><a href="#FN262A">[262]</a></sup>
+ Here again evidence was found of the direct guidance of Heaven:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"And thus with loyall heart away he goes,<br />
+ Thereto resolved whatever should betide,<br />
+ To th' Court he went this matter to disclose,<br />
+ To th' Earle of Salsb'ryes chamber soone he hide,<br />
+ <span class="c10">Whither heavens finger doubtless him directed,</span><br />
+ <span class="c10">As the best meanes to have this fact detected."</span></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="right c6">Mischeefes Mystery.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN263" id="FN263"></a><a href="#FN263A">[263]</a></sup>
+ In the account forwarded to the ambassadors, there is a curious contradiction. In the
+ general sketch of the discovery with which it opens, it is said that Faukes was
+ captured "in the place itself," with his lantern, "making his preparations."
+ Afterwards, in the detailed narrative of the proceedings, that he was taken outside.
+ The fact is, that the first portion of this letter is taken bodily from that of
+ November 6th to Parry, wherein the arrest of Faukes in the vault was a principal
+ point. Between the 6th and the 9th this part of the story had been altered, but it
+ does not seem to have been noticed that a remnant of the earlier version still
+ existed in the introductory portion.</p>
+
+ <p>It will be remarked that the account of November 6th makes no mention of the visit
+ of the chamberlain to the vault, nor that of November 9th to the presence of Faukes
+ at the time of this visit. The minute of November 7th says that Faukes admitted the
+ chamberlain to the vault.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN264" id="FN264"></a><a href="#FN264A">[264]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 3-5.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN265" id="FN265"></a><a href="#FN265A">[265]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narrative</i>, p. 100.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN266" id="FN266"></a><a href="#FN266A">[266]</a></sup>
+ This word is cancelled in the original draft.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN267" id="FN267"></a><a href="#FN267A">[267]</a></sup>
+ To Sir T. Edmondes, January 22nd, 1605-6.&mdash;Stowe MSS., 168, 73, f. 301.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN268" id="FN268"></a><a href="#FN268A">[268]</a></sup>
+ <i>Viz.</i>, the complicity of the Jesuits, "not only as being casually acquainted
+ with the Plot," but as having been "principall comforters, to instruct the
+ consciences of some of these wicked Traytors, in the lawfulnesse of the Act and
+ meritoriousnesse of the same."</p>
+
+ <p>On this it is enough to remark that when Father Garnet, the chief of the said
+ Jesuits, came afterwards to be tried, no attempt whatever was made to prove any such
+ thing. Cecil therefore wrote thus, and made so grave an assertion, without having any
+ evidence in his hands to justify it.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN269" id="FN269"></a><a href="#FN269A">[269]</a></sup>
+ That King James alone solved the enigma was put forth as an article of faith. In the
+ preamble to the Act for the solemnization of the 5th of November, Parliament declared
+ that the treason "would have turned to utter ruin of this whole kingdom, had it not
+ pleased Almighty God, by inspiring the king's most excellent Majesty with a divine
+ Spirit, to discover some dark phrases of a letter...." In like manner, the monarch
+ himself, in his speech to the Houses, of November 9th, informed them: "I did upon the
+ instant interpret and apprehend some dark phrases therein, contrary to the ordinary
+ grammar construction of them, and in another sort, than I am sure any divine or
+ lawyer in any university would have taken them."</p>
+
+ <p>This "dark phrase" was the sentence&mdash;"For the danger is past as soon as you
+ have burnt the letter," which the royal sage interpreted to mean "as quickly," and
+ that by these words "should be closely understood the suddenty and quickness of the
+ danger, which should be as quickly performed and at an end as that paper should be of
+ blazing up in the fire."</p>
+
+ <p>Of this famous interpretation Mr. Gardiner says that it is "certainly absurd;"
+ while Mr. Jardine is of opinion that the words in question "must appear to every
+ common understanding mere nonsense."</p>
+
+ <p>When it was proposed in the House of Commons (January 31st, 1605-6,) to pass a
+ vote of thanks to Lord Monteagle for his share in the "discovery," one Mr. Fuller
+ objected that this would be to detract from the honour of his Majesty, for "the true
+ discoverer was the king."</p>
+
+ <p>The reader will perhaps be reminded of Sir Walter Scott's inimitable picture of
+ the king's satisfaction in this notable achievement.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do I not ken the smell of pouther, think ye? Who else nosed out the Fifth of
+ November, save our royal selves? Cecil, and Suffolk, and all of them, were at fault,
+ like sae mony mongrel tikes, when I puzzled it out; and trow ye that I cannot smell
+ pouther? Why, 'sblood, man, Joannes Barclaius thought my ingine was in some manner
+ inspiration, and terms his history of the plot, <i>Series patefacti divinitus
+ parricidii</i>; and Spondanus, in like manner, saith of us, <i>Divinitus
+ evasit</i>."&mdash;<i>Fortunes of Nigel</i>, c. xxvii.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN270" id="FN270"></a><a href="#FN270A">[270]</a></sup>
+ <i>Relation</i> ..., November 7th, 1605 (P.R.O.).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN271" id="FN271"></a><a href="#FN271A">[271]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narrative</i>, f. 68 b.&mdash;Stonyhurst MSS.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN272" id="FN272"></a><a href="#FN272A">[272]</a></sup>
+ F. 66. It will be remembered that this episode is not mentioned by Cecil in his
+ version of November 6th. Bishop Goodman's opinion is that this and other points of
+ the story were contrived for stage effect: "The King must have the honour to
+ interpret that it was by gunpowder; and the very night before the parliament began it
+ was to be discovered, to make the matter the more odious, and the deliverance the
+ more miraculous. No less than the lord chamberlain must search for it and discover
+ it, and Faux with his dark lantern must be apprehended." (<i>Court of King James</i>,
+ p. 105.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN273" id="FN273"></a><a href="#FN273A">[273]</a></sup>
+ T. Winter, November 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN274" id="FN274"></a><a href="#FN274A">[274]</a></sup>
+ There is, of course, abundant contradiction upon this point, as all others, but the
+ balance of evidence appears to point to 2 a.m. or thereabouts.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN275" id="FN275"></a><a href="#FN275A">[275]</a></sup>
+ The customary hour for the meeting of the Houses was 9 a.m., or even earlier.
+ (<i>Journals of Parliament.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN276" id="FN276"></a><a href="#FN276A">[276]</a></sup>
+ The list of those present is given in the <i>Lords' Journals</i>; it is headed by the
+ Lord Chancellor (Ellesmere), and includes the Archbishop of Canterbury, fourteen
+ bishops, and thirty-one peers, of whom Lord Monteagle was one. In 1598, as Mr.
+ Atkinson tells us in his preface to the lately published volume of the <i>Calendar of
+ Irish State Papers</i>, the cellars of the Dublin Law Courts were used as a powder
+ magazine. The English Privy Council, startled to hear of this remarkable arrangement,
+ pointed out that it might probably further diminish the number of loyal subjects in
+ that kingdom, but were quaintly reassured by the Irish Lords Justices, who explained
+ that, in view of the troublous state of the times, the sittings of the courts had
+ been discontinued, and were not likely to be resumed for the present.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN277" id="FN277"></a><a href="#FN277A">[277]</a></sup>
+ The only allusion to it I have been able to find occurs in the <i>Politician's
+ Catechism</i> (1658), p. 95: "Yet the barells, wherein the powder was, are kept as
+ reliques, and were often shown to the king and his posterity, that they might not
+ entertain the least thought of clemency towards the Catholique Religion. There is not
+ an ignorant Minister or Tub-preacher, who doth not (when all other matter fails)
+ remit his auditors to the Gunpowder Treason, and describe those tubs very
+ pathetically, the only reliques thought fit by them to be kept in memory."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN278" id="FN278"></a><a href="#FN278A">[278]</a></sup>
+ <i>Journals of the House of Lords</i>, November 1st and 2nd, 1678.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN279" id="FN279"></a><a href="#FN279A">[279]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i>, November 2nd, 1678.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN280" id="FN280"></a><a href="#FN280A">[280]</a></sup> I
+ have already remarked upon Faukes' statement that he was arrested in quite a
+ different place from any mentioned in the government accounts. It should be added,
+ that as to the person who arrested him, there is a somewhat similar discrepancy of
+ evidence. The honour is universally assigned by the official accounts to Sir T.
+ Knyvet, who in the following year was created a peer, which shows that he undoubtedly
+ rendered some valuable service on the occasion. An epitaph, however, in St. Anne's
+ Church, Aldersgate (printed in Maitland's <i>History of London</i>, p. 1065, 3rd
+ ed.), declares that it was Peter Heiwood, of Heywood, Lancashire, "who apprehended
+ Guy Faux, with his dark Lanthorn; and for his zealous Prosecution of Papists, as
+ Justice of Peace, was stabbed, in Westminster Hall, by John James, a Dominican Friar,
+ <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 1640." No trace of this assassination can be found,
+ nor does the name of John James occur in the Dominican records. It is, however, a
+ curious coincidence that the "Guy Faukes' Lantern," exhibited in the Ashmolean Museum
+ at Oxford, bears the inscription: "<i>Laterna ilia ipsa qu&acirc; usus est, et cum
+ qua deprehensus Guido Faux in crypt&acirc; subterrane&acirc;, ubi domo</i> [sic]
+ <i>Parliamenti difflandae operam dabat. Ex dono Robti. Heywood nuper Academiae
+ Procuratoris, Ap. 4<sup>o</sup>, 1641.</i>" See the epitaph in full, Appendix I.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN281" id="FN281"></a><a href="#FN281A">[281]</a></sup>
+ To J. Chamberlain, 10th-20th November, 1605. P.R.O. <i>France</i>, b. 132, f. 335
+ b.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN282" id="FN282"></a><a href="#FN282A">[282]</a></sup>
+ The Council appears at this time to have met in the Painted Chamber, and, without at
+ all wishing to lay too much stress upon this point, I cannot but remark that the
+ supposition that this was the original scene assigned to the operations of Faukes
+ would solve various difficulties:</p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>Beneath the Painted Chamber was a vaulted cellar, answering to the description
+ we have so frequently heard, whereas under the House of Lords was neither a cellar
+ nor a vault.</li>
+
+ <li>This crypt beneath the Painted Chamber has been constantly shown as "Guy
+ Faukes' Cellar."</li>
+
+ <li>In prints of the period, Faukes is usually represented as going to blow up this
+ chamber, never the House of Lords.</li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN283" id="FN283"></a><a href="#FN283A">[283]</a></sup>
+ To Chamberlain, November 13th (O.S.), 1605. P.R.O.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN284" id="FN284"></a><a href="#FN284A">[284]</a></sup>
+ Thus M. Bouillet, in the latest edition of his <i>Dictionnaire d'histoire et
+ g&eacute;ographie</i>, speaks as follows: "Le ministre cupide et orgueilleux,
+ C&eacute;cil, semble avoir &eacute;t&eacute; l'&acirc;me du complot, et l'avoir
+ d&eacute;couvert lui m&ecirc;me au moment propice, apr&egrave;s avoir
+ pr&eacute;sent&eacute; &agrave; l'esprit faible de Jacques I. les dangers auxquels il
+ &eacute;tait en but de la part des Catholiques."</p>
+
+ <p>Gazeau and Prampain (<i>Hist. Mod.</i>, tome i.) speak of the conspiracy as "cette
+ plaisanterie;" and say of the conspirators, "Dans une cave, ils avaient
+ d&eacute;pos&eacute; 36 barils contenant (ou soi-disant tels) de la poudre."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN285" id="FN285"></a><a href="#FN285A">[285]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 39 (November 7).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN286" id="FN286"></a><a href="#FN286A">[286]</a></sup>
+ In Herring's <i>Pietas Pontificia</i> (1606) the king is described as coming to the
+ House:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">"Magna cum Pompa, stipatorumque Caterva,<br />
+ Palmatisque, Togis, Gemmis, auroque refulgent:<br />
+ Ingens fit Populi concursus, compita complens,<br />
+ Turbis se adglomerant densis, spectantque Triumphum."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN287" id="FN287"></a><a href="#FN287A">[287]</a></sup>
+ Faukes himself says&mdash;examination of November 16th&mdash;that the touchwood would
+ have burnt a quarter of an hour.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN288" id="FN288"></a><a href="#FN288A">[288]</a></sup>
+ See Appendix K, <i>Myths of the Powder Plot</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN289" id="FN289"></a><a href="#FN289A">[289]</a></sup>
+ In connection with this appears an interesting example of the natural philosophy of
+ the time, it being said that Faukes selected this mode of escape, hoping that water,
+ being a non-conductor, would save him from the effects of the explosion.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN290" id="FN290"></a><a href="#FN290A">[290]</a></sup> I
+ am informed on high authority that on the day in question it was high water at London
+ Bridge between five and six p.m. In his <i>Memorials of the Tower of London</i> (p.
+ 136) Lord de Ros says that the vessel destined to convey him to Flanders was to be in
+ waiting for Faukes at the river side close by, and that in it he was to drop down the
+ river with the ebb tide. It would, of course, have been impossible for any sea-going
+ craft to make its way up to Westminster; nor would the ebb tide run to order.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN291" id="FN291"></a><a href="#FN291A">[291]</a></sup>
+ It is frequently said that the testimony of Bishop Goodman, who has been so often
+ cited, is discredited by the fact that he probably died a Catholic, for he was
+ attended on his death-bed by the Dominican Father, Francis &agrave; S. Clara
+ (Christopher Davenport), chaplain to Queen Henrietta Maria, a learned man who
+ indulged in the dream of corporate reunion between England and Rome, maintaining that
+ the Anglican articles were in accordance with Catholic doctrine.</p>
+
+ <p>In his will Goodman professed that as he lived, so he died, most constant in all
+ the articles of the Christian Faith, and in all the doctrine of God's holy Catholic
+ and Apostolic Church, "whereof," he says, "I do acknowledge the Church of Rome to be
+ the Mother Church. And I do verily believe that no other church hath any salvation in
+ it, but only so far as it concurs with the faith of the Church of Rome." On this, Mr.
+ Brewer, his editor, observes that a sound Protestant might profess as much, the
+ question being what meaning is to be given to the terms employed. Moreover, the same
+ writer continues, Goodman cannot have imagined that his life had been a constant
+ profession of Roman doctrine, inasmuch as he advanced steadily from one preferment to
+ another in the Church of England, and strongly maintaining her doctrines formally
+ denounced those of Rome. What is certain, however, is this, that in the very work
+ from which his evidence is quoted he speaks in such a manner as to show that whatever
+ were his religious opinions, he was a firm believer in the Royal Supremacy and a
+ lover of King James, whom he thus describes: "Truly I did never know any man of so
+ great an apprehension, of so great love and affection,&mdash;a man so truly just, so
+ free from all cruelty and pride, such a lover of the church, and one that had done so
+ much good for the church." (<i>Court of King James</i>, i. 91.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+ <h3>PERCY, CATESBY, AND TRESHAM.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">On</span> occasion of a notorious trial in the Star
+ Chamber, in the year 1604,<sup><a name="FN292A" id="FN292A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN292">[292]</a></sup> Bancroft, the Archbishop of Canterbury, made the significant
+ observation<sup><a name="FN293A" id="FN293A"></a><a href="#FN293">[293]</a></sup> that
+ nothing was to be discovered concerning the Catholics "but by putting some Judas
+ amongst them." That amongst the Powder Plot conspirators there was some one who played
+ such a part, who perhaps even acted as a decoy-duck to lure the others to destruction,
+ has always been suspected, but with sundry differences of opinion as to which of the
+ band it was. Francis Tresham has most commonly been supposed at least to have sent the
+ warning letter to Monteagle, which proved fatal to himself and his comrades: some
+ writers have conjectured that he did a good deal more.<sup><a name="FN294A" id=
+ "FN294A"></a><a href="#FN294">[294]</a></sup> Monteagle himself, as we have seen, has
+ been supposed by others to have been in the Plot and to have betrayed it. It would
+ appear, however, that neither of these has so strong a claim to this equivocal
+ distinction as one whose name has been scarcely mentioned hitherto in such a
+ connection.</p>
+
+ <p>The part played in the conspiracy by Thomas <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148"
+ id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>Percy is undoubtedly very singular, and the more so
+ when we learn something of the history and character of the man. Till within some three
+ years previously<sup><a name="FN295A" id="FN295A"></a><a href="#FN295">[295]</a></sup>
+ he had been a Protestant, and, moreover, unusually wild and dissolute. After his
+ conversion, he acquired the character of a zealous, if turbulent, Catholic, and is so
+ described, not only by Father Gerard and Father Greenway, but by himself. In a letter
+ written so late as November 2nd, 1605,<sup><a name="FN296A" id="FN296A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN296">[296]</a></sup> he represents that he has to leave Yorkshire, being threatened
+ by the Archbishop with arrest, "as the chief pillar of papistry in that county."</p>
+
+ <p>It unfortunately appears that all the time this zealous convert was a bigamist,
+ having one wife living in the capital and another in the provinces. When his name was
+ published in connection with the Plot, the magistrates of London arrested the one, and
+ those of Warwickshire the other, alike reporting to the secretary what they had done,
+ as may be seen in the State Paper Office.<sup><a name="FN297A" id="FN297A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN297">[297]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Gravely suspicious as such a fact must appear in connection with one professing
+ exceptional religious fervour, it by no means stands alone. Father Greenway, in
+ describing the character of Percy,<sup><a name="FN298A" id="FN298A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN298">[298]</a></sup> dwells much on his sensitiveness to the suspicion of having
+ played false to his fellow Catholics in his dealings with King <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span><span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>James in Scotland,
+ coupled with protestations of his determination to do something to show that he as well
+ as they had been deceived by that monarch. We find evidence that as a fact some
+ Catholics distrusted him, as in the examination of one Cary, who, being interrogated
+ concerning the Powder Plot, protested that "Percy was no Papist but a
+ Puritan."<sup><a name="FN299A" id="FN299A"></a><a href="#FN299">[299]</a></sup> There
+ is likewise in the king's own book a strange and obscure reference to Percy as the
+ possible author of the letter to Monteagle, one of the chief grounds for suspecting him
+ being "his backwardness in religion." It would moreover appear that he was not a man
+ who always impressed those favourably who had to do with him, for Chamberlain reminds
+ his friend Carleton that the latter had ever considered him "a subtle, flattering,
+ dangerous knave."<sup><a name="FN300A" id="FN300A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN300">[300]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c13">
+ <a name="image18" id="image18"></a><img src="images/image18.png" width="556" height=
+ "800" alt="THOMAS PERCY." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">thomas percy.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We have seen something of the extraordinary manner in which Percy transacted the
+ business of hiring the house and "cellar," wholly unlike what we should expect from one
+ whose main object was to escape observation, and that he brought to bear the influence
+ of sundry Protestant gentlemen, amongst them Dudley Carleton himself,<sup><a name=
+ "FN301A" id="FN301A"></a><a href="#FN301">[301]</a></sup> in order to obtain the
+ desired lease. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg
+ 151]</a></span>We know, moreover, that various unfortunate accidents prevented the
+ history of these negotiations from ever being fully told.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet more remarkable is a piece of information supplied by Bishop Goodman, his
+ authority being the eminent lawyer Sir Francis Moore, who, says he, "is beyond all
+ exception."<sup><a name="FN302A" id="FN302A"></a><a href="#FN302">[302]</a></sup>
+ Moore, having occasion during the period when the Plot was in progress to be out on
+ business late at night, and going homeward to the Middle Temple at two in the morning,
+ "several times he met Mr. Percy coming out of the great statesman's house, and wondered
+ what his business should be there." Such wonder was certainly not unnatural, and must
+ be shared by us. That a man who was ostensibly the life and soul of a conspiracy
+ directed against the king's chief minister, even more than against the sovereign
+ himself, should resort for conference with his intended victim at an hour when he was
+ most likely to escape observation, is assuredly not the least extraordinary feature in
+ this strange and tangled tale.</p>
+
+ <p>Not less suspicious is another circumstance. Immediately before the fatal Fifth of
+ November, Percy had been away in the north, and he returned to London only on the
+ evening of Saturday, the 2nd. Of this return, Cecil, writing a week later,<sup><a name=
+ "FN303A" id="FN303A"></a><a href="#FN303">[303]</a></sup> made a great mystery, as
+ though the traitor's movements had been of a most stealthy and secret character, and
+ declared <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>that
+ the fact had been discovered from Faukes only with infinite difficulty, and after many
+ denials. It happens, however, that amongst the State Papers is preserved a pass dated
+ October 25th, issued by the Commissioners of the North, for Thomas Percy, posting to
+ Court upon the king's especial service, and charging all mayors, sheriffs, and
+ postmasters to provide him with three good horses all along the road.<sup><a name=
+ "FN304A" id="FN304A"></a><a href="#FN304">[304]</a></sup> It is manifestly absurd to
+ speak of secrecy or stealth in connection with such a journey, or to pretend that the
+ Chief Secretary of State could have any difficulty in tracing the movements of a man
+ who travelled in this fashion; and protestations of ignorance serve only to show that
+ to seem ignorant was thought desirable.</p>
+
+ <p>Considerations like these, it will hardly be denied, countenance the notion that
+ Percy was, in King James's own phrase, a tame duck employed to catch wild ones. Against
+ such a supposition, however, a grave objection at once presents itself. Percy was
+ amongst the very first victims of the enterprise, being one of the four who were killed
+ at Holbeche when the conspirators were brought to bay.</p>
+
+ <p>This, unquestionably, must at first sight appear to be fatal to the theory of his
+ complicity, and the importance of such a fact should not be extenuated. At the same
+ time, on further scrutiny, the argument which it supplies loses much of its force.</p>
+
+ <p>It must, in the first place, be remembered, that according to the belief then
+ current, it was no uncommon thing, as Lord Castlemaine expresses it<sup><a name=
+ "FN305A" id="FN305A"></a><a href="#FN305">[305]</a></sup> the game being secured, to
+ hang the spaniel which caught <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id=
+ "Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>it, that its master's art might not appear, and, to cite
+ no other instance, we have the example of Dr. Parry, who, as Mr. Brewer
+ acknowledges,<sup><a name="FN306A" id="FN306A"></a><a href="#FN306">[306]</a></sup> was
+ involved in the ruin of those whom he had been engaged to lure to destruction.</p>
+
+ <p>There are, moreover, various remarkable circumstances in regard to the case of Percy
+ in particular. It was observed at the time as strange and suspicious that any of the
+ rebels should have been slain at all, for they were almost defenceless, having no
+ fire-arms; they did not succeed in killing a single one of their assailants, and might
+ all have been captured without difficulty. Nevertheless, the attacking party were not
+ only allowed to shoot, but selected just the wrong men as their mark, precisely those
+ who, being chiefly implicated in the beginnings of the Plot, could have afforded the
+ most valuable information,<sup><a name="FN307A" id="FN307A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN307">[307]</a></sup> for besides Percy, were shot down Catesby and the two
+ Wrights,<sup><a name="FN308A" id="FN308A"></a><a href="#FN308">[308]</a></sup> all
+ deeply <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg
+ 154]</a></span>implicated from the first. So unaccountable did such a course appear as
+ at once to suggest sinister interpretations&mdash;especially as regarded the case of
+ Percy and Catesby, who were always held to be the ringleaders of the band. As Goodman
+ tells us,<sup><a name="FN309A" id="FN309A"></a><a href="#FN309">[309]</a></sup> "Some
+ will not stick to report that the great statesman sending to apprehend these traitors
+ gave special charge and direction for Percy and Catesby, 'Let me never see them alive;'
+ who it may be would have revealed some evil counsel given." A similar suspicion seems
+ to be insinuated by Sir Edward Hoby, writing to Edmondes, the Ambassador at
+ Brussels<sup><a name="FN310A" id="FN310A"></a><a href="#FN310">[310]</a></sup>: "Percy
+ is dead: who it is thought by some particular men could have said more than any
+ other."</p>
+
+ <p>More suspicious still appears the fact that the king's government thought it
+ necessary to explain how it had come to pass that Percy was not secured alive, and to
+ protest that they had been anxious above all for his capture, but had been frustrated
+ by the inconsiderate zeal of their subordinates. In the "King's Book" we read as
+ follows: "Although divers of the King's Proclamations were posted down after those
+ Traitors with all speed possible, declaring the odiousness of that bloody attempt, and
+ the necessity to have Percy preserved alive, if it had been possible, ... yet the far
+ distance of the way (which was above an hundred miles), together with the extreme
+ deepness thereof, joined also with the shortness of the day, was <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>the cause that the hearty
+ and loving affection of the King's good subjects in those parts prevented the speed of
+ his Proclamations."</p>
+
+ <p>Such an explanation cannot be deemed satisfactory. The distance to be covered was
+ about 112 miles, and there were three days to do it, for not till November 8th were the
+ fugitives surrounded. They in their flight had the same difficulties to contend with,
+ as are here enumerated, yet they accomplished their journey in a single day, and they
+ had not, like the king's couriers, fresh horses ready for them at every post.</p>
+
+ <p>But we have positive evidence upon this point. Father Greenway, who was at the time
+ in the Midlands, close to the scene of action, incidentally mentions, without any
+ reference to our present question,<sup><a name="FN311A" id="FN311A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN311">[311]</a></sup> that while the rebels were in the field, messengers came post
+ haste continually, one after the other, from the capital, all bearing proclamations
+ mentioning Percy by name.</p>
+
+ <p>It must also be observed that though the couriers, we are told, could not in three
+ days get from London to Holbeche to hinder Percy's death, they contrived to ride in one
+ from Holbeche to London with news that he was dead.<sup><a name="FN312A" id=
+ "FN312A"></a><a href="#FN312">[312]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Another circumstance not easy to explain is, that the man who killed Percy and
+ Catesby,<sup><a name="FN313A" id="FN313A"></a><a href="#FN313">[313]</a></sup> John
+ Streete by name, received for his service the handsome pension of two shillings a day
+ for life, equal at least to a pound of our present money.<sup><a name="FN314A" id=
+ "FN314A"></a><a href="#FN314">[314]</a></sup> This is certainly a large <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>reward for having done
+ the very thing that the government most desired to avoid, and for an action, moreover,
+ involving no sort of personal risk, killing two practically unarmed men from behind a
+ tree.<sup><a name="FN315A" id="FN315A"></a><a href="#FN315">[315]</a></sup> If,
+ however, he had silenced a dangerous witness, it is easy to understand the munificence
+ of his recompense.</p>
+
+ <p>Against Catesby, likewise, there are serious indictments, and it seems impossible to
+ believe him to have been, as commonly represented, a man, however blinded by
+ fanaticism, yet honest in his bad enterprise, who would not stoop to fraud or untruth.
+ It is abundantly evident that on many occasions he deliberately deceived his
+ associates, and those whom he called his spiritual guides, making promises which he did
+ not mean to keep, and giving assurances which he knew to be false.<sup><a name="FN316A"
+ id="FN316A"></a><a href="#FN316">[316]</a></sup> It will be sufficient to quote one or
+ two examples quite sufficient to stamp him as a man utterly unscrupulous about the
+ means employed to gain his ends.</p>
+
+ <p>On the 5th of November, when, after the failure of the enterprise, he arrived at
+ Dunchurch, in Warwickshire, Catesby, in order to induce Sir Everard Digby to commit
+ himself to the hopeless campaign now to be undertaken, assured him,<sup><a name=
+ "FN317A" id="FN317A"></a><a href="#FN317">[317]</a></sup> that though the powder was
+ discovered, yet the king and Salisbury were killed; all were in "a pother;" the
+ Catholics were sure to rise in a body, one family alone, the Littletons, would bring in
+ one thousand men the next day; and so on,&mdash;all <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>this being absolutely untrue. That he had
+ previously employed similar means on a large scale to inveigle his friends into his
+ atrocious and senseless scheme, there is much evidence, strongest of all that of Father
+ Garnet;<sup><a name="FN318A" id="FN318A"></a><a href="#FN318">[318]</a></sup> "I doubt
+ not that Mr. Catesby hath feigned many such things for to induce others."</p>
+
+ <p>Worst of all, we learn from another intercepted letter of Garnet's, Catesby had for
+ his own purposes circulated an atrocious slander against Garnet himself, although
+ passing as his devoted disciple and friend: "Master Catesby," he wrote,<sup><a name=
+ "FN319A" id="FN319A"></a><a href="#FN319">[319]</a></sup> "did me much wrong, and hath
+ confessed that he told them he asked me a question in Q. Elizabeth's time of the powder
+ action,<sup><a name="FN320A" id="FN320A"></a><a href="#FN320">[320]</a></sup> and that
+ I said it was lawful. All which is most untrue. He did it to draw in others."</p>
+
+ <p>In view of this, and much else of a similar kind, it is difficult to read Father
+ Gerard's <i>Narrative</i>, and more particularly Father Greenway's additions thereto,
+ without a growing feeling that if Catesby sought counsel it was with no intention of
+ being guided by it, and that his sole desire was to get hold of something which might
+ serve his own purposes.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>We have already seen that a great deal of mystery attaches to Francis Tresham, who
+ is generally supposed to have written the letter to Monteagle, and was clearly
+ suspected by some of having done a great deal more; for the author of the
+ <i>Politician's Catechism</i> speaks of him as having access to Cecil's house even at
+ midnight, along with another whose name is not given, these two being therefore
+ supposed to have been the secretary's instruments in all this business. What is certain
+ is, that Tresham did not fly like the rest when the "discovery" had taken place, not
+ only remaining in London, and showing himself openly in the streets, but actually
+ presenting himself to the council, and offering them his services. Moreover, though his
+ name was known to the government, at least on November 7th, as one of the accomplices,
+ it was for several days omitted from their published proclamations, and not till the
+ 12th was he taken into custody. Being confined in the Tower, he was shortly attacked by
+ a painful malady, and on December 23rd he died, as was officially announced, of a
+ "strangury," as Salisbury assures Cornwallis "by a natural sickness, such as he hath
+ been a long time subject to."<sup><a name="FN321A" id="FN321A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN321">[321]</a></sup> Throughout his sickness he himself and his friends loudly
+ declared that should he survive it "they feared not the course of
+ justice."<sup><a name="FN322A" id="FN322A"></a><a href="#FN322">[322]</a></sup> Such
+ confidence, as Mr. Jardine remarks, could be grounded only on his possession of
+ knowledge which the authorities would not venture to reveal, and it is not surprising
+ that his death should have been attributed, by the enemies of the government, to
+ poison. It is no doubt an argument against <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id=
+ "Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>such a supposition that during his illness Tresham was
+ allowed to be attended by his wife and a confidential servant. On the other hand, not
+ only does Bishop Goodman inform us<sup><a name="FN323A" id="FN323A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN323">[323]</a></sup> that "Butler, the great physician of Cambridge," declared him
+ to have been poisoned; but the author of <i>Mischeefes Mystery</i>, a violent
+ government partisan, contradicts the notion of a natural death, by asserting that
+ "Tresham murthered himself in the Tower."</p>
+
+ <p>It thus appears, once again, that the more its details are scrutinized, the less
+ does the traditional history of the Plot commend itself to our acceptance. It is hard
+ to believe that within the ranks of the conspirators themselves, there was no
+ treachery, no one who, lending himself to work the ruin of his associates, unwittingly
+ wrought his own.</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p>The evidence hitherto considered may fitly conclude with the testimony of a witness
+ living near the time in question, who had evidently been at pains to make inquiries
+ amongst those most likely to give information. This is an anonymous correspondent of
+ Anthony &agrave; Wood, whose notes are preserved in Fulman's collection in the library
+ of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. These remarkable notes have been seen by Fulman, who
+ inserted in the margin various questions and objections, to which the writer always
+ supplied precise and definite replies. In the following version this supplementary
+ information is incorporated in the body of his statement, being distinguished by
+ italics. The writer, who explains that his full materials are in the country, speaks
+ thus:<sup><a name="FN324A" id="FN324A"></a><a href="#FN324">[324]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>"I should be glad to understand what your friend driveth at about the Fifth of
+ November. It was, without all peradventure, a State Plot. I have collected many
+ pregnant circumstances concerning it.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Tis certain that the last Earl of Salisbury<sup><a name="FN325A" id=
+ "FN325A"></a><a href="#FN325">[325]</a></sup> confessed to William Lenthal<sup><a name=
+ "FN326A" id="FN326A"></a><a href="#FN326">[326]</a></sup> it was his father's
+ contrivance, which Lenthal soon after told one Mr. Webb (<i>John Webb, Esq.</i>), a
+ person of quality, and his kinsman, yet alive.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sir Henry Wotton says 'twas usual with Cecil to create plots, that he might have
+ the honour of the discovery, or to such effect.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Lord Mounteagle knew there was a letter to be sent to him before it came.
+ (<i>Known by Edmund Church, Esq., his confidant.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>"Sir Everard Digby's sons were both knighted soon after, and Sir Kenelm would often
+ say it was a State design, to disengage the king of his promise to the Pope and the
+ King of Spain, to indulge the Catholics if ever he came to be king here; and somewhat
+ to his purpose was found in the Lord Wimbledon's papers after his death.<sup><a name=
+ "FN327A" id="FN327A"></a><a href="#FN327">[327]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Vowell, who was executed in the Rump time, did also affirm it so.<sup><a name=
+ "FN328A" id="FN328A"></a><a href="#FN328">[328]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"Catesby's man (<i>George Bartlet</i>),<sup><a name="FN329A" id=
+ "FN329A"></a><a href="#FN329">[329]</a></sup> on his death-bed, <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>confessed his master went
+ to Salisbury House several nights before the discovery, and was always brought
+ privately in at a back door."</p>
+
+ <p>Then, in answer to an objection of Fulman's, is added: "Catesby, 'tis like, did not
+ mean to betray his friends or his own life&mdash;he was drawn in and made believe
+ strange things. All good men condemn him and the rest as most desperate wretches; yet
+ most believed the original contrivance of the Plot was not theirs."</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever else may be thought of the above statements, they at least serve to
+ contradict Mr. Jardine's assertion,<sup><a name="FN330A" id="FN330A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN330">[330]</a></sup> that the notion of Cecil's complicity,&mdash;which he terms a
+ strange suggestion, scarce worthy of notice,&mdash;was first heard of long after the
+ transaction, and was adopted exclusively by Catholics. Clearly it was not unknown to
+ Protestants who were contemporaries, or personally acquainted with contemporaries, of
+ the event. Yet the document here cited was known to Mr. Jardine, who mentions one of
+ its statements, that relating to Lord Monteagle, but says nothing of its more serious
+ allegations.</p>
+
+ <p>It must also be remarked that we find some traces in the evidence which remains of
+ certain mysterious conspirators of great importance, concerning whom no investigation
+ whatever appears to have been made, they being at once permitted to drop into the
+ profoundest obscurity, in a manner quite contrary to the habitual practice of the
+ authorities.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>One such instance is afforded by the testimony of a mariner, Henry Paris, of
+ Barking,<sup><a name="FN331A" id="FN331A"></a><a href="#FN331">[331]</a></sup> that Guy
+ Faukes, <i>alias</i> Johnson, hired a boat of him, "wherein was carried over to
+ Gravelines a man supposed of great import: he went disguised, and would not suffer any
+ one man to go with him but this Vaux, nor to return with him. This Paris did attend for
+ him back at Gravelines six weeks. If cause require there are several proofs of this
+ matter." None of these, however, seem to have been sought.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN292" id="FN292"></a><a href="#FN292A">[292]</a></sup>
+ That of Mr. Pound.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN293" id="FN293"></a><a href="#FN293A">[293]</a></sup>
+ Jardine, <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 38, n.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN294" id="FN294"></a><a href="#FN294A">[294]</a></sup>
+ <i>E.g.</i>, the author of the <i>Politician's Catechism</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN295" id="FN295"></a><a href="#FN295A">[295]</a></sup>
+ "About the time of my Lord Essex his enterprise he became Catholic" (<i>i.e.</i>
+ 1601). Father Gerard, <i>Narrative</i>, p. 58.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN296" id="FN296"></a><a href="#FN296A">[296]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, n. 4.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN297" id="FN297"></a><a href="#FN297A">[297]</a></sup>
+ Justice Grange, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, to Salisbury, November 5th, 1605.
+ Justices of Warwickshire, to the same, November 12th.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN298" id="FN298"></a><a href="#FN298A">[298]</a></sup>
+ MS., f. 31-32.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN299" id="FN299"></a><a href="#FN299A">[299]</a></sup>
+ Tanner MSS., <i>ut sup.</i>, f. 167.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN300" id="FN300"></a><a href="#FN300A">[300]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i>, November 7th, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN301" id="FN301"></a><a href="#FN301A">[301]</a></sup>
+ The case of Carleton is not without mystery. At the time of the discovery he was at
+ Paris, as secretary to the English ambassador, but about the middle of the month was
+ ordered home in hot haste and placed "in restraint." On February 28th, 1605-6, he
+ wrote to his friend Chamberlain that he was airing himself on the Chilterns to get
+ rid of the scent of powder, asking his correspondent to consult a patron as to his
+ best means of promotion (<i>Dom. James I.</i> xviii. 125). Far from being injured by
+ any suspicion that he might seem to have incurred, he subsequently rose rapidly in
+ favour, was intrusted with most important diplomatic missions, and was finally
+ created Viscount Dorchester.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN302" id="FN302"></a><a href="#FN302A">[302]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 105.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN303" id="FN303"></a><a href="#FN303A">[303]</a></sup>
+ To the ambassadors, November 9th.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN304" id="FN304"></a><a href="#FN304A">[304]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xv. 106.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN305" id="FN305"></a><a href="#FN305A">[305]</a></sup>
+ <i>Catholique Apology</i>, p. 415.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN306" id="FN306"></a><a href="#FN306A">[306]</a></sup>
+ Goodman's <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 121, note.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN307" id="FN307"></a><a href="#FN307A">[307]</a></sup>
+ See Goodman's remarks on this subject (<i>Court of King James</i>, i. 106). The
+ author of the <i>Politician's Catechism</i> writes: "It is very certaine that Percy
+ and Catesby might have been taken alive, when they were killed, but Cecil knew full
+ well that these two unfortunate Gentlemen would have related the story lesse to his
+ owne advantage, than himself caused it to be published: therefore they were
+ dispatched when they might have been made prisoners, having no other weapons,
+ offensive or defensive, but their swords."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN308" id="FN308"></a><a href="#FN308A">[308]</a></sup>
+ About the death of the Wrights there are extraordinary contradictions. In the
+ "original" of his famous confession T. Winter says: "The next shot was the elder
+ Wright, stone dead; after him the younger Mr. Wright." In <i>Mischeefes Mystery</i>
+ we read that Percy and Catesby were killed "with a gunne," the two Wrights "with
+ Halberts." The day after the attack, November 9th, Sir Edward Leigh wrote to the
+ Council, that the Wrights were not slain, as reputed, but wounded. Not till the 13th
+ was their death certified by Sir Richard Walsh.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN309" id="FN309"></a><a href="#FN309A">[309]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 106.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN310" id="FN310"></a><a href="#FN310A">[310]</a></sup>
+ Nichols, <i>Progresses of King James I.</i>, i. 588.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN311" id="FN311"></a><a href="#FN311A">[311]</a></sup>
+ MS., f. 70, b.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN312" id="FN312"></a><a href="#FN312A">[312]</a></sup>
+ Cecil writing to the ambassadors, November 9th, mentions in a postscript the fate of
+ the rebels.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN313" id="FN313"></a><a href="#FN313A">[313]</a></sup>
+ They were slain by two balls from the same musket.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN314" id="FN314"></a><a href="#FN314A">[314]</a></sup>
+ Warrant, P.R.O.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN315" id="FN315"></a><a href="#FN315A">[315]</a></sup>
+ Father Gerard mentions this circumstance (<i>Narrative</i>, p. 110).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN316" id="FN316"></a><a href="#FN316A">[316]</a></sup>
+ This point is well developed in the recent <i>Life of a Conspirator</i>, pp.
+ 120-126.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN317" id="FN317"></a><a href="#FN317A">[317]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvi. 97.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN318" id="FN318"></a><a href="#FN318A">[318]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i>, March 4th, 1605-6.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN319" id="FN319"></a><a href="#FN319A">[319]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 242.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN320" id="FN320"></a><a href="#FN320A">[320]</a></sup>
+ The strange story of a powder-plot under Elizabeth is variously told. According to
+ one of the mysterious confessions attributed to Faukes, which have disappeared from
+ the State Papers, Owen told him in Flanders that one Thomas Morgan had proposed to
+ blow up her majesty (Abbot, <i>Antilogia</i>, 137). The <i>Memorial to
+ Protestants</i> by Bishop Kennet (1713) says that the man's name was Moody, who
+ wanted the French ambassador to subsidise him. The idea was to place a 20 lb. bag of
+ powder under the queen's bed, and explode it in the middle of the night, but how this
+ was to be managed is not explained.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN321" id="FN321"></a><a href="#FN321A">[321]</a></sup>
+ Winwood, <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 189.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN322" id="FN322"></a><a href="#FN322A">[322]</a></sup>
+ Wood to Salisbury, December 23rd, 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN323" id="FN323"></a><a href="#FN323A">[323]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court of King James</i>, i. 107.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN324" id="FN324"></a><a href="#FN324A">[324]</a></sup>
+ <i>Collection</i>, vol. ii. 15.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN325" id="FN325"></a><a href="#FN325A">[325]</a></sup>
+ William, second earl (born 1591, died 1668), son of the minister of James I.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN326" id="FN326"></a><a href="#FN326A">[326]</a></sup>
+ Speaker of the Long Parliament.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN327" id="FN327"></a><a href="#FN327A">[327]</a></sup>
+ Edward Cecil, Viscount Wimbledon, third son of Thomas, first Earl of Exeter (the
+ elder brother of Robert Cecil, first Earl of Salisbury), died 1638.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN328" id="FN328"></a><a href="#FN328A">[328]</a></sup>
+ Peter Vowell, a Protestant, executed with Colonel John Gerard for an alleged plot
+ against Cromwell, July 10th, 1654.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN329" id="FN329"></a><a href="#FN329A">[329]</a></sup>
+ "George Bartlett, Mr. Catesby's servant," appears amongst the suspected persons whose
+ names were sent up to Cecil by the justices of Warwickshire, November 12th, 1605.
+ (<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 134.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN330" id="FN330"></a><a href="#FN330A">[330]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 188.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN331" id="FN331"></a><a href="#FN331A">[331]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 130.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE GOVERNMENT'S CASE.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">We</span> have hitherto confined our attention to
+ sources of information other than those with which the authors of the official
+ narrative have supplied us, and upon which they based the same. It remains to inquire
+ how far the evidence presented by them can avail to substantiate the traditional
+ history, and to rebut the various arguments against its authenticity which have been
+ adduced.</p>
+
+ <p>For brevity and clearness' sake it will be advisable to divide this investigation
+ under several heads.</p>
+
+ <h4>i. <i>The Trial of the Conspirators.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>On the threshold of our inquiry we are met by a most singular and startling fact. As
+ to what passed on the trial of the conspirators, what evidence was produced against
+ them, how it was supported,&mdash;nay, even how the tale of their enterprise was
+ told&mdash;we have no information upon which any reliance can be placed. One version
+ alone has come down to us of the proceedings upon this occasion&mdash;that published
+ "by authority"&mdash;and of this we can be sure only that it is utterly untrustworthy.
+ It was issued under the title of the <i>True and Perfect Relation</i>, but, as Mr.
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>Jardine has
+ already told us, is certainly not deserving of the character which its title imports.
+ "It is not true, because many occurrences on the trial are wilfully misrepresented; and
+ it is not <i>perfect</i>, because the whole evidence, and many facts and circumstances
+ which must have happened, are omitted, and incidents are inserted which could not by
+ possibility have taken place on the occasion. It is obviously a false and imperfect
+ relation of the proceedings; a tale artfully garbled and misrepresented ... to serve a
+ State purpose, and intended and calculated to mislead the judgment of the world upon
+ the facts of the case."<sup><a name="FN332A" id="FN332A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN332">[332]</a></sup> Again the same author remarks,<sup><a name="FN333A" id=
+ "FN333A"></a><a href="#FN333">[333]</a></sup> "that every line of the published trial
+ was rigidly weighed and considered, not with reference to its accuracy, but its effect
+ on the minds of those who might read it, is manifest."</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, the narrative thus obviously dishonest, was admittedly issued in
+ contradiction of divers others already passing "from hand to hand," which were at
+ variance with itself in points of importance, and which it stigmatized as "uncertain,
+ untrue, and incoherent;" it justified its appearance on the ground that it was
+ supremely important for the public to be rightly informed in such a case:<sup><a name=
+ "FN334A" id="FN334A"></a><a href="#FN334">[334]</a></sup> and so successful were the
+ efforts made to secure for it a monopoly, that no single document has come down to us
+ by which its statements <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg
+ 165]</a></span>might be checked. In consequence, to quote Mr. Jardine once
+ more,<sup><a name="FN335A" id="FN335A"></a><a href="#FN335">[335]</a></sup> there is no
+ trial since the time of Henry VIII. in regard of which we are so ignorant as to what
+ actually occurred.<sup><a name="FN336A" id="FN336A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN336">[336]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>The employment of methods such as these would in any circumstances forfeit all
+ credit on behalf of the story thus presented. In the present instance the presumption
+ raised against it is even stronger than it would commonly be. If the Gunpowder Plot
+ were in reality what was represented, why was it deemed necessary, in Cecil's own
+ phrase, to pervert and disguise its history in order to produce the desired effect? A
+ project so singular and diabolical in its atrocity, prepared for on so large a scale,
+ and so nearly successful, should, it would appear, have needed no fictitious adjuncts
+ to enhance its enormity; and for the conviction of miscreants caught red-handed in such
+ an enterprise no evidence should have been so effectual as that furnished by the facts
+ of the case, which of their nature should have been patent and unquestionable. When we
+ find, on the contrary, a web <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg
+ 166]</a></span>of falsehood and mystery woven with elaborate care over the whole
+ history of the transaction, it is not unnatural to infer that to have told the simple
+ truth would not have suited the purpose of those who had the telling of the tale; and
+ it is obviously necessary that the evidence whereby their story was supported should be
+ rigorously sifted.</p>
+
+ <p>What has been said, though in great measure true of the trial of Father Garnet, at
+ the end of March, is especially applicable to that of the conspirators, two months
+ earlier, for in regard of this we have absolutely no information beyond that officially
+ supplied. The execution of Faukes and his companions following close upon their
+ arraignment,<sup><a name="FN337A" id="FN337A"></a><a href="#FN337">[337]</a></sup> all
+ that had been elicited, or was said to have been elicited, at their trial, became
+ henceforth evidence which could not be contradicted, the prosecution thus having a free
+ hand in dealing with their subsequent victim.<sup><a name="FN338A" id=
+ "FN338A"></a><a href="#FN338">[338]</a></sup> In view of this circumstance it has been
+ noted as remarkable that whereas the conspirators had been kept alive and untried for
+ nearly three months, they were thus summarily dealt with at the moment when it was
+ known that the capture of Father Garnet was imminent, and, as a matter of fact, he was
+ taken on the very day on which the first company were executed.<sup><a name="FN339A"
+ id="FN339A"></a><a href="#FN339">[339]</a></sup> It would <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>appear that nothing
+ should have seemed more desirable than to confront the Jesuit superior with those whom
+ he was declared to have instigated to their crime, instead of putting them out of the
+ way at the very moment when there was a prospect of doing so.</p>
+
+ <h4>ii. <i>The Fundamental Evidence.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>Amongst all the confessions and "voluntary declarations" extracted from the
+ conspirators, there are two of exceptional importance, as having furnished the basis of
+ the story told by the government, and ever since generally accepted. These are a long
+ declaration made by Thomas Winter, and another by Guy Faukes, which alone were made
+ public, being printed in the "King's Book," and from which are gathered the essential
+ particulars of the story as we are accustomed to hear it.</p>
+
+ <p>Of Winter's declaration, which is in the form of a letter to the Lords
+ Commissioners, there is found in the State Paper Office only a copy, bearing date
+ November 23rd, 1605, in the handwriting of Levinus Munck, Cecil's private secretary.
+ This copy has been shown to the King, who in a marginal note objects to a certain
+ "uncleare phrase," which has accordingly been altered in accordance with the royal
+ criticism: <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg
+ 168]</a></span>and from it has evidently been taken the printed version, which agrees
+ with it in every respect, including the above-mentioned emendation of the
+ phraseology.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image19" id="image19"></a><img src="images/image19.png" width="600" height=
+ "104" alt="FROM WINTER'S CONFESSION, NOVEMBER 23." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">from winter's confession, november 23.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It must strike the reader as remarkable that, whereas, as has been said, the body of
+ the letter is in the handwriting of the secretary, Munck, the names of the witnesses
+ who attest it<sup><a name="FN340A" id="FN340A"></a><a href="#FN340">[340]</a></sup> are
+ added in that of his master, Cecil himself.</p>
+
+ <p>The "original" document, in Winter's own hand, is at Hatfield, and agrees in general
+ so exactly with the copy, as to demonstrate the identity of their origin.<sup><a name=
+ "FN341A" id="FN341A"></a><a href="#FN341">[341]</a></sup> But while, as we have seen,
+ the "copy" is dated November 23rd, the "original" is dated on the 25th.<sup><a name=
+ "FN342A" id="FN342A"></a><a href="#FN342">[342]</a></sup> On a circumstance so
+ singular, light is possibly thrown by a letter from Waad, the Lieutenant of the Tower,
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>to Cecil, on
+ the 21st of the same month.<sup><a name="FN343A" id="FN343A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN343">[343]</a></sup> "Thomas Winter," he wrote, "doth find his hand so strong, as
+ after dinner he will settle himself to write that he hath verbally declared to your
+ Lordship, adding what he shall remember." The inference is certainly suggested that
+ torture had been used until the prisoner's spirit was sufficiently broken to be ready
+ to tell the story required of him, and that the details were furnished by those who
+ demanded it. It must, moreover, be remarked that although Winter's "original"
+ declaration is witnessed only by Sir E. Coke, the Attorney General, it appears in print
+ attested by all those whom Cecil had selected for the purpose two days before the
+ declaration was made.<sup><a name="FN344A" id="FN344A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN344">[344]</a></sup> It may be said that the inference drawn above is violent and
+ unfair, and, perhaps, were there no other case to go upon but that of Winter, so grave
+ a charge as it implies should not be made. There remains, however, the companion case
+ of Faukes, which is yet more extraordinary.</p>
+
+ <p>His declaration first makes its appearance as "The examination of Guy Fawkes, taken
+ the 8th of November."<sup><a name="FN345A" id="FN345A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN345">[345]</a></sup> The document thus described is manifestly a draft, and not a
+ copy of a deposition actually taken. It is unsigned: the list of witnesses is in the
+ same handwriting as the rest, and in no instance is a witness indicated by such a title
+ as he would employ for his signature.<sup><a name="FN346A" id="FN346A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN346">[346]</a></sup> Throughout this paper Faukes is made to <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>speak in the third
+ person, and the names of accomplices to whom he refers are not given.</p>
+
+ <p>What, however, is most remarkable is the frank manner in which this document is
+ treated as a draft. Several passages are cancelled and others substituted, sometimes in
+ quite a contrary sense, so that the same deponent cannot possibly have made the
+ statements contained in both versions. Other paragraphs are "ticked off," as the event
+ proves, for omission.</p>
+
+ <p>Nine days later, November 17th,<sup><a name="FN347A" id="FN347A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN347">[347]</a></sup> Faukes was induced to put his name to the substance of the
+ matter contained in the draft.<sup><a name="FN348A" id="FN348A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN348">[348]</a></sup> The document is headed "The declaration<sup><a name="FN349A"
+ id="FN349A"></a><a href="#FN349">[349]</a></sup> of Guy Fawkes, prisoner in the Tower
+ of London." Faukes speaks throughout in the first person, and supplies the names
+ previously omitted.<sup><a name="FN350A" id="FN350A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN350">[350]</a></sup> Most noteworthy is the manner in which this <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>version is adapted to the
+ emendations of the draft. The passages ticked off have disappeared entirely, amongst
+ them the remarkable statements that "they [the confederates] meant also to have sent
+ for the prisoners in the Tower, of whom particularly they had some
+ consultation,"&mdash;that "they had consultation for the taking of the Lady Mary [the
+ infant daughter of King James] into their possession"&mdash;and that "provision was
+ made by some of the conspiracy of armour of proof this last summer, for this action."
+ Where an alteration has been made in the draft, great skill is shown in combining what
+ is important in both versions.<sup><a name="FN351A" id="FN351A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN351">[351]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>As to the means which were employed to compel Faukes to sign the declaration there
+ can be no doubt; his signature bearing evidence that he had been tortured with extreme
+ severity. The witnesses are but two, Coke, the Attorney General, and Waad, the
+ Lieutenant of the Tower. When, however, the document came to be printed, as in the
+ other case, a fuller list was appended, but not exactly that previously indicated, for
+ to Faukes were assigned the same witnesses as to Winter, including the Earls of
+ Worcester and Dunbar over and above his own list.<sup><a name="FN352A" id=
+ "FN352A"></a><a href="#FN352">[352]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c15">
+ <a name="image20" id="image20"></a><img src="images/image20.png" width="300" height=
+ "397" alt="SIGNATURES OF FAUKES AND OLDCORNE." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">signatures of faukes and oldcorne.</span><sup><a name=
+ "FN353A" id="FN353A"></a><a href="#FN353">[353]</a></sup></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The printed version exhibits other points of interest. There was in the Archduke's
+ service, in Flanders, an <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg
+ 173]</a></span>English soldier, Hugh Owen,<sup><a name="FN354A" id=
+ "FN354A"></a><a href="#FN354">[354]</a></sup> whom the government were for some reason,
+ excessively desirous to incriminate, and get into their hands. For this purpose, a
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>passage was
+ artfully interpolated in the statement of Faukes, whereof no trace is found in the
+ original. In the "King's Book," the passage in question stands thus, the words
+ italicised being those fraudulently introduced:</p>
+
+ <p>"About Easter, the parliament being prorogued till October next, we dispersed
+ ourselves, and I retired into the Low-countries, <i>by advice and direction of the
+ rest; as well to acquaint Owen with the particulars of the plot, as also</i>, lest, by
+ my longer stay, I might have grown suspicious." But of Owen we shall see more in
+ particular. It must not be forgotten that on several other days besides those named
+ above, Faukes made declarations, still extant, viz., November 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, and
+ 16th, and January 9th and 20th. The most important items of information furnished by
+ that selected for publication were not even hinted at in any of these.</p>
+
+ <p>Farther light appears to be thrown on the manner in which this important declaration
+ was prepared by another document found amongst the State Papers. This is an
+ "interrogatory" drawn up by Sir E. Coke on November 8th, the very day of the "draft,"
+ expressly for the benefit of Faukes.<sup><a name="FN355A" id="FN355A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN355">[355]</a></sup> That the "draft" was composed from this appears to be shown by
+ a curious piece of evidence. We have already noticed the strange phraseology of one of
+ the passages attributed to Faukes: "He confesseth that the same day that this
+ detestable act should have been performed the same day should other of their
+ confederacy have surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth," etc. <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>Precisely the same
+ repetition occurs in the sixth of Mr. Attorney's suggested questions. "<i>Item</i>, was
+ it not agreed that the same day that the act should have been done, the same day or
+ soon after the person of the Lady Elizabeth should have been surprised," etc.?</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, it is apparent that this interrogatory is not founded on information
+ already obtained, but is, in fact, what is known as a "fishing" document, intended to
+ elicit evidence of some kind. In the first place, some of its suggestions are mutually
+ incompatible. Thus in another place it implies that not Elizabeth but her infant sister
+ Mary was the choice of the queen-makers:&mdash;"Who should have been protector of the
+ Lady Mary, who, being born in England, they meant to prefer to the crown. With whom
+ should she have married?" (She was then seven months old.) Again it asks: "What should
+ have become of the Prince?" as though he might after all be the sovereign intended.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides this, many points are raised which are evidently purely imaginary, inasmuch
+ as no more was ever heard of them though if substantiated, they would have been
+ supremely important.<sup><a name="FN356A" id="FN356A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN356">[356]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>The above details will not appear superfluous if the importance of these documents
+ be fully understood. It is upon these narratives, stamped with features so incompatible
+ with their trustworthiness, that we entirely depend for much of prime importance in the
+ history of the conspiracy, in particular for the notable episode of the mine, which
+ they alone relate, and which is not even mentioned, either in the other numerous
+ confessions of Faukes and Winter themselves, or by any of the other confederates. Save
+ for an incidental remark of Keyes, that he helped to work in the mine, we hear nothing
+ else of it; while not only is this confession quite as strange a document as the two
+ others, but, to complicate the matter still more, Keyes is expressly described by
+ Cecil<sup><a name="FN357A" id="FN357A"></a><a href="#FN357">[357]</a></sup> himself as
+ one of those that "wrought not in the mine."</p>
+
+ <p>It is hard to understand how so remarkable an operation should have been totally
+ ignored in all the other confessions and declarations, numerous and various as they
+ are; while, on the other hand, should <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id=
+ "Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>this striking feature of the Plot prove to be a
+ fabrication, what is there of which to be certain?</p>
+
+ <h4>iii. <i>The Confession of Thomas Bates (December 4th, 1605).</i></h4>
+
+ <p>There is another piece of evidence to which exceptional prominence has been given,
+ the confession of Thomas Bates, Catesby's servant, dated December 4th, 1605. This is
+ the only one of the conspirators' confessions specifically mentioned in the government
+ account of their trial, and it is mentioned twice over&mdash;a circumstance not
+ unsuspicious in view of the nature of that account as already described.<sup><a name=
+ "FN358A" id="FN358A"></a><a href="#FN358">[358]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>It is not necessary at present to enter upon the large question of the attitude of
+ the Jesuits towards the Plot, nor to discuss their guilt or innocence. This is,
+ however, beyond dispute, that the government were above all things anxious to prove
+ them guilty,<sup><a name="FN359A" id="FN359A"></a><a href="#FN359">[359]</a></sup> and
+ no document ever produced was so effective for this purpose as the said confession,
+ for, if it were true, there could be no question as to the guilt of one Jesuit, at
+ least, Father Greenway <i>alias</i> Tesimond. The substance of Bates' declaration was
+ as follows:</p>
+
+ <p>That being introduced and sworn into the conspiracy by his master, Catesby, he was
+ then told that, as a pledge of fidelity, he must receive the sacrament upon his oath,
+ and accordingly he went to confession to Greenway, the Jesuit.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="c6">That in his confession he fully informed Greenway of the design, and that
+ Greenway bade him obey his master, because it was for a good cause, and be secret, and
+ mention the matter to no other priest.</p>
+
+ <p>That he was absolved by Greenway, and afterwards received Holy Communion.</p>
+
+ <p>It will be observed that the second paragraph, here italicized, is of supreme
+ importance. We have evidence that although the conspirators, during the course of their
+ operations, frequented the sacraments, they expressly avoided all mention of their
+ design to their confessors, Catesby having required this of them, assuring them that he
+ had fully satisfied himself that the project, far from being sinful, was meritorious,
+ but that the priests were likely to give trouble.<sup><a name="FN360A" id=
+ "FN360A"></a><a href="#FN360">[360]</a></sup> We are even told by some authors that
+ Catesby exacted of his confederates an oath of secrecy in this regard. It is clear that
+ his authority must have had special weight with his own servant, who was, moreover,
+ devotedly attached to his master, as he proved in the crisis of his fate. We might,
+ therefore, naturally be prepared to learn that Bates, though confessing to Greenway,
+ never acquainted him with the Plot; and, that in fact he never did so, there is some
+ interesting evidence.</p>
+
+ <p>It cannot escape observation as a suspicious circumstance <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>that this most important
+ confession, upon which so much stress was laid, exists amongst the State Papers only in
+ a copy.<sup><a name="FN361A" id="FN361A"></a><a href="#FN361">[361]</a></sup> Moreover,
+ this copy has been treated as though it were an original, being officially endorsed,
+ and it has on some occasion been used in Court.<sup><a name="FN362A" id=
+ "FN362A"></a><a href="#FN362">[362]</a></sup> If, however, this version were not
+ genuine, but prepared for a purpose, it is clear that it could not have been produced
+ while Bates was alive to contradict it, and there appears to be no doubt that it was
+ not heard of till after his death.</p>
+
+ <p>This appears, in the first place, from a manuscript account of the
+ Plot,<sup><a name="FN363A" id="FN363A"></a><a href="#FN363">[363]</a></sup> written
+ between the trial of the conspirators and that of Father Garnet, that is, within two
+ months of the former. The author sets himself expressly to prove that the priests must
+ have been cognizant of the design, for, he argues, Catholics, when they have anything
+ of the kind in hand, always consult their confessors about it, and it cannot be
+ supposed that on this occasion only did they omit to do so. In support of his
+ assertion, he quotes the instances of Parry, Babington, and Squires, but says nothing
+ of Bates. He mentions Greenway as undoubtedly one of the guilty priests, but only
+ because "his Majesty's proclamation so speaks it." Had the confession of Bates, as we
+ have it, been so prominently adduced at the trial, as the official narrative
+ represents, it is quite impossible that such a writer should have been content with
+ these feeble inferences.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Still more explicit is the evidence furnished by another MS. containing a report of
+ Father Garnet's trial.<sup><a name="FN364A" id="FN364A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN364">[364]</a></sup> In this the confession of Bates is cited, but precisely
+ without the significant passage of which we have spoken, as follows: "Catesby
+ afterwards discovered the project unto him; shortly after which discovery, Bates went
+ to Mass to Tesimond [Greenway], and there was confessed and had absolution."</p>
+
+ <p>Here, again, it is impossible to suppose that the all-important point was the one
+ omitted. It is clear, however, that the mention of a confession made to Greenway would
+ <i>prim&acirc; facie</i> afford a presumption that this particular matter had been
+ confessed, thus furnishing a foundation whereon to build; and, knowing as we do how
+ evidence was manipulated, it is quite conceivable that the copy now extant incorporates
+ the improved version thus suggested.</p>
+
+ <p>Such an explanation was unmistakably insinuated by Father Garnet, when, on his
+ trial, this evidence was urged against him; for he significantly replied that "Bates
+ was a dead man."<sup><a name="FN365A" id="FN365A"></a><a href="#FN365">[365]</a></sup>
+ Greenway himself afterwards, when beyond danger, denied on his salvation that Bates had
+ ever on any occasion mentioned to him any word concerning the Plot. It is still more
+ singular that Bates himself appears to have known nothing of his own declaration. He
+ had apparently said, in some examination of which no record remains, that he thought
+ Greenway "knew of the business." This statement he afterwards retracted as having been
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>elicited by a
+ vain hope of pardon, in a letter which is given in full by Father Gerard,<sup><a name=
+ "FN366A" id="FN366A"></a><a href="#FN366">[366]</a></sup> and of which Cecil himself
+ made mention at Garnet's trial.<sup><a name="FN367A" id="FN367A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN367">[367]</a></sup> But of the far more serious accusation we are considering he
+ said never a word.</p>
+
+ <p>There is, however, evidence still more notable. On the same day, December 4th, on
+ which Bates made his declaration, Cecil wrote a most important letter to one
+ Favat,<sup><a name="FN368A" id="FN368A"></a><a href="#FN368">[368]</a></sup> who had
+ been commissioned by King James to urge the necessity of obtaining evidence without
+ delay against the priests. This document is valuable as furnishing explicit testimony
+ that torture was employed with this object. "Most of the prisoners," says the
+ secretary, "have wilfully forsworn that the priests knew anything in particular, and
+ obstinately refuse to be accusers of them, yea, what torture soever they be put
+ to."</p>
+
+ <p>He goes on, however, to assure his Majesty that the desired object is now in sight,
+ particularly referring to a confession which can be none other than that of Bates, but
+ likewise cannot be that afterwards given to the world; for it is spoken of as affording
+ promise, but not yet satisfactory in its performance.</p>
+
+ <p>"You may tell his Majesty that if he please to read privately what this day we have
+ drawn from a voluntary and penitent examination, the point I am persuaded (but I am no
+ undertaker) shall be so well cleared, if he forbear to speak much of this but few days,
+ as we shall see all fall out to the end whereat his Majesty shooteth."</p>
+
+ <p>It seems clear, therefore, that the famous declaration <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>of Bates, like those of
+ Faukes and Winter, tends to discredit the story which in particulars so important rests
+ upon such evidence.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be farther observed that if the confession of Bates, as officially preserved,
+ were of any worth, it would have helped to raise other issues of supreme importance.
+ Thus its concluding paragraph runs as follows:</p>
+
+ <p>"He confesseth that he heard his master, Thomas Winter, and Guy Fawkes say
+ (presently upon the coming over of Fawkes) that they should have the sum of
+ five-and-twenty thousand pounds out of Spain."</p>
+
+ <p>This clearly means that the King of Spain was privy to the design, for a sum
+ equivalent to a quarter of a million of our money could not have been furnished by
+ private persons. The government, however, constantly assured the English ambassadors
+ abroad of the great satisfaction with which they found that no suspicion whatever
+ rested upon any foreign prince.</p>
+
+ <h4>iv. <i>Robert Winter.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>There are various traces of foul play in regard of this conspirator in particular,
+ which serve to shake our confidence as to the treatment of all. Robert Winter was the
+ eldest brother of Thomas, and held the family property, which was considerable. Whether
+ this motive, as Mr. Jardine suggests, or some other, prompted the step, certain it is
+ that the government in their published history falsified the documents in order to
+ incriminate him more deeply. Faukes, in the confession of Nov. 17th, mentioned Robert
+ Keyes <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>as
+ amongst the first seven of the conspirators who worked in the mine, and Robert Winter
+ as one of the five introduced at a later period. The names of these two were
+ deliberately interchanged in the published version, Robert Winter appearing as a worker
+ in the mine, and Keyes, who was an obscure man of no substance, among the gentlemen of
+ property whose resources were to have supported the subsequent rebellion. Moreover, in
+ the account of the same confession sent to Edmondes by Cecil three days before Faukes
+ signed it (<i>i.e.</i>, Nov. 14th), the same transposition occurs, Keyes being
+ explicitly described as one of those "who wrought not in the mine," although, as we
+ have seen, he is one of the three who alone make any mention of it.</p>
+
+ <p>Still more singular is another circumstance. About November 28th, Sir Edward Coke,
+ the attorney-general, drew up certain farther notes of questions to be put to various
+ prisoners.<sup><a name="FN369A" id="FN369A"></a><a href="#FN369">[369]</a></sup>
+ Amongst these we read: "Winter to be examined of his brother. For no man else can
+ accuse him." But a fortnight or so before this time the Secretary of State had
+ officially informed the ambassador in the Low Countries that Robert Winter was one of
+ those deepest in the treason, and, to say nothing of other evidence, a proclamation for
+ his apprehension had been issued on November 18th. Yet Coke's interrogatory seems to
+ imply that nothing had yet been established against him, and that he was not known to
+ the general body of the traitors as a fellow-conspirator.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h4>v. <i>Captain Hugh Owen, Father William Baldwin, and others.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>We have seen something of the extreme anxiety evinced by the English government to
+ incriminate a certain Hugh Owen, a Welsh soldier of fortune serving in Flanders under
+ the archduke.<sup><a name="FN370A" id="FN370A"></a><a href="#FN370">[370]</a></sup>
+ With him were joined Father Baldwin, the Jesuit, and Sir William Stanley, who, like
+ Owen, was in the archduke's service. The measures taken in regard of them are
+ exceedingly instructive if we would understand upon what sort of evidence the guilt of
+ obnoxious individuals was proclaimed as incontrovertible.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>No time was lost in commencing operations. On November 14th, three days before
+ Faukes signed the celebrated declaration which we have examined, and in which Owen was
+ not mentioned, the Earl of Salisbury wrote to Edmondes, ambassador at
+ Brussels,<sup><a name="FN371A" id="FN371A"></a><a href="#FN371">[371]</a></sup> that
+ Faukes had now directly accused Owen, whose extradition must therefore be demanded. In
+ proof of this assertion he inclosed a copy of the declaration, in which, however,
+ curiously enough, no mention of Owen's name occurs.<sup><a name="FN372A" id=
+ "FN372A"></a><a href="#FN372">[372]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Edmondes on his side was equally prompt. He at once laid the matter before the
+ archduke and his ministers, and on November 19th was able to write to Salisbury that
+ Owen and his secretary were apprehended and their papers and ciphers seized, and that,
+ "If there shall fall out matter to charge Owen with partaking in the treason, the
+ archduke will not refuse the king to yield him to be answerable to
+ justice,"<sup><a name="FN373A" id="FN373A"></a><a href="#FN373">[373]</a></sup> though
+ venturing to hope that he would be able to clear himself of so terrible an
+ accusation.</p>
+
+ <p>On "the last of November" the subject was pursued in an epistle from the King
+ himself to the "Archdukes,"<sup><a name="FN374A" id="FN374A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN374">[374]</a></sup> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg
+ 186]</a></span>in which the undoubted guilt of both Owen and Baldwin was roundly
+ affirmed.<sup><a name="FN375A" id="FN375A"></a><a href="#FN375">[375]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>On December 2nd, 1605, Salisbury wrote to Edmondes:<sup><a name="FN376A" id=
+ "FN376A"></a><a href="#FN376">[376]</a></sup> "I do warrant you to deliver upon the
+ forfeiture of my judgment in your opinion that it shall appear as evident as the sun in
+ the clearest day, that Baldwin by means of Owen, and Owen directly by himself, have
+ been particular conspirators."</p>
+
+ <p>In spite of this, the authorities in Flanders asked for proofs of the guilt of those
+ whom they were asked to give up. Wherefore Edmondes wrote (December 27th) to secure the
+ co-operation of Cornwallis, his fellow-ambassador, at Madrid. After declaring that Owen
+ and Baldwin were now found to have been "principal dealers in the late execrable
+ treason," with remarkable <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i> he thus continues:<sup><a name=
+ "FN377A" id="FN377A"></a><a href="#FN377">[377]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"I will not conceal from your lordship that they have been here so unrespective as
+ to desire for their better satisfaction to have a copy of the information against the
+ said persons to be sent over hither; which I fear will be very displeasing to his
+ Majesty to understand."</p>
+
+ <p>In January (1605-6), Salisbury sending, in the King's name, instructions to Sir E.
+ Coke as to the trial of the conspirators, concluded with this admonition:<sup><a name=
+ "FN378A" id="FN378A"></a><a href="#FN378">[378]</a></sup> "You must remember to lay
+ Owen as foul in this as you <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg
+ 187]</a></span>can," which certainly does not suggest that the case against him was
+ overwhelmingly strong.</p>
+
+ <p>After the execution of the traitors, an Act of Attainder passed by Parliament
+ included Owen amongst them.<sup><a name="FN379A" id="FN379A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN379">[379]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>The archdukes remaining unconvinced, another and very notable argument was brought
+ into play. On February 12th, 1605-6, Salisbury wrote to Edmondes:<sup><a name="FN380A"
+ id="FN380A"></a><a href="#FN380">[380]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"As for the particular depositions against Owen and Baldwin, which the archdukes
+ desire to have a sight of, you may let them know that it is a matter which can make but
+ little to the purpose, considering that his Majesty already upon his royal word hath
+ certified the archdukes of their guilt."</p>
+
+ <p>As to Owen's own papers which had been seized, the archduke assured the English
+ ambassador,<sup><a name="FN381A" id="FN381A"></a><a href="#FN381">[381]</a></sup> "that
+ if there had been anything to have been discovered out of the said papers touching the
+ late treason (as he was well assured of the contrary), he would not have failed to have
+ imparted the same to his Majesty."</p>
+
+ <p>At a later date the Spanish minister De Grenada wrote from Valladolid<sup><a name=
+ "FN382A" id="FN382A"></a><a href="#FN382">[382]</a></sup> that men could not be
+ delivered <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>up
+ on mere suspicion, which might prove groundless, but that the archduke had received
+ orders to sift the matter to the bottom, in order that justice might be done "very
+ fully."</p>
+
+ <p>About the same time President Richardot informed Edmondes<sup><a name="FN383A" id=
+ "FN383A"></a><a href="#FN383">[383]</a></sup> that Owen strenuously denied the charges
+ against him, "and that there is the more probability of his innocency for that his
+ papers having been carefully visited, there doth not appear anything in them to charge
+ him concerning the said matter."</p>
+
+ <p>On April 21st Salisbury informed Edmondes of a conference on the subject between the
+ king and the archduke's ambassador.<sup><a name="FN384A" id="FN384A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN384">[384]</a></sup> The latter declared that his master was ready to prosecute the
+ accused in his own courts if evidence was furnished him, but in reply King James
+ explained that this was impossible, and that he "was loth to send any papers or
+ accusations over, not knowing how they might be framed or construed there by the
+ formalities of their laws." He added that it was useless now to talk of evidence,
+ "seeing the wretch is already condemned by the public sentence of the whole Parliament,
+ which sentence the archdukes might see if they would." The ambassador thereupon asked
+ to have a copy, but was curtly told that it would presently be printed, when he could
+ buy one for twelve pence and send it to his masters, but that the king was not disposed
+ to make a present of it.</p>
+
+ <p>In these circumstances the archdukes determined to detain Owen no longer, and he was
+ presently discharged. The news of this proceeding produced a <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>remarkable change in the
+ tone of his accusers. On June 18th, the secretary wrote to Edmondes<sup><a name=
+ "FN385A" id="FN385A"></a><a href="#FN385">[385]</a></sup> that Owen's enlargement
+ "seemed to give too much credit to his innocency;" moreover, that "though his Majesty
+ showed no great disposition (for many considerations specified unto you) to send over
+ the papers and accusations against him, ... yet this proceeded not out of any
+ conscience of the invalidity of the proofs, but rather in respect that his process
+ being made here, and the caitiff condemned by the public sentence of the Parliament, it
+ would have come all to one issue, seeing they have proceeded when his Majesty left it
+ to themselves to do as they thought fit."</p>
+
+ <p>To reinforce this lucid explanation Salisbury sent six days later what had before
+ been refused, an abstract of "confessions against Owen," and a corrected copy of the
+ Act of Attainder. These documents deserve some consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>We have seen how much stress was laid upon the action of Parliament in regard of
+ Owen, although the Act of Attainder which it passed affords no information whatever to
+ assist our judgment of his case. In moving for this attainder, Sir E. Coke appeared at
+ the bar of the House of Commons (April 29th, 1606) to exhibit the evidence on which the
+ charge rested. His notes of this evidence, which are extant,<sup><a name="FN386A" id=
+ "FN386A"></a><a href="#FN386">[386]</a></sup> clearly show that the government
+ possessed no proofs at all beyond surmise and inference.<sup><a name="FN387A" id=
+ "FN387A"></a><a href="#FN387">[387]</a></sup> Three testimonies were cited <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>which were quite
+ inconsistent and mutually destructive: (1) An extract from a confession of Guy Faukes,
+ January 20th, 1605-6, declaring that he had himself initiated Owen in the Plot in May,
+ 1605. (2) An information of one Ralph Ratcliffe, to the effect that Owen and Baldwin
+ were busy with the Plot in April, 1604. (3) T. Winter's testimony&mdash;from his famous
+ confession of November 23rd, or 25th, 1605&mdash;that in the spring of 1604 Owen had
+ assisted him to secure the services of Faukes.</p>
+
+ <p>In Salisbury's letter to Edmondes, the first and the last of these alone were
+ cited,<sup><a name="FN388A" id="FN388A"></a><a href="#FN388">[388]</a></sup> probably
+ because it had by this time been perceived that Ratcliffe's evidence flatly
+ contradicted that of Faukes.</p>
+
+ <p>Winter's confession has already been discussed, and moreover affords no proof that
+ Owen was acquainted with the purpose for which the services of Faukes were required.
+ There remains the very circumstantial story of Faukes himself, which belongs to a
+ curious and interesting class of documents, containing matter of the highest
+ importance, whereof no trace, not even a copy, is to be found amongst the State Papers.
+ These comprise various confessions of Faukes, dated November 19th, 25th, and 30th,
+ 1605, and January 20th, 1605-6, all dealing with information of a sensational nature,
+ concerning which we learn nothing from the eleven depositions of the same conspirator
+ preserved in the Record Office.<sup><a name="FN389A" id="FN389A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN389">[389]</a></sup> For our knowledge of these <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>mysterious documents we have to depend on
+ transcripts of portions of them among the Tanner MSS. in the Bodleian Library, on
+ fragmentary Latin versions in the <i>Antilogia</i> of Bishop Abbot, and on the extract
+ cited from the last amongst them by Sir Edward Coke, which exactly agrees with that
+ sent by Salisbury to Edmondes, as above mentioned.</p>
+
+ <p>It cannot escape notice that although these versions all profess to be taken from
+ the originals under Faukes' hand, they are so utterly different as to preclude the
+ belief that they have been copied from the same documents.<sup><a name="FN390A" id=
+ "FN390A"></a><a href="#FN390">[390]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>It must farther be observed that we hear nothing of important matters contained in
+ these confessions till the supposed author and his confederates were all dead, whereas
+ these are such as would certainly have been <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193"
+ id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>produced on their trial had this been
+ possible.<sup><a name="FN391A" id="FN391A"></a><a href="#FN391">[391]</a></sup> Some of
+ the evidence thus afforded is, in fact, too good, for the Government's purpose, to be
+ true, for if authentic, it would have secured results which, though much desired, were
+ never obtained. In particular it would have established beyond question the guilt of
+ the Jesuits abroad, and especially of Father Baldwin.<sup><a name="FN392A" id=
+ "FN392A"></a><a href="#FN392">[392]</a></sup> It is this Father, however, whose case
+ conclusively proves the utter worthlessness of the evidence. Having been proclaimed and
+ branded by the English government <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id=
+ "Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>as a convicted traitor, he, five years later, fell into
+ their hands, being delivered up, in 1610, by their ally the Elector Palatine. He was at
+ once thrown into the Tower, where he was frequently and rigorously examined, it is said
+ even on the rack.<sup><a name="FN393A" id="FN393A"></a><a href="#FN393">[393]</a></sup>
+ After a confinement of eight years he was discharged "with honour," his innocence being
+ attested by the respect with which he was treated by men of all parties.<sup><a name=
+ "FN394A" id="FN394A"></a><a href="#FN394">[394]</a></sup> In view of this
+ unquestionable acquittal the famous proofs of his criminality, though certified on the
+ royal word of King James himself, forfeit all claim to consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>A word may be added concerning Father Cresswell, an English Jesuit residing in
+ Spain. He, too, was assumed to have been deeply implicated in this and other treasons.
+ In November, 1605, Cecil included his name in a list of traitors against whom proofs
+ were to be procured.<sup><a name="FN395A" id="FN395A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN395">[395]</a></sup> It was even asserted that at the time of the intended
+ explosion he came over to England "to bear his part with the rest of his Society in a
+ victorial song of thanksgiving."<sup><a name="FN396A" id="FN396A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN396">[396]</a></sup> He was, moreover, loudly denounced as the principal agent in
+ the notorious Spanish Treason.</p>
+
+ <p>After all this it is somewhat surprising to find Sir Charles Cornwallis, the English
+ Ambassador, while the excitement of the Powder Plot was at its height, testifying in
+ the most cordial terms to his esteem for the said Cresswell. The latter having been
+ called to Rome by his superiors, Cornwallis (December <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>23rd, N.S. 1605,) addressed to him the
+ following letter.<sup><a name="FN397A" id="FN397A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN397">[397]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"Sir, although in matter of religion well you know that there are many discords
+ between us, yet sure in your duty and loyalty to my King and Country I find in you so
+ good a concordance I cannot but much reverence and love you, and wish you all the
+ happiness that a man of your sort upon the earth can desire.</p>
+
+ <p>"Much am I (I assure you) grieved at your departure, and the more that I was put in
+ so good hope that your journey should have been stayed. The time of the year unpleasant
+ to travel in, your body, as I think, not much accustomed to journeys of so great
+ length, and the great good you did here to your poor countrymen (which now they want)
+ are great motives to make your friends to wish your will in that voyage had been
+ broken.</p>
+
+ <p>"If it be not, I shall not believe in words, for many here do greatly desire you for
+ causes spiritual, and some for temporal. In the latter number am I, who, not affecting
+ your spiritualities (for that these in you abound to superfluity), do much reverence
+ and respect your temporal abilities, as wherein I acknowledge much wisdom, temper, and
+ sincerity. So no friends you have shall ever more desire good unto you than myself. And
+ therefore I wish I were able to make so good demonstration as willingly I would that I
+ ever will here and in all places in this world rest</p>
+
+ <p class="right">"Your very assured loving friend,</p>
+
+ <p class="right">"<span class="smcap">Ch. Co.</span>"</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>About the same time, in an undated letter to Lord Salisbury,<sup><a name="FN398A"
+ id="FN398A"></a><a href="#FN398">[398]</a></sup> Cornwallis again expresses his regret
+ on account of the removal of Cresswell from Spain.</p>
+
+ <h4>vi. <i>Other Documents.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>It is impossible to analyze in detail the evidence supplied by the several
+ conspirators after their capture, or to examine the endless inconsistencies and
+ contradictions with which it abounds. One or two points must, however, be
+ indicated.</p>
+
+ <p>1. As we have seen, it is clear that at the beginning an effort was made to invest
+ the Plot with a far wider political significance than was afterwards attempted, and to
+ introduce elements which were soon quietly laid aside. In the interrogatories prepared
+ by Sir E. Coke and Chief Justice Popham, we find it suggested that the death of the
+ Earl of Salisbury was a main feature of the scheme, "absolutely agreed upon" among the
+ conspirators. Also that the titular Earl of Westmoreland, the titular Lord Dacre, the
+ Earl of Northumberland, Sir Walter Raleigh, and others were mixed up in the
+ business.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor were such endeavours altogether fruitless, for, supposing the testimony extorted
+ from the prisoners to be worthy of credit, information was obtained altogether changing
+ the character and complexion of the design. This was, however, presently buried in
+ oblivion and treated as of no moment whatever.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus in Sir Everard Digby's declaration of Nov. 23rd,<sup><a name="FN399A" id=
+ "FN399A"></a><a href="#FN399">[399]</a></sup> we find him testifying that the Earls of
+ Westmoreland <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg
+ 197]</a></span>and Derby,<sup><a name="FN400A" id="FN400A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN400">[400]</a></sup> were to have been sent to raise forces in the north. Faukes,
+ in the famous confession which we have so fully discussed, was made to say "They meant
+ also to have sent for the prisoners in the Tower to have come to them, of whom
+ particularly they had some consultation," and although this important clause was
+ omitted from the finished version finally adopted, it appears in that of Nov. 14th,
+ sent by Cecil to the ambassador at Brussels. Again, in his examination of November 9th,
+ famous for the ghastly evidence of torture afforded by his signature, we find Faukes
+ declaring, "He confesseth also that there was speech amongst them to draw Sir Walter
+ Rawley to take part with them, being one that might stand them in good stead, <i>as
+ others in like sort were named</i>."<sup><a name="FN401A" id="FN401A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN401">[401]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>With regard to Raleigh it must be remembered that he was in a very special manner
+ obnoxious to Salisbury, who, however, was at great pains to disguise his hostility. On
+ occasion of Sir Walter's trial, in 1603, he vehemently protested that it was a great
+ grief to him to have to pronounce against one whom he had hitherto loved.<sup><a name=
+ "FN402A" id="FN402A"></a><a href="#FN402">[402]</a></sup> But two years earlier, in his
+ secret correspondence with James, he had not only described <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>Raleigh to the future
+ king as one of the diabolical triplicity hatching cockatrice eggs, but had solemnly
+ protested that if he feigned friendship for such a wretch, it was only with the purpose
+ of drawing him on to discover his real nature.<sup><a name="FN403A" id=
+ "FN403A"></a><a href="#FN403">[403]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Even more worthy of notice is the shameless manner in which evidence was falsified.
+ That produced in court consisted entirely of the written depositions of the prisoners
+ themselves, and of those who had been similarly examined. It was, however, carefully
+ manipulated before it was read; all that told in favour of those whose conviction was
+ desired being omitted, and only so much retained as would tell against them. On this
+ subject Mr. Jardine well remarks:<sup><a name="FN404A" id="FN404A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN404">[404]</a></sup> "This mode of dealing with the admissions of an accused person
+ is pure and unmixed injustice; it is in truth a forgery of evidence; for when a
+ qualified statement is made, the suppression of the qualification is no less a forgery
+ than if the whole statement had been fabricated."</p>
+
+ <p>It will be sufficient to cite one notorious and compendious <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>example. In regard of the
+ oath of secrecy taken by the conspirators, Faukes (Nov. 9th, 1605) and Thomas Winter
+ (Jan. 9th, 1605-6) related how they administered it to one another, "in a chamber," to
+ quote Winter, "where no other body was," and afterwards proceeded to another chamber
+ where they heard Mass and received Communion at the hands of Father
+ Gerard.<sup><a name="FN405A" id="FN405A"></a><a href="#FN405">[405]</a></sup> Both
+ witnesses, however, emphatically declared that the Father knew nothing of the oath that
+ had been taken, or of the purpose of the associates.<span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image21" id="image21"></a><img src="images/image21.png" width="600" height=
+ "309" alt="FROM FAUKES' CONFESSION OF NOVEMBER 9, 1605." title="" /> <span class=
+ "caption"><span class="smcap">from faukes' confession of november 9,
+ 1605.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Such testimony in favour of one whom they were anxious above all things to
+ incriminate, the government would not allow to appear. Accordingly, Sir E. Coke,
+ preparing the documents to be used in court as evidence, marked off the exculpatory
+ passages, with directions that they were not to be read.<sup><a name="FN406A" id=
+ "FN406A"></a><a href="#FN406">[406]</a></sup> Having thus suppressed the passage which
+ declared that the Jesuit was unaware of the conspirators' purpose, and of their oath,
+ Coke went on to inform the jury, in his speech, "This oath was by Gerard the Jesuit
+ given to Catesby, Percy, Christopher Wright, and Thomas Winter, and by Greenwell
+ [Greenway] the Jesuit to Bates at another time, and so to the rest."<sup><a name=
+ "FN407A" id="FN407A"></a><a href="#FN407">[407]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>3. Neither must it be forgotten that even apart from these manifest instances of
+ tampering, the confessions themselves, obtained in such circumstances, are open to much
+ suspicion. In an intercepted letter to Father Baldwin, of whom we have heard, Father
+ Schondonck, another Jesuit, then rector of St. Omers, speaks thus:<sup><a name="FN408A"
+ id="FN408A"></a><a href="#FN408">[408]</a></sup> "I much rejoice that, as I hear, there
+ is no confession produced, by which, either in court or at the place of execution, any
+ of our society is accused of so abominable a crime. This I consider a point of prime
+ importance. <i>Of secret confessions, or those extorted by violence or torture, less
+ account must be made; for we have many examples whereby the dishonesty of our enemies
+ in such matters has been fully displayed.</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>Father John Gerard in his Autobiography<sup><a name="FN409A" id=
+ "FN409A"></a><a href="#FN409">[409]</a></sup> relates an experience of his own which
+ illustrates the methods employed to procure evidence such as was required. <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>When, in Queen
+ Elizabeth's time, he had himself been taken and thrown into prison, the notorious
+ Topcliffe, the priest-hunter, endeavoured to force him into an acknowledgment of
+ various matters of a treasonable character. Father Gerard undertook to write what he
+ had to say on the subject, and proceeded to set down an explicit denial of what his
+ questioner suggested. What followed he thus relates.<sup><a name="FN410A" id=
+ "FN410A"></a><a href="#FN410">[410]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"While I was writing this, the old man waxed wroth. He shook with passion, and would
+ fain have snatched the paper from me."</p>
+
+ <p>"'If you don't want me to write the truth,' said I, 'I'll not write at all.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"'Nay,' quoth he, 'write so and so, and I'll copy out what you have written.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"'I shall write what I please,' I answered, 'and not what <i>you</i> please. Show
+ what I have written to the Council, for I shall add nothing but my name.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Then I signed so near the writing, that nothing could be put in between.</i> The
+ hot-tempered man, seeing himself disappointed, broke out into threats and blasphemies:
+ 'I'll get you into my power, and hang you in the air, and show you no mercy: and then I
+ shall see what God will rescue you out of my hands.'"</p>
+
+ <p>It was not by Catholics alone that allegations of this sort were advanced. Sir
+ Anthony Weldon tells us<sup><a name="FN411A" id="FN411A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN411">[411]</a></sup> that on the trial of Raleigh and Cobham, the latter protested
+ that he had never made the declaration attributed to him incriminating Raleigh. "That
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>villain
+ Wade,"<sup><a name="FN412A" id="FN412A"></a><a href="#FN412">[412]</a></sup> said he,
+ "did often solicit me, and, not prevailing, got me, by a trick, to write my name on a
+ piece of white paper, which I, thinking nothing, did; so that if any charge came under
+ my hand, it was forged by that villain Wade, by writing something above my hand,
+ without my consent or knowledge."</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, there exists undoubted evidence that the king's chief minister availed
+ himself upon occasion of the services of such as could counterfeit handwriting and
+ forge evidence against suspected persons. One Arthur Gregory<sup><a name="FN413A" id=
+ "FN413A"></a><a href="#FN413">[413]</a></sup> appears to have been thus employed, and
+ he subsequently wrote to Salisbury reminding him of what he had done.<sup><a name=
+ "FN414A" id="FN414A"></a><a href="#FN414">[414]</a></sup> After acknowledging that he
+ owes his life to the secretary who knows how to appreciate "an honest desire in respect
+ of his Majesty's public service," Gregory thus continues:</p>
+
+ <p>"Your Lordship hath had a present trial of that which none but myself hath done
+ before, <i>to write in another man's hand</i>, and, discovering the secret writing
+ being in blank, to abuse a most cunning villain in his own subtlety, leaving the same
+ at last in blank again, wherein although there be difficulty their answers show they
+ have no suspicion."</p>
+
+ <p>This the calendarer of State Papers believes to refer to the case of Father Garnet,
+ and it is certain from <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg
+ 204]</a></span>Gregory's own letter that at one time he held a post in the Tower. Is it
+ not possible that an explanation may here be found of the strange circumstance, that
+ perhaps the most important of Father Garnet's examinations<sup><a name="FN415A" id=
+ "FN415A"></a><a href="#FN415">[415]</a></sup> bears an endorsement, "This was forbydden
+ by the King to be given in evidence"?</p>
+
+ <p>Gregory's letter, of which we have been speaking, has appended to it an instructive
+ postscript:</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Lieutenant expecteth something to be written in the blank leaf of a Latin
+ Bible, which is pasted in already for the purpose. I will attend it, and whatsoever
+ else cometh."<sup><a name="FN416A" id="FN416A"></a><a href="#FN416">[416]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <h4>vii. <i>Catholic Testimony.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>It will not improbably be urged that the government history is confirmed in all
+ essential particulars by authorities to whom no exception can be taken, namely,
+ contemporary Catholic writers, and especially the Jesuits Gerard and Greenway, whose
+ narratives of the conspiracy corroborate every detail concerning which doubts have been
+ insinuated.</p>
+
+ <p>This argument is undoubtedly deserving of all consideration, but upon examination
+ appears to lose much of its force. If the narratives in question agree with that
+ furnished by the government, it is because they are based almost entirely upon it, and
+ upon those published confessions of Winter and Faukes with which we are familiar.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>On this point Father Gerard is very explicit:<sup><a name="FN417A" id=
+ "FN417A"></a><a href="#FN417">[417]</a></sup> "Out of [Mr. Thomas Winter's]
+ examination, with the others that were made in the time of their imprisonment, I must
+ gather and set down all that is to be said or collected of their purposes and
+ proceedings in this heady enterprize. For that, as I have said, they kept it so wholly
+ secret from all men, that until their flight and apprehension it was not known to any
+ that such a matter was in hand, and then there could none have access to them to learn
+ the particulars. But we must be contented with that which some of those that lived to
+ be examined, did therein deliver. Only for that some of their servants that were up in
+ arms with them in the country did afterwards escape, somewhat might be learned by them
+ of their carriage in their last extremities, and some such words as they then uttered,
+ whereby their mind in the whole matter is something the more opened."</p>
+
+ <p>Elsewhere he writes, exhibiting more confidence in government documents than we can
+ feel:<sup><a name="FN418A" id="FN418A"></a><a href="#FN418">[418]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"[The prisoners'] examinations did all agree in all material points, and therefore
+ two only were published in print, containing the substance of the rest. And indeed
+ [this is] the sum of that which I have been able to say in this narration touching
+ either their first intentions or the names or number of the conspirators, or concerning
+ the course they took to keep the matter so absolutely secret, or, finally, touching the
+ manner of their beginning and proceeding in the whole matter; for that&mdash;as I noted
+ before&mdash;it being kept a vowed secret in the heads and hearts of so few, and those
+ also <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg
+ 206]</a></span>afterwards apprehended before they could have means to declare the
+ particulars in any private manner, therefore no more can be known of the matter or
+ manner of this tragedy than is found or gathered out of their examinations."</p>
+
+ <p>As for Greenway, it should not be forgotten that for the most part he confined
+ himself to translating Gerard's narrative from English into Italian, though he
+ supplemented it occasionally with items furnished by his own experience as to the
+ character and general conduct of the conspirators on previous occasions, or during
+ their last desperate rally. Of this he was able to speak with more authority, as he not
+ only chanced to be in the immediate neighbourhood, but actually visited them at
+ Huddington House (the seat of Robert Winter) on November 6th, being summoned thither by
+ Catesby through his servant Bates.<sup><a name="FN419A" id="FN419A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN419">[419]</a></sup> Greenway, like Gerard, constantly refers to the published
+ confessions of Winter and Faukes as the sources of his information.</p>
+
+ <p>It may here be observed that the practical identity <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>of the narratives of these two fathers was
+ unknown to Mr. Jardine, who having seen only that of Father Greenway, and believing it
+ to be an original work, founded upon this erroneous assumption an argument which loses
+ its force when we learn the real author to have been Gerard. Mr. Jardine maintains that
+ the narrator must, from internal evidence, have been an active and zealous member of
+ the conspiracy, "approving, promoting and encouraging it with the utmost
+ enthusiasm."<sup><a name="FN420A" id="FN420A"></a><a href="#FN420">[420]</a></sup> It
+ so happens, however, that the real author, Father Gerard, is just the one of the
+ incriminated Jesuits whose innocence is held by historians certainly not partial to his
+ Order, to be beyond question. Mr. Gardiner considers<sup><a name="FN421A" id=
+ "FN421A"></a><a href="#FN421">[421]</a></sup> that there is "strong reason" to believe
+ him not to have been acquainted with the Plot. Dr. Jessopp is still more emphatic, and
+ declares<sup><a name="FN422A" id="FN422A"></a><a href="#FN422">[422]</a></sup>
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>that it is
+ impossible for any candid reader of all the evidence to doubt that Gerard must be
+ exonerated.</p>
+
+ <p>What has been said of Gerard and Greenway may serve also for Father Garnet, who in
+ his various examinations and other utterances assumes the truth of the government
+ story, for neither had he materials to go upon except those officially supplied.</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p>It is obvious that the conclusion to be drawn from the above considerations is
+ chiefly negative. That the conspirators embarked on a plot against the state, is, of
+ course unquestionable. What was the precise nature of that plot is by no means clear,
+ and still less what were the exact circumstances of its initiation and its collapse.
+ This only appears to be certain, that things did not happen as they were officially
+ related, while the elaborate care expended on the falsification of the story seems to
+ indicate that the true version would not have served the purposes to which that story
+ was actually put.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN332" id="FN332"></a><a href="#FN332A">[332]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 235. Mr. Jardine is here speaking expressly of the trial
+ of Father Garnet, as reported in the book, but evidently intends his observations to
+ extend to that of the conspirators as well.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN333" id="FN333"></a><a href="#FN333A">[333]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> 105.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN334" id="FN334"></a><a href="#FN334A">[334]</a></sup>
+ <i>True and Perfect Relation</i>, Introduction.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN335" id="FN335"></a><a href="#FN335A">[335]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 113.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN336" id="FN336"></a><a href="#FN336A">[336]</a></sup>
+ The contemporary, Hawarde (<i>Les Reportes del Cases in Camera Stellata</i>) gives a
+ report of the trial of the conspirators, under the curious title "<i>Al le
+ arraignemente del Traitors por le grande treason of blowinge up the Parliamente
+ Howse</i>," which, although evidently based upon the official account, differs in two
+ remarkable particulars. In the first place it gives a different list of the
+ commissioners by whom the trial was conducted, omitting Justice Warburton, and
+ including instead, Lord Chief Baron Flemming, Justices Yelverton and Williams, and
+ Baron Saville. Moreover, Hawarde says that the king and queen "were both there in
+ pryvate," an important circumstance, of which the <i>True and Perfect Relation</i>
+ says nothing.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN337" id="FN337"></a><a href="#FN337A">[337]</a></sup>
+ Viz., on January 30th and 31st: not January 31st and February 1st, as Mr. Gardiner
+ has it.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN338" id="FN338"></a><a href="#FN338A">[338]</a></sup>
+ Father Garnet clearly believed that this advantage was used unscrupulously against
+ him, for when certain evidence attributed to Bates was cited, he replied that "Bates
+ was a dead man," and would testify otherwise if he were alive. (Brit. Mus. MSS. Add.
+ 21203. <i>Foley's Records</i>, iv. p. 188.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN339" id="FN339"></a><a href="#FN339A">[339]</a></sup>
+ It is frequently said that the search at Hendlip was undertaken not for Garnet but
+ for Oldcorne, whose presence there was known by the confession of Humphrey Littleton.
+ But this confession was made several days after the search had been begun, and the
+ directions for it given by Cecil to the sheriff, Sir H. Bromley, clearly indicate
+ that he had in view some capture of prime importance. (See Gardiner's <i>History</i>,
+ i. 271, and Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, f. 693.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN340" id="FN340"></a><a href="#FN340A">[340]</a></sup>
+ Viz.: Nottingham, Suffolk, Worcester, Devonshire, Northampton, Salisbury, Marr,
+ Dunbar, Popham, Coke, and Waad.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN341" id="FN341"></a><a href="#FN341A">[341]</a></sup>
+ In the "original," however, there are some passages which do not appear in the copy,
+ notably one in which Lord Monteagle is mentioned. It appears, therefore, that the
+ "copy" is not the first version produced, but has been edited from another still
+ earlier.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN342" id="FN342"></a><a href="#FN342A">[342]</a></sup>
+ That this is not a slip of the pen is evidenced by the fact that Winter first wrote
+ 23, and then corrected it to 25.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN343" id="FN343"></a><a href="#FN343A">[343]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, 84.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN344" id="FN344"></a><a href="#FN344A">[344]</a></sup>
+ The document is headed in the printed version: "Thomas Winter's Confession, taken the
+ Twenty-third of November, 1605, in the Presence of the Counsellors, whose Names are
+ underwritten."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN345" id="FN345"></a><a href="#FN345A">[345]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 49.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN346" id="FN346"></a><a href="#FN346A">[346]</a></sup>
+ The list stands thus: "L. Admyrall&mdash;L. Chamberlayn&mdash;Erle of
+ Devonshire&mdash;Erle of Northampton&mdash;Erle of Salisbury&mdash;Erle of
+ Marr&mdash;L. Cheif Justice&mdash;attended by Mr. Attorney Generall."</p>
+
+ <p>The Lord Admiral was the Earl of Nottingham, better known as Lord Howard of
+ Effingham, the commander-in-chief against the Spanish Armada. There appears to be no
+ foundation for the supposition that he was a Catholic. Northampton (Henry Howard) was
+ a professing Catholic. The chamberlain was the Earl of Suffolk, the Chief Justice,
+ Popham.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN347" id="FN347"></a><a href="#FN347A">[347]</a></sup>
+ The <i>Calendar of State Papers</i> assigns this document, like the other, to the
+ 8th, a mistake not easy to understand, for not only is the date clearly written, but
+ the printed version in the "King's Book" gives it correctly.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN348" id="FN348"></a><a href="#FN348A">[348]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 101.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN349" id="FN349"></a><a href="#FN349A">[349]</a></sup>
+ This was originally written "deposition;" the title is altered in Coke's hand, who
+ also added the words, "taken the 17 of Nov. 1605: acknowledged before the Lords
+ Commissioners."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN350" id="FN350"></a><a href="#FN350A">[350]</a></sup>
+ Thus the <i>examination</i> of November 8th begins as follows: "He confesseth that a
+ Practise in generall was first broken unto him, agaynst his Majesty, for the
+ Catholique cause, and not invented, or propounded by himself: and this was first
+ propounded unto him, about Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the seas, in the Low
+ Countreyes, by an English Lay-man, and that English man came over with him in his
+ company, into England, and they tow and three more were the first five, mencioned in
+ the former examination," etc.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>declaration</i> of November 17th opens: "I confesse that a practise in
+ general was first broken unto me against his Majesty, for releife of the Catholique
+ cause, and not invented or propounded by myself. And this was first propounded unto
+ me about Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the Seas, in the Low Countries of the
+ Archdukes obeysance, by Thomas Winter, who came thereupon with me into England, and
+ there wee imparted our purpose to three other Englishmen more, namely Rob<sup>t</sup>
+ Catesby, Tho<sup>s</sup> Percy, and John Wright, who all five consulting together,"
+ etc. See both documents in full, Appendix N.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN351" id="FN351"></a><a href="#FN351A">[351]</a></sup>
+ Thus, in the confession of November 8th, we read as follows: "He confesseth, that it
+ was resolved amonge them, that the same day that this detestable act should have been
+ performed, the same day [<i>sic</i>] should other of their confederacye have
+ surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth and presently have proclaimed her queen
+ [to which purpose a Proclamation was drawne, as well to avow and justifye the Action,
+ as to have protested against the Union, and in noe sort to have meddled with Religion
+ therein. And would have protested all soe against all strangers,] and this
+ Proclamation should have been made in the name of the Lady Elizabeth."</p>
+
+ <p>The portion within brackets is cancelled, and the following substituted: "He
+ confesseth that if their purpose had taken effect, untill they had power enough, they
+ would not have avowed the deed to be theirs; but if their power ... had been
+ sufficient, they thereafter would have taken it upon them."</p>
+
+ <p>The corresponding portion of the declaration of November 17th runs thus: "It was
+ further resolved amongst us, that the same day that this action should have been
+ performed, some other of our confederates should have surprised the person of the L.
+ Elizabeth, the King's eldest daughter, ... and presently proclaimed her for Queene,
+ having a <i>project</i> of a Proclamation ready for the purpose, wherein we made no
+ mention of altering of Religion, nor would have avowed the deed to be ours, untill we
+ should have had power enough to make our partie good, and then we would have avowed
+ both."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN352" id="FN352"></a><a href="#FN352A">[352]</a></sup>
+ The printed version of Fauke's declaration is headed: "The true Copy of the
+ Deposition of Guido Fawkes, taken in the Presence of the Counsellors, whose Names are
+ under written."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN353" id="FN353"></a><a href="#FN353A">[353]</a></sup>
+ See Appendix K., <i>The Use of Torture</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN354" id="FN354"></a><a href="#FN354A">[354]</a></sup>
+ In the <i>Calendar of State Papers</i> he is continually styled "Father Owen," or
+ "Owen the Jesuit," without warrant in the original documents. That he was a soldier
+ and not a priest there is no doubt.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN355" id="FN355"></a><a href="#FN355A">[355]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvi. 38.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN356" id="FN356"></a><a href="#FN356A">[356]</a></sup>
+ E.g. <i>Item.</i> Where you have confessed that it was discoursed between you that
+ the prisoners in the Tower should have had intelligence after the act done, declare
+ the particularity of that discourse, and whether some prisoners in the Tower should
+ not have been called to office or place, or have been employed, etc.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Item.</i> Where you have confessed that the L. Elizabeth should have succeeded,
+ and that she should have been brought up as a Catholic, and married to an English
+ Catholic. (1) Who should have had the government of her? (2) Who was nominated to be
+ the fittest to have married her?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Item.</i> Was it not resolved amongst you that after the act done you would
+ have taken the Tower, or any other place of strength, and meant you not to have taken
+ the spoil of London, and whom should you have instantly proclaimed?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Item.</i> By what priests or Jesuits were you resolved that it was godly and
+ lawful to execute the act?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Item.</i> Whether was it not resolved that if it were discovered Catesby and
+ others should have killed the king coming from Royston?</p>
+
+ <p><i>Item.</i> Were not Edw. Neville, calling himself Earl of Westmorland, Mr.
+ Dacre, calling himself Lord Dacre, or any of the Nobility, privy to it? How many of
+ the Nobility have you known at Mass? What persons in the Tower were named to be
+ partakers with you?</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN357" id="FN357"></a><a href="#FN357A">[357]</a></sup>
+ To Edmondes, November 14th, 1605. (Stowe MSS.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN358" id="FN358"></a><a href="#FN358A">[358]</a></sup>
+ <i>Viz., The True and Perfect Relation.</i> The confession of Bates is mentioned but
+ not textually quoted. It is in the "King's Book" that the confessions of Winter and
+ Faukes are given.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN359" id="FN359"></a><a href="#FN359A">[359]</a></sup>
+ "The great object of the government now was to obtain evidence against the
+ priests."&mdash;Gardiner, <i>History of England</i>, i. 267.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN360" id="FN360"></a><a href="#FN360A">[360]</a></sup>
+ See Rokewood's examination, December 2nd, 1605. (<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 136.) In
+ the confession of Keyes, November 30th, 1605 (<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 126) we
+ read: "He sayth that the reason that he revealed not the project to his ghostly
+ father was for that Catesby told him that he had good warrant and authoritie that it
+ might safely and with good conscience be done," etc.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN361" id="FN361"></a><a href="#FN361A">[361]</a></sup>
+ <i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 145.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN362" id="FN362"></a><a href="#FN362A">[362]</a></sup>
+ This is shown by a mark (&sect;) in the margin opposite the important passage,
+ attention being called to this by the same mark, and the name "Greenway" in the
+ endorsement.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN363" id="FN363"></a><a href="#FN363A">[363]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Mus., Harleian 360, f. 96.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN364" id="FN364"></a><a href="#FN364A">[364]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Mus., Harleian 360, f. 109, etc. The reporter had clearly been present.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN365" id="FN365"></a><a href="#FN365A">[365]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Mus., MSS. Add. 21, 203; Plut. ciii. F. Printed by Foley, <i>Records</i>, iv.
+ 164 <i>seq.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN366" id="FN366"></a><a href="#FN366A">[366]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narrative</i>, p. 210.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN367" id="FN367"></a><a href="#FN367A">[367]</a></sup>
+ Plut. ciii. F. &sect; 39.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN368" id="FN368"></a><a href="#FN368A">[368]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, &sect; 625.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN369" id="FN369"></a><a href="#FN369A">[369]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvi. 116.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN370" id="FN370"></a><a href="#FN370A">[370]</a></sup>
+ In the <i>Calendar of State Papers</i>, Mrs. Everett Green, as has been said, quite
+ gratuitously and without warrant from the original documents, uniformly describes him
+ as "Father Owen," or "Owen the Jesuit." Mr. Gardiner (<i>Hist.</i> i. 242) has been
+ led into the same error.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not impossible that Owen had some knowledge of the conspiracy, though the
+ course adopted by his enemies seems to afford strong presumption to the contrary. It
+ must, moreover, be remembered that, as Father Gerard tells us, he and others
+ similarly accused, vehemently protested against the imputation, while in his case in
+ particular we have some evidence to the same effect. Thomas Phelippes, the
+ "Decipherer," of whom we have already heard, was on terms of close intimacy with
+ Owen, and in December, 1605, wrote to him about the Plot in terms which certainly
+ appear to imply a strong conviction that his friend had nothing to do with it.</p>
+
+ <p>"There hath been and yet is still great paynes taken to search to the bottom of
+ the late damnable conspiracy. The Parliamente hit seemes shall not be troubled with
+ any extraordinarie course for their exemplarye punishment, as was supposed upon the
+ Kinges speeche, but onlye with their attaynder, the more is the pitye I
+ saye."&mdash;<i>Dom. James I.</i> xvii. 62.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN371" id="FN371"></a><a href="#FN371A">[371]</a></sup>
+ Stowe MSS. 168, 54.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN372" id="FN372"></a><a href="#FN372A">[372]</a></sup>
+ This version of the deposition is interesting as being a form intermediate between
+ the draft of November 8th and the finished document of November 17th. The passages
+ cancelled in the former are simply omitted without any attempt to complete the sense
+ of the passages in which they occurred. Those "ticked off" are retained.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN373" id="FN373"></a><a href="#FN373A">[373]</a></sup>
+ Stowe MSS. 168, 58.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN374" id="FN374"></a><a href="#FN374A">[374]</a></sup>
+ <i>I.e.</i>, the Archduke Albert, and his consort the Infanta, daughter of Philip
+ II., who, as governors of the Low Countries, were usually so designated.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN375" id="FN375"></a><a href="#FN375A">[375]</a></sup>
+ "Nous avons bien voulu aussy par ces presentes, nous mesmes vous asseurer que ce
+ qu'il [Edmondes] vous en a desja declar&eacute;, est fond&eacute; sur tout
+ verit&eacute;; et vous dire en oultre, que ces meschantes Creatures d'Owen et
+ Baldouin, gens de mesme farine, ont eu aussi leur part en particulier a ceste
+ malheureuse conspiration de Pouldre."&mdash;<i>Phillipps' MS.</i> 6297, f. 129.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN376" id="FN376"></a><a href="#FN376A">[376]</a></sup>
+ Stowe, 168, 65.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN377" id="FN377"></a><a href="#FN377A">[377]</a></sup>
+ Winwood, ii. 183.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN378" id="FN378"></a><a href="#FN378A">[378]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xix. 94.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN379" id="FN379"></a><a href="#FN379A">[379]</a></sup>
+ 3<sup>o</sup> <i>Jac. I.</i> c. 3. On the 21st of June following, Salisbury forwarded
+ to Edmondes a fresh copy of this Act, "because in the former there was a great error
+ committed in the printing." (Phillipps, f. 157.) It would be highly interesting to
+ know what the first version was. In that now extant it is only said regarding Owen,
+ that inasmuch as he obstinately keeps beyond the seas, he cannot be arraigned, nor
+ can evidence and proofs be produced against him. (<i>Statutes at large.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN380" id="FN380"></a><a href="#FN380A">[380]</a></sup>
+ Stowe, 168, 76; Phillipps, f. 141.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN381" id="FN381"></a><a href="#FN381A">[381]</a></sup>
+ Edmondes to Salisbury, January 23rd, 1605(6). P.R.O., Flanders, 38.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN382" id="FN382"></a><a href="#FN382A">[382]</a></sup>
+ April 19th, 1606, <i>ibid.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN383" id="FN383"></a><a href="#FN383A">[383]</a></sup>
+ Edmondes to Salisbury, April 5th, 1606, <i>ibid.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN384" id="FN384"></a><a href="#FN384A">[384]</a></sup>
+ Phillipps, f. 150.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN385" id="FN385"></a><a href="#FN385A">[385]</a></sup>
+ Phillipps, f. 152.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN386" id="FN386"></a><a href="#FN386A">[386]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xx. 52.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN387" id="FN387"></a><a href="#FN387A">[387]</a></sup>
+ This is obvious from a marginal note in Coke's own hand, arguing that Owen must be
+ guilty in this instance, as he has been guilty on former occasions, and "Qui semel
+ malus est semper pr&aelig;sumitur esse malus in eodem genere mali."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN388" id="FN388"></a><a href="#FN388A">[388]</a></sup>
+ It will be noticed that the confession of Faukes cited against Owen is dated two
+ months after he had first been declared to be proved guilty by Faukes' testimony.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN389" id="FN389"></a><a href="#FN389A">[389]</a></sup>
+ These are dated November 5th, 6th [bis], 7th, 8th [the "draft"], 9th, 16th, 17th,
+ January 9th, 20th, 26th.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN390" id="FN390"></a><a href="#FN390A">[390]</a></sup>
+ Thus, to confine ourselves to the confession of January 20th, with which we are
+ particularly concerned, we have the following variations:</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tanner transcript.</i> "At my going over M<sup>r</sup> Catesby charged me two
+ things more: the one to desire of Baldwin &amp; M<sup>r</sup> Owen to deal with the
+ Marquis [Spinola] to send over the regiment of which he [Catesby] expected to have
+ been Lieutenant Colonel under Sir Charles [Percy].... He wished me secondly to be
+ earnest with Baldwin to deal with the Marquis to give the said M<sup>r</sup> Catesby
+ order for a Company of Horse, thinking by that means to have opportunity to buy
+ Horses and Arms without suspition."</p>
+
+ <p>According to <i>Abbot</i>, Faukes was to give instructions that when the time of
+ Parliament approached, Sir Wm. Stanley was on some pretext to lead the English forces
+ in the archduke's service towards the sea, and with them any others he could manage
+ to influence. He also mentions the conspiracy of Morgan, as spoken of by Coke.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to all this, Abbot cites from the same confession the following
+ extraordinary particulars (p. 160): Faukes, when he came to London, with T. Winter,
+ went to Percy's house and found there Catesby and Father Gerard. They talked over
+ matters, and agreed that nothing was to be hoped from foreign aid, nor from a general
+ rising of Catholics, and that the only plan was to strike at the king's person:
+ whereupon Catesby, Percy, John Wright, Winter, and himself, were sworn in by
+ Gerard.</p>
+
+ <p>[This is in absolute contradiction to Winter's evidence (November 23rd) that Percy
+ was initiated in the middle of the Easter term, the other four having agreed on the
+ scheme at the beginning of the same term; and to that of Faukes himself (November
+ 17th) that he and Winter first resolved on a plot for the benefit of the Catholic
+ cause, and afterwards imparted their idea to Catesby, Wright, and Percy.]</p>
+
+ <p><i>Sir E. Coke's Version.</i> "After the powder treason was resolved upon by
+ Catesbye, Thomas Winter, the Wrightes, my self, and others, and preparation made by
+ us for the execution of it, by their advise and direction I went into fflanders and
+ had leave given unto me to discover our project in every particular to Hughe Owen and
+ others, but with condicion that they should sweare first to secrecie as we our selves
+ had done. When I arryved in fflanders I found M<sup>r</sup> Owen at Bruxelles to whom
+ after I had given the oathe of secrecye I discovered the whole busines, howe we had
+ layed 20 whole barrells of powder in the celler under the parliament howse, and howe
+ we ment to give it fire the first day of the parliament when the King, the prince,
+ the duke, the Lords spirituall and temporall, and all the knights, citizens, and
+ burgesses of parliament should be there assembled. And that we meant to take the
+ Ladye Elizabeth and proclaime hir for we thought most like that the prince and duke
+ would be there with the king. M<sup>r</sup> Owen liked the plott very well, and said
+ that Thomas Morgan had once propounded the very same in quene Elizabeth's time, and
+ willed me that by ani meanes we should not make any mencion of religion at the first,
+ and assured me that so soone as he should have certaine newes that this exploit had
+ taken effect that he would give us what assistance he could and that he would procure
+ that Sir W<sup>m</sup> Stanley should have leave to come with those English men which
+ be there and what other forces he could procure."</p>
+
+ <p>The confession of Faukes in the Record Office, dated the same, January 20th, is
+ thus summarized in the <i>Calendar of State Papers</i> (<i>Dom. James I.</i> xviii.
+ 28): "Talked with Catesby about noblemen being absent from the meeting of Parliament;
+ he said Lord Mordaunt would not be there, because he did not like to absent himself
+ from the sermons, as the king did not know he was a Catholic; and that Lord Stourton
+ would not come to town till the Friday after the opening."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN391" id="FN391"></a><a href="#FN391A">[391]</a></sup>
+ The powder design of Morgan is an instance in point. The Thomas Morgan in question
+ was doubtless the same as the partisan of Mary Queen of Scots.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN392" id="FN392"></a><a href="#FN392A">[392]</a></sup>
+ <i>E.g.</i>: "Winter came over to Owen, by him and the Fathers to be informed of a
+ fit and resolute man for the execution of the enterprise. This examinate (being by
+ the Fathers and Owen recommended to be used and trusted in any action for the
+ Catholicks) came into England with Winter."&mdash;Faukes, November 19th, 1605 (Tanner
+ MSS.).</p>
+
+ <p>Abbot, whose whole object is to incriminate the Jesuits, does not mention this
+ remarkable statement.</p>
+
+ <p>Again we read, November 30th (<i>ibid.</i>): "Father Baldwin told this examinate
+ that about 2,000 horses would be provided by the Catholicks of England to join with
+ the Spanish forces ... and willed this examinate to intimate so much to Father
+ Creswell, which this examinate did."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN393" id="FN393"></a><a href="#FN393A">[393]</a></sup>
+ Oliver, <i>Collectanea</i>, sub nom.; Foley, <i>Records</i>, iv. 120, note.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN394" id="FN394"></a><a href="#FN394A">[394]</a></sup>
+ Foley, <i>Records</i>, iii. 509; <i>English Protestants' Plea</i>, p. 59.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN395" id="FN395"></a><a href="#FN395A">[395]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvi. 115.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN396" id="FN396"></a><a href="#FN396A">[396]</a></sup>
+ <i>England's Warning Peece</i>, by T. S. [Thomas Spencer], P.73.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN397" id="FN397"></a><a href="#FN397A">[397]</a></sup>
+ Cotton MSS. <i>Vespasian C.</i>, ix. f. 259.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN398" id="FN398"></a><a href="#FN398A">[398]</a></sup>
+ Winwood, <i>Memorials</i>, ii. 178.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN399" id="FN399"></a><a href="#FN399A">[399]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvi. 104.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN400" id="FN400"></a><a href="#FN400A">[400]</a></sup>
+ William Stanley.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN401" id="FN401"></a><a href="#FN401A">[401]</a></sup>
+ The last words are added in another hand.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN402" id="FN402"></a><a href="#FN402A">[402]</a></sup>
+ "I am in great dispute with myself to speak in the case of this gentleman. A former
+ dearness between me and him tied so firm a knot of my conceit of his virtues, now
+ broken by discovery of his imperfections, that I protest, did I serve a king that I
+ knew would be displeased with me for speaking, in this case I would speak, whatever
+ came of it; but seeing he is compacted of piety and justice, and one that will not
+ mislike of any man for speaking a truth, I will answer," etc.&mdash;<i>State
+ Trials.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN403" id="FN403"></a><a href="#FN403A">[403]</a></sup>
+ "For this do I profess in the presence of Him that knoweth and searcheth all men's
+ harts, that if I did not some tyme cast a stone into the mouth of these gaping
+ crabbs, when they are in their prodigall humour of discourses, they wold not stick to
+ confess dayly how contrary it is to their nature to be under your soverainty; though
+ they confess (Ralegh especially) that (<i>rebus sic stantibus</i>) naturall pollicy
+ forceth them to keep on foot such a trade against the great day of mart. In all which
+ light and soddain humours of his, though I do no way check him, because he shall not
+ think I reject his freedome or his affection ... yet under pretext of extraordinary
+ care of his well doing, I have seemed to dissuade him from ingaging himself so farr,"
+ etc.&mdash;<i>Hatfield MSS.</i>, cxxxv. f. 65.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN404" id="FN404"></a><a href="#FN404A">[404]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. 358.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN405" id="FN405"></a><a href="#FN405A">[405]</a></sup>
+ Father Gerard (<i>Narrative</i>, p. 201) denies in the most emphatic terms that he
+ was the priest who said mass on this occasion. The point is fully discussed by the
+ late Father Morris, S. J., in his Life of Father Gerard, pp. 437-438.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN406" id="FN406"></a><a href="#FN406A">[406]</a></sup>
+ The accompanying facsimile of this portion of Faukes' confession exhibits the marks
+ made by Coke, and his added direction in the margin, <i>hucusque</i> ("thus far"). In
+ the original his additions are in red ink.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN407" id="FN407"></a><a href="#FN407A">[407]</a></sup>
+ It is singular that he should not mention Faukes himself as one of those who received
+ the oath from Gerard. There is no mention in any document of Greenway as giving the
+ oath to Bates, or anyone else.</p>
+
+ <p>The facsimile of Faukes' signature, appended to his confession of November 9th,
+ though affording unmistakable evidence of torture, gives no idea of the original,
+ wherein the letters are so faintly traced as to be scarcely visible. It is evident
+ that the writer had been so severely racked as to have no strength left in his hands
+ to press the pen upon the paper. He must have fainted when he had written his
+ Christian name, two dashes alone representing the other.</p>
+
+ <p>This signature, with other of the more sensational documents connected with the
+ Plot, is exhibited in the newly established museum at the Record Office.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN408" id="FN408"></a><a href="#FN408A">[408]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xviii. 97, February 27th, 1606, N. S. (Latin).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN409" id="FN409"></a><a href="#FN409A">[409]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narratio de rebus a se in Anglia gestis</i> (Stonyhurst MSS.). Published in Father
+ G. R. Kingdon's translation under the title of <i>During the Persecution</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN410" id="FN410"></a><a href="#FN410A">[410]</a></sup>
+ <i>During the Persecution</i>, p. 83.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN411" id="FN411"></a><a href="#FN411A">[411]</a></sup>
+ <i>Court and Character of King James</i>, p. 350 (ed. 1811).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN412" id="FN412"></a><a href="#FN412A">[412]</a></sup>
+ Sir William Waad, Lieutenant of the Tower, to whose charge the Powder Plot
+ conspirators were committed, was afterwards dismissed from his office on a charge of
+ embezzling the jewels of the Lady Arabella Stuart.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN413" id="FN413"></a><a href="#FN413A">[413]</a></sup>
+ Presumably the same Arthur Gregory who at an earlier period had counterfeited the
+ seals of Mary Queen of Scots' correspondence.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN414" id="FN414"></a><a href="#FN414A">[414]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> xxiv. 38.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN415" id="FN415"></a><a href="#FN415A">[415]</a></sup>
+ March 3rd, 1605-6 (Hatfield MSS.).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN416" id="FN416"></a><a href="#FN416A">[416]</a></sup>
+ Eudaemon Joannes cites the renegade Alabaster as testifying to having seen a letter
+ seemingly of his own to Garnet, which he had never written. (<i>Answer to
+ Casaubon</i>, p. 159.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN417" id="FN417"></a><a href="#FN417A">[417]</a></sup>
+ <i>Narrative</i>, p. 54.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN418" id="FN418"></a><a href="#FN418A">[418]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i> p. 113.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN419" id="FN419"></a><a href="#FN419A">[419]</a></sup>
+ Though we have not now to consider the question of Father Greenway's connection with
+ the conspirators, it may not be out of place to cite his own account of this visit
+ (<i>Narrative</i>, Stonyhurst MSS., f. 86 b):</p>
+
+ <p>"Father Oswald [Greenway] went to assist these gentlemen with the Sacraments of
+ the Church, understanding their danger and their need, and this with evident danger
+ to his own person and life: and all those gentlemen could have borne witness that he
+ publicly told them how he grieved not so much because of their wretched and shameful
+ plight, and the extremity of their peril, as that by their headlong course they had
+ given the heretics occasion to slander the whole body of Catholics in the kingdom,
+ and that he flatly refused to stay in their company, lest the heretics should be able
+ to calumniate himself and the other Fathers of the Society."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN420" id="FN420"></a><a href="#FN420A">[420]</a></sup>
+ In this, as in some other respects, Mr. Jardine shows himself rather an advocate than
+ an impartial historian. He holds that the complicity of the writer of the
+ <i>Narrative</i> with the plotters is proved by the intimate knowledge he displays
+ concerning them, "their general conduct&mdash;their superstitious fears&mdash;their
+ dreams&mdash;'their thick coming fancies'&mdash;in the progress of the work of
+ destruction." (<i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. xi.)</p>
+
+ <p>There is here an evident allusion to the silly story of the "bell in the wall"
+ (related by Greenway and not by Gerard), to which Mr. Jardine gives extraordinary
+ prominence. He does not, however, inform us that Greenway relates this
+ (<i>Narrative</i>, f. 58 b) and some similar matters, on the authority of "an
+ acquaintance to whom Catesby told it shortly before his death," and that he leaves it
+ to the judgment of his readers.</p>
+
+ <p>Greenway's frequent and earnest protestations of innocence Mr. Jardine summarily
+ dismisses with the observation that they are "entitled to no credit whatever" (p.
+ xii).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN421" id="FN421"></a><a href="#FN421A">[421]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, i. 243.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN422" id="FN422"></a><a href="#FN422A">[422]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i> (Digby, Sir E.).</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+ <h3>THE SEQUEL.</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">As</span> we have already seen, the Gunpowder Plot
+ formed no exception to the general law observable in conspiracies of its period,
+ proving extremely advantageous to those against whom it was principally directed. No
+ single individual was injured by it except those concerned in it, or accused of being
+ so concerned. On the other hand, it marked an epoch in public policy, and irrevocably
+ committed the king and the nation to a line of action towards Catholics, which up to
+ that time they had hoped, and their enemies had feared, would not be permanently
+ pursued.</p>
+
+ <p>"The political consequences of this transaction," says Mr. Jardine,<sup><a name=
+ "FN423A" id="FN423A"></a><a href="#FN423">[423]</a></sup> "are extremely important and
+ interesting. It fixed the timid and wavering mind of the king in his adherence to the
+ Protestant party, in opposition to the Roman Catholics; and the universal horror, which
+ was naturally excited not only in England but throughout Europe by so barbarous an
+ attempt, was artfully converted into an engine for the suppression of the Roman
+ Catholic Church: so that the ministers of James I., having procured the reluctant
+ acquiescence of the king, and the cordial assent of public opinion, were enabled to
+ continue in full force <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg
+ 210]</a></span>the severe laws previously passed against Papists, and to enact others
+ of no less rigour and injustice."</p>
+
+ <p>Such was the effect in fact produced, and the calm deliberation displayed in dealing
+ with the crisis appears to indicate that no misgivings were entertained as to the
+ chance of anything but advantage resulting from it. We have already seen with what
+ strange equanimity the presence of the powder beneath the Parliament House was treated.
+ Not less serene was the attitude of the minister chiefly responsible for the safety of
+ the State in face of the grave dangers still declared to be threatening, even after the
+ "discovery." Preparations, it was officially announced, had been made for an extensive
+ rising of the Catholics, and this had still to be reckoned with. As the king himself
+ informed Sir John Harington, the design was not formed by a few, the "whole legion of
+ Catholics" were implicated: the priests had been active in preaching the holy war, and
+ the Pope himself had employed his authority on behalf of the cause.<sup><a name=
+ "FN424A" id="FN424A"></a><a href="#FN424">[424]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, the conspirators, except Faukes, escaped from London, and hurried to the
+ intended scene of action, where, though no man voluntarily joined them, they were able
+ at first to collect a certain force of their own retainers and domestics, and began to
+ traverse the shires in which their influence was greatest, committing acts of plunder
+ and violence, and calling on all men to join them for God and the country. For a couple
+ of days the local magistrates did not feel strong enough to cope with them, and
+ forwarded to the capital reports capable, it might be <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>supposed, of alarming those who were
+ bewildered by so totally unexpected an assault, for which the evidence in hand showed
+ preparations of no ordinary magnitude to have been made. The numbers of the insurgents,
+ it was said, were constantly increasing; only a feeble force could be brought against
+ them; they were seizing horses and ammunition, and all this in "a very Catholic
+ country."</p>
+
+ <p>In his famous speech to Parliament, delivered on November 9th, the king dwelt
+ feelingly on the danger of the land, left exposed to the traitors, in the absence of
+ the members of the legislature, its natural guardians. "These rebels," he
+ declared,<sup><a name="FN425A" id="FN425A"></a><a href="#FN425">[425]</a></sup> "that
+ now wander through the country could never have gotten so fit a time of safety in their
+ passage, or whatsoever unlawful actions, as now; when the country, by the aforesaid
+ occasions, is, in a manner, left desolate and waste unto them."<sup><a name="FN426A"
+ id="FN426A"></a><a href="#FN426">[426]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, however, the secretary remained imperturbably tranquil as before, and so
+ well aware of the true state of the case that he could afford to make merry over the
+ madcap adventurers. On the same 9th of November he wrote to the ambassadors: "It is
+ also thought fit that some martial men should presently repair down to those countries
+ where the Robin Hoods are assembled, to encourage the good and to terrify the bad. In
+ which service the Earl of Devonshire <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id=
+ "Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>is used, a commission going forth for him as general:
+ although I am easily persuaded that this Faggot will be burnt to ashes before he shall
+ be twenty miles on his way."</p>
+
+ <p>His prescience was not at fault, for before despatching the letter the minister was
+ able to announce the utter collapse of the foolish and unsupported enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>No time was lost in turning the defeated conspiracy to practical account. On the
+ very 5th of November<sup><a name="FN427A" id="FN427A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN427">[427]</a></sup> itself the Commons proceeded, before all other business, to
+ the first reading of a bill for the better execution of penal statutes against
+ Recusants. On the following day this was read a second time. The house next met on the
+ 9th, to hear the king's speech, and was then prorogued to January 21st following. On
+ that day, the foremost article on the programme was the first reading of a bill
+ (whether the same or another) for the better execution of penal statutes; another was
+ likewise proposed for prevention of the danger of papistical practices; and a committee
+ was appointed "to consider of some course for the timely and severe proceeding against
+ Jesuits, Seminaries, and other popish agents and practisers, and for the prevention and
+ suppression of their plots and practices."<sup><a name="FN428A" id=
+ "FN428A"></a><a href="#FN428">[428]</a></sup> On the 22nd there was a motion directed
+ against the seminaries beyond the seas, and the bill for better execution of penal
+ statutes was read a second time. On the 23rd the bill for a public thanksgiving was
+ read twice, being finally <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg
+ 213]</a></span>passed on the 25th. Its preamble runs thus: "Forasmuch as ... no nation
+ of the earth hath been blessed with greater benefits than this kingdom now enjoyeth,
+ having the true and free profession of the gospel under our most gracious sovereign
+ lord King James, the most great, learned, and religious king that ever reigned therein
+ ... the which many malignant and devilish papists, Jesuits, and seminary priests, much
+ envying and fearing, conspired most horribly ..." and so forth.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus did the Commons set to work, and the other House, though they declined to
+ sanction all that was proposed in the way of exceptional severity towards the actual
+ conspirators, were no wise lacking in zeal against the Catholic body.</p>
+
+ <p>The course of legislation that ensued is thus described by Birch:<sup><a name=
+ "FN429A" id="FN429A"></a><a href="#FN429">[429]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"The discovery of the Plot occasioned the Parliament to enjoin the oath of
+ allegiance to the king, and to enact several laws against Popery, and especially
+ against the Jesuits and Priests who, as the Earl of Salisbury observed,<sup><a name=
+ "FN430A" id="FN430A"></a><a href="#FN430">[430]</a></sup> sought to bring all things
+ into <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg
+ 214]</a></span>confusion.... In passing these laws for the security of the Protestant
+ religion, the Earl of Salisbury exerted himself with distinguished zeal and vigour,
+ which gained him great love and honour from the kingdom, as appeared, in some measure,
+ in the unusual attendance upon him at his installation into the Order of the Garter, on
+ the 20th of May, 1606,<sup><a name="FN431A" id="FN431A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN431">[431]</a></sup> at Windsor."</p>
+
+ <p>It is, indeed, abundantly clear that beyond all others this statesman benefited by
+ the Plot, in consequence of which he obtained, at least for a time, a high degree of
+ both power and popularity. His installation at Windsor, above mentioned, was an almost
+ regal triumph. Baker notes<sup><a name="FN432A" id="FN432A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN432">[432]</a></sup> that he was attended on the occasion "beyond ordinary
+ promotion." Howes writes<sup><a name="FN433A" id="FN433A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN433">[433]</a></sup> that he "set forward from his house in the Strand, being
+ almost as honourably accompanied, and with as great a train of lords, knights,
+ gentlemen, and officers of the Court, with others besides his peculiar servants, very
+ richly attired and bravely mounted, as was the King when he rid in state through
+ London."</p>
+
+ <p>Neither were there wanting to the secretary other advantages which, if less showy,
+ were not less substantial. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg
+ 215]</a></span>It will be remembered how, in his secret correspondence with the King of
+ Scots before the death of Elizabeth, Cecil had constantly endeavoured to turn the mind
+ of his future sovereign against the Earl of Northumberland, whom he declared to be
+ associated with Raleigh and Cobham in a "diabolical triplicity," and to be "a sworn
+ enemy of King James."<sup><a name="FN434A" id="FN434A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN434">[434]</a></sup> These <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id=
+ "Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>efforts had not been altogether successful, and though
+ Cobham and Raleigh had been effectually disposed of in connection with the conspiracy
+ known as the "Main," Northumberland was still powerful, and was thought by many to be
+ Cecil's most formidable rival. As one result of the Gunpowder Plot, he now disappeared
+ for ever from public life.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image22" id="image22"></a><img src="images/image22.png" width="600" height=
+ "566" alt="THE POWDER PLOT. III." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">the powder plot. iii.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>When we remember the terms in which the secretary had previously described him, as
+ well as the result about to ensue, it is not a little startling to remark with what
+ emphasis it was protested, in season and out, that a ruling principle of the
+ government's action was to do nothing which might even seem to cast a slur upon the
+ earl's character, while at the same time the very point is artfully insinuated which
+ was to be turned against him.<sup><a name="FN435A" id="FN435A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN435">[435]</a></sup> Thus in the "King's Book," in explanation of the curious
+ roundabout courses adopted in connection with the "discovery," we are told that a
+ far-fetched excuse was devised for the search determined upon, lest it might "lay an
+ ill-favoured imputation upon the Earl of Northumberland, one of his Majesty's greatest
+ subjects and counsellors; this Thomas Percy being his kinsman and most confident
+ familiar." So again Cecil wrote to the ambassadors: "It hath been thought meet in
+ policy of State (all circumstances considered) to commit the Earl of Northumberland
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>to the
+ Archbishop of Canterbury, there to be honourably used, until things be more quiet.
+ Whereof if you shall hear any judgment made, as if his Majesty or his council could
+ harbour a thought of such a savage practice to be lodged in such a nobleman's breast,
+ you shall do well to suppress it as a malicious discourse and invention, this being
+ only done to satisfy the world that nothing be undone which belongs to policy of State,
+ when the whole monarchy was proscribed to dissolution; and being no more than himself
+ discreetly approved when he received the sentence of the council for his
+ restraint."</p>
+
+ <p>Yet what was the issue? A series of charges were brought against Northumberland, all
+ of which broke down except that of having, as Captain of the Royal Pensioners, admitted
+ Percy amongst them without exacting the usual oath. He in vain demanded an open trial,
+ and was brought before the Star Chamber, by which, after he had been assailed by Coke
+ in the same violent strain previously employed against Raleigh, he was sentenced to
+ forfeit all offices which he held under the Crown, to be imprisoned during the king's
+ pleasure, and to pay a fine of &pound;30,000, equal to at least ten times that sum at
+ the present day.</p>
+
+ <p>As if this were not enough, fresh proceedings were taken against him six years
+ later, when he was again subjected to examination, and again, says
+ Lingard,<sup><a name="FN436A" id="FN436A"></a><a href="#FN436">[436]</a></sup> foiled
+ the ingenuity or malice of his persecutor.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>It seems, therefore, by no means extraordinary that men, as we have heard from the
+ French ambassador, should have commonly attributed the earl's ruin to the resolution of
+ his great rival to remove from his own path every obstacle likely to be dangerous, or
+ that Cecil should himself bear witness,<sup><a name="FN437A" id="FN437A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN437">[437]</a></sup> in 1611, to the "bruites" touching Northumberland which were
+ afloat, and should be anxious, as "knowing how various a discourse a subject of this
+ nature doth beget," to "prevent any erroneous impression by a brief narrative of the
+ true motive and progress of the business."</p>
+
+ <p>As to Northumberland's own sentiments, he, we are told by Osborne,<sup><a name=
+ "FN438A" id="FN438A"></a><a href="#FN438">[438]</a></sup> declared that the blood of
+ Percy would refuse to mix with that of Cecil if they were poured together in the same
+ basin.</p>
+
+ <p>It is, moreover, evident not only that the great statesman, to use Bishop Goodman's
+ term, actually profited largely by the powder business, but that from the first he saw
+ in it a means for materially strengthening his position; an opportunity which he lost
+ no time in turning to account by making it appear that in such a crisis he was
+ absolutely necessary to the State. This is shown by the remarkable manifesto which he
+ promptly issued, a document which appears to have been almost forgotten, though well
+ deserving attention.</p>
+
+ <p>A characteristic feature of the traitorous proceedings of the period was the
+ inveterate habit of conspirators to drop compromising documents in the street, or to
+ throw <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>them
+ into yards and windows. In the court of Salisbury House was found, in November, 1605, a
+ threatening letter, more than usually extraordinary. It purported to come from five
+ Catholics, who began by unreservedly condemning the Gunpowder Plot as a work abhorred
+ by their co-religionists as much as by any Protestants. Since, however, his lordship,
+ beyond all others, seemed disposed to take advantage of so foul a scandal, in order to
+ root out all memory of the Catholic religion, they proceeded to warn him that they had
+ themselves vowed his death, and in such fashion that their success was certain. None of
+ the accomplices knew who the others were, but it was settled who should first make the
+ attempt, and who, in order, afterwards. Moreover, death had no terrors for any of them,
+ two being stricken with mortal sickness, which must soon be fatal; while the other
+ three were in such mental affliction as not to care what became of them.</p>
+
+ <p>As a reply to this strange effusion Cecil published a tract,<sup><a name="FN439A"
+ id="FN439A"></a><a href="#FN439">[439]</a></sup> obviously intended as a companion to
+ the famous "King's Book," in which with elaborate modesty he owned to the impeachment
+ of being more zealous than others in the good cause, and protested his resolution, at
+ whatever peril to himself, to continue his services to <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>his king and country. The sum and substance
+ of this curious apology is as follows.</p>
+
+ <p>Having resolved to recall his thoughts from the earthly theatre to higher things,
+ which statesmen are supposed overmuch to neglect, he had felt he could choose no better
+ theme for his meditations than the "King's Book," wherein so many lively images of
+ God's great favour and providence are represented, every line discovering where
+ Apelles' hand hath been; so that all may see there needs now no Elisha to tell the King
+ of Israel what the Aramites do in their privatest councils.</p>
+
+ <p>While in this most serious and silent meditation, divided between rapture at God's
+ infinite mercy and justice, and thought of his own happiness to live under a king
+ pleasing to God for his zealous endeavours to cleanse the vessels of his kingdom from
+ the dregs and lees of the Romish grape,&mdash;and while his heart was not a little
+ cheered to observe any note of his own name in the royal register, for one that had
+ been of any little use in this so fortunate discovery,&mdash;as the poor day labourer
+ who taketh contentment when he passeth that glorious architecture, to the building
+ whereof he can remember to have carried some few sticks and stones,&mdash;while thus
+ blissfully engaged, he is grieved to find himself singled out from the honourable body
+ of the council,&mdash;why, he knows not, for with it he would be content to be
+ identified&mdash;as the author of the policy which is being adopted; and, conscious
+ that in his humble person the Body of Authority is assailed, he thinks it well, for
+ once, to make a reply.</p>
+
+ <p>Having recited the threatening letter in full, he presently continues:</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>"Though I participate not in the follies of that fly who thought herself to raise
+ the dust because she sat on the chariot-wheel, yet I am so far from disavowing my
+ honest ambition of my master's favour, as I am desirous that the world should hold me,
+ not so much his creature, by the undeserved honours I hold from his grace and power, as
+ my desire to be the shadow of his mind, and to frame my judgment, knowledge, and
+ affections according to his. Towards whose Royal Person I shall glory more to be always
+ found an honest and humble subject, than I should to command absolutely in any other
+ calling."</p>
+
+ <p>Of those who threaten him he says very little, assuming, however, as self-evident,
+ that they are set on by some priest, who, after the manner of his tribe, doth "carry
+ the unlearned Catholics, like hawks hooded, into those dangerous positions."</p>
+
+ <p>But, as for himself, let the world understand that he is not the man to neglect his
+ duty on account of the personal danger it entails. "Far I hope it shall be from me, who
+ know so well in whose <span class="smcap">Holy Book</span> my days are numbered, once
+ to entertain a thought to purchase a span of time, at so dear a rate, as for the fear
+ of any mortal power, in my poor talent, <i>Aut Deo, aut Patri&aelig;, aut Patri
+ patri&aelig; deesse</i>."<sup><a name="FN440A" id="FN440A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN440">[440]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>In spite of the singular ability of this manifesto, the art of the writer is
+ undoubtedly somewhat too conspicuous to permit us to accept it as the kind of document
+ which would be produced by one who felt himself confronted by a serious peril. An
+ interesting and most pertinent commentary is supplied by a contemporary Jesuit, Giles
+ Schondonck, Rector of St. Omers College, in a letter to Father Baldwin, the same of
+ whom we have already heard in connection with the Plot.<sup><a name="FN441A" id=
+ "FN441A"></a><a href="#FN441">[441]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Schondonck has, he says, read and re-read Cecil's book, which Baldwin had lent him.
+ If his opinion be required, he finds in it many flowers of wit and eloquence, and it is
+ a composition well adapted for its object; but the original letter which has evoked
+ this brilliant rejoinder is a manifest fraud, not emanating from any Catholic, but
+ devised by the enemies of the Church for her injury. The writers plainly contradict
+ themselves. They begin by denouncing the Powder Plot as impious and abominable, and
+ they do so most righteously, and they declare its authors to have been turbulent
+ spirits and not religious, in which also they are right. But they go on to approve the
+ design of murdering Cecil. What sense is there in this? If the one design be impious
+ and detestable, with what <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg
+ 223]</a></span>colour or conscience can the other be approved? There is no difference
+ of principle, though in the one case many were to be murdered, in the other but a
+ single man. No one having in him any spark of religion could defend either project,
+ much less approve it. Moreover, much that is set down is simply ridiculous. Men in the
+ last extremity of sickness, or broken down by sorrow, are not of the stuff whereof
+ those are made by whom desperate deeds are done.</p>
+
+ <p>From another Jesuit we obtain instructive information which at least serves to show
+ what was the opinion of Catholics as to the way in which things were being managed.
+ This is conveyed in a letter addressed December 1st, 1606, to the famous Father Parsons
+ by Father Richard Blount, Father Garnet's successor as superior of the English
+ mission.<sup><a name="FN442A" id="FN442A"></a><a href="#FN442">[442]</a></sup> It must
+ be remembered that this was not meant for the public eye, and in fact was never
+ published. It cannot have been intended to obtain credence for a particular version of
+ history, and it was written to him who, of all men, was behind the scenes so far as the
+ English Jesuits were concerned. Much of it is in cipher which, fortunately, has been
+ interpreted for us by the recipient.</p>
+
+ <p>Blount begins with a piece of intelligence which is startling enough. Amongst the
+ lords of the council none was a more zealous enemy of Popery than the chamberlain, the
+ Earl of Suffolk,<sup><a name="FN443A" id="FN443A"></a><a href="#FN443">[443]</a></sup>
+ who was more than once on the commission for expelling priests and Jesuits, and had in
+ particular been so energetic in the matter of the Powder Plot that Salisbury modestly
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>confessed
+ that in regard of the "discovery" he had himself been "much less forward."<sup><a name=
+ "FN444A" id="FN444A"></a><a href="#FN444">[444]</a></sup> Now, however, we are told,
+ only a twelvemonth later, that this nobleman and his wife are ready for a sufficient
+ fee to procure "some kind of peace" for the Catholics. The needful sum may probably be
+ raised through the Spanish Ambassador, but the issue is doubtful "because Salisbury
+ will resist."&mdash;"Yet such is the want of money with the chamberlain at this
+ time&mdash;whose expenses are infinite&mdash;that either Salisbury must supply, or else
+ he must needs break with him."<sup><a name="FN445A" id="FN445A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN445">[445]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>After some particulars concerning the jealousy against the Scots, and the matter of
+ the union (which "sticketh much in the Parliament's teeth") Blount goes on to relate
+ how Cecil has been attempting to float a second Powder Plot&mdash;the scene being this
+ time the king's court itself. He has had another letter brought in, to set it going,
+ and had seemingly calculated on capturing the writer himself and some of his brethren
+ in connection with it. In this, however, he has been foiled, and the matter appears to
+ have been dropped. In Blount's own words:<sup><a name="FN446A" id="FN446A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN446">[446]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>"Now these last days we expected some new stratagem, because Salisbury pretended a
+ letter to be brought to his lordship found by chance in St. Clement's Churchyard,
+ written in ciphers, wherein were many persons named, and a question asked, whether
+ there were any concavity under the stage in the court. But belike the device failed,
+ and so we hear no words of it. About this time this house was ransacked, where by
+ chance Blount came late the night before, finding four more, Talbot, N. Smith, Wright,
+ Arnold; being all besieged from morning to night. If things had fallen out as was
+ expected, then that letter would have haply been spoken of, whereas now it is very
+ secret, and only served to pick a thanks of King James, with whom Salisbury keepeth his
+ credit by such tricks, as upon whose vigilancy his majesty's life dependeth."</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p>One other feature of the after history demands consideration. As Fuller tells
+ us,<sup><a name="FN447A" id="FN447A"></a><a href="#FN447">[447]</a></sup> "a learned
+ author, making mention of this treason, breaketh forth into the following rapture:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">'Excidat illa dies aevo, ne postera credant<br />
+ Saecula; nos certe taceamus, et obruta mult&acirc;<br />
+ Nocte tegi propriae patiamur crimina gentis.'<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="ni">'Oh, let that day be quite dashed out of time,<br />
+ <span class="c10">And not believ'd by the next generation;</span><br />
+ In night of silence we'll conceal the crime,<br />
+ <span class="c10">Thereby to save the credit of the nation.'"</span></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>"A wish," he adds, "which in my opinion, hath more of poetry than of piety therein,
+ and from which I must be <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg
+ 226]</a></span>forced to dissent." Assuredly if it were judged that silence and
+ oblivion should be the lot of the conspiracy, no stranger means were ever adopted to
+ secure the desired object. A public thanksgiving was appointed to be held every year,
+ on the anniversary of the "discovery;" a special service for that day was inserted in
+ the Anglican liturgy, and Gunpowder Plot Sermons kept the memory of the Treason green
+ in the mind not of one but of many generations.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, the country was flooded with literature on the subject, in prose and
+ rhyme, and the example of Milton is sufficient to show how favourite a topic it was
+ with youthful poets essaying to try their wings.<sup><a name="FN448A" id=
+ "FN448A"></a><a href="#FN448">[448]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In regard of the history, one line was consistently adopted. The Church of England
+ in its calendar marked November 5th, as the <i>Papists' Conspiracy</i>, and in the
+ collect appointed for the day the king and estates of the realm were described as being
+ "by Popish treachery appointed as sheep to the slaughter, in a most barbarous and
+ savage manner, beyond the examples of former ages." Similarly, preachers and writers
+ alike concurred in saying little or nothing about the actual conspirators, but much
+ about the iniquity of Rome; the official character of the Plot, and its sanction, even
+ its first suggestion, by the highest authorities of the Church, being the chief feature
+ of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>the tale
+ hammered year after year into the ears of the English people. The details of history
+ supplied are frequently pure and unmixed fables.<sup><a name="FN449A" id=
+ "FN449A"></a><a href="#FN449">[449]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image23" id="image23"></a><img src="images/image23.png" width="600" height=
+ "646" alt="THE POWDER PLOT. IV." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">the powder plot. iv.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Nor was the pencil less active than the pen in popularizing the same belief. Great
+ was the ingenuity spent in devising and producing pictures which should impress
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>on the minds
+ of the most illiterate a holy horror of the Church which had doomed the nation to
+ destruction. One of the most elaborate of these was headed by an inscription which
+ admirably summarizes the moral of the tale.</p>
+
+ <p><span class="smcap">The Powder Treason.</span>&mdash;Propounded by <i>Satan</i>:
+ Approved by <i>Antichrist</i> [<i>i.e.</i> the Pope]: Enterprised by <i>Papists</i>:
+ Practized by <i>Traitors</i>: Revealed by an <i>Eagle</i> [Monteagle]: Expounded by an
+ <i>Oracle</i> [King James]: Founded in <i>Hell</i>: Confounded in <i>Heaven</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly we find representations of Lucifer, the Pope, the King of Spain, the
+ General of the Jesuits, and other such worthies, conspiring in the background while the
+ redoubtable Guy walks arm in arm with a demon to fire the mine, the latter grasping a
+ papal Bull (unknown to the Bullarium), expedited to promote the project: or again,
+ Faukes and Catesby stand secretly conspiring in the middle of the street, while Father
+ Garnet, in full Jesuit habit (or what is meant for such) exhorts them to go on: or a
+ priest gives the conspirators "the sacrament of secrecy;" or representative Romish
+ dignitaries blow threats and curses against England and her Parliament House,&mdash;or
+ the Jesuits are buried in Hell in recompense of their perfidy.</p>
+
+ <p>It cannot, however, escape remark that while the limners have been conscientiously
+ careful in respect of these details, they have one and all discarded accuracy in regard
+ of another matter in which we might naturally have expected it. In no single instance
+ is Guy Faukes represented as about to blow up the right house. Sometimes it is the
+ House of Commons that he is going to destroy, more frequently the Painted <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>Chamber, often a
+ nondescript building corresponding to nothing in particular,&mdash;but in no single
+ instance is it the House of Lords.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id=
+ "Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter c7">
+ <a name="image24" id="image24"></a><img src="images/image24.png" width="600" height=
+ "770" alt="THE POWDER PLOT. V." title="" /> <span class="caption"><span class=
+ "smcap">the powder plot. v.</span></span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The most extraordinary instance of so strange a vagary is afforded by a plate
+ produced immediately after the occurrence it commemorates, in the year 1605
+ itself.<sup><a name="FN450A" id="FN450A"></a><a href="#FN450">[450]</a></sup> In this,
+ Faukes with his inseparable lantern, but without the usual spurs, is seen advancing to
+ the door of the "cellar," which stands conspicuous above ground. Aloft is seen the
+ crescent moon, represented in exactly the right phase for the date of the
+ discovery.<sup><a name="FN451A" id="FN451A"></a><a href="#FN451">[451]</a></sup> The
+ accuracy exhibited as to this singular detail makes it more than ever extraordinary
+ that the building to which he directs his steps is unquestionably St. Stephen's
+ Chapel&mdash;The House of Commons.</p>
+
+ <p>One point of the history, in itself apparently insignificant, was at the time
+ invested with such extravagant importance, as to suggest a question in its regard,
+ namely the day itself whereon the marvellous deliverance took place. A curious
+ combination of circumstances alone assigned it to the notorious Fifth of November.
+ Parliament, as we have seen, was originally appointed to meet on the 3rd of October,
+ but was suddenly adjourned for about a month, and so little reason did there seem to be
+ for the prorogation<sup><a name="FN452A" id="FN452A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN452">[452]</a></sup> as to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id=
+ "Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>fill the conspirators with alarm lest some suspicion of
+ their design had prompted it; wherefore they sent Thomas Winter to attend the
+ prorogation ceremony, and observe the demeanour of those who took part in it.
+ Afterwards, though the discovery might have easily been made any time during the
+ preceding week, nothing practical was done till the fateful day itself had actually
+ begun, when, as the acute Lingard has not failed to observe, a remarkable change at
+ once came over the conduct of the authorities, who discarding the aimless and dilatory
+ manner of proceeding which had hitherto characterized them, went straight to the point
+ with a promptitude and directness leaving nothing to be desired.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever were their motive in all this, the action of the government undoubtedly
+ brought it about that the great blow should be struck on a day which not a little
+ enhanced the evidence for the providential character of the whole affair. Tuesday was
+ King James' lucky day, more especially when it happened to be the 5th of the month, for
+ on Tuesday, August the 5th, 1600, he had escaped the mysterious treason of the
+ Gowries.</p>
+
+ <p>This coincidence evidently created a profound impression. "Curious folks observe,"
+ wrote Chamberlain to Carleton,<sup><a name="FN453A" id="FN453A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN453">[453]</a></sup> "that this deliverance happened on the fifth of November,
+ answerable to the fifth of August, both Tuesdays; and this plot to be executed by
+ Johnson [the assumed name of Faukes], and that at Johnstown [<i>i.e.</i>, Perth]." On
+ the 27th of November, Lake <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg
+ 232]</a></span>suggested to the Archbishop of Canterbury,<sup><a name="FN454A" id=
+ "FN454A"></a><a href="#FN454">[454]</a></sup> that as a perpetual memorial of this so
+ providential circumstance, the anniversary sermon should always be delivered upon a
+ Tuesday. Two days later, the Archbishop wrote to his suffragans,<sup><a name="FN455A"
+ id="FN455A"></a><a href="#FN455">[455]</a></sup> reminding them how on a Tuesday his
+ majesty had escaped the Gowries, and now, on another Tuesday, a peril still more
+ terrible, which must have ruined the whole nation, had not the Holy Ghost illumined the
+ king's heart with a divine spirit. In remembrance of which singular instance of God's
+ governance, there was to be an annual celebration.<sup><a name="FN456A" id=
+ "FN456A"></a><a href="#FN456">[456]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>Most important of all, King James himself much appreciated the significance of this
+ token of divine protection, and not only impressed this upon his Parliament, but
+ proroguing it forthwith till after Christmas, selected the same propitious day of the
+ week for its next meeting, as a safeguard against possible danger. "Since it has
+ pleased God," said his majesty,<sup><a name="FN457A" id="FN457A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN457">[457]</a></sup> "to grant me two such notable deliveries upon one day of the
+ week, which was Tuesday, and likewise one day of the month, which was the fifth,
+ thereby to teach me that as it was the same devil that still persecuted me, so it was
+ one and the same God that still mightily delivered me, I thought it therefore not
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>amiss, that
+ the twenty-first day which fell to be upon Tuesday, should be the day of meeting of
+ this next session of parliament, hoping and assuring myself, that the same God, who
+ hath now granted me and you all so notable and gracious a delivery, shall prosper all
+ our affairs at that next session, and bring them to an happy conclusion."</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p>Whatever may be thought of this particular element of its history, it is perfectly
+ clear that the fashion in which the Plot was habitually set before the English people,
+ and which contributed more than anything else to work the effect actually produced, was
+ characterized from the first by an utter disregard of truth on the part of those whose
+ purposes it so opportunely served, and with such lasting results.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h4><span class="smcap">A Summary.</span></h4>
+
+ <p>The evidence available to us appears to establish principally two points,&mdash;that
+ the true history of the Gunpowder Plot is now known to no man, and that the history
+ commonly received is certainly untrue.</p>
+
+ <p>It is quite impossible to believe that the government were not aware of the Plot
+ long before they announced its discovery.</p>
+
+ <p>It is difficult to believe that the proceedings of the conspirators were actually
+ such as they are related to have been.</p>
+
+ <p>It is unquestionable that the government consistently falsified the story and the
+ evidence as presented to the world, and that the points upon which they most insisted
+ prove upon examination to be the most doubtful.</p>
+
+ <p>There are grave reasons for the conclusion that the whole transaction was
+ dexterously contrived for the purpose which in fact it opportunely served, by those who
+ alone reaped benefit from it, and who showed themselves so unscrupulous in the manner
+ of reaping.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN423" id="FN423"></a><a href="#FN423A">[423]</a></sup>
+ <i>Criminal Trials</i>, ii. I.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN424" id="FN424"></a><a href="#FN424A">[424]</a></sup>
+ <i>Nug&aelig; Antiqu&aelig;</i>, i. 374.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN425" id="FN425"></a><a href="#FN425A">[425]</a></sup>
+ <i>Harleian Miscellany</i>, iv. 249.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN426" id="FN426"></a><a href="#FN426A">[426]</a></sup>
+ This terrible state of things was alleged as a principal reason for the prorogation
+ of the Parliament for two months and a half. As a matter of fact, the rebels had been
+ overthrown and captured the day before that on which the king's speech was delivered,
+ and news of that event was received that same evening.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN427" id="FN427"></a><a href="#FN427A">[427]</a></sup>
+ <i>Commons' Journals.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN428" id="FN428"></a><a href="#FN428A">[428]</a></sup>
+ In the preamble of the Act so passed we read: "Forasmuch as it is found by daily
+ experience, that many his Majesty's subjects that adhere in their hearts to the
+ popish religion, by the infection drawn from thence, and by the wicked and devilish
+ counsel of jesuits, seminaries, and other like persons dangerous to the church and
+ state, are so perverted in the point of their loyalties and due allegiance unto the
+ King's majesty, and the Crown of England, as they are ready to entertain and execute
+ any treasonable conspiracies and practices, as evidently appears by that more than
+ barbarous and horrible attempt to have blown up with gunpowder the King, Queen ..."
+ etc., etc.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN429" id="FN429"></a><a href="#FN429A">[429]</a></sup>
+ <i>Negotiations</i>, p. 256.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN430" id="FN430"></a><a href="#FN430A">[430]</a></sup>
+ "Our parliament is prorogued till the 18th of next November. Many things have been
+ considerable in it, but especially the zeal of both Houses for the preservation of
+ God's true religion, by establishing many good laws against Popery and those
+ firebrands, Jesuits, and Priests, that seek to bring all things into confusion. His
+ Majesty resolveth once more by proclamation to banish them all; and afterwards, if
+ they shall not obey, then the laws shall go upon them without any more
+ forbearance."&mdash;Cecil to Winwood, June 7th, 1606 (Winwood, <i>Memorials</i>, ii.
+ 219).</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN431" id="FN431"></a><a href="#FN431A">[431]</a></sup>
+ In the <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>, and Doyle's <i>Official Baronage</i>,
+ this installation is erroneously assigned to 1605.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN432" id="FN432"></a><a href="#FN432A">[432]</a></sup>
+ <i>Chronicle</i>, p. 408.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN433" id="FN433"></a><a href="#FN433A">[433]</a></sup>
+ Continuation of Stowe's <i>Annals</i>, p. 883.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN434" id="FN434"></a><a href="#FN434A">[434]</a></sup>
+ Letter iii.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN435" id="FN435"></a><a href="#FN435A">[435]</a></sup>
+ At Northumberland's trial Lord Salisbury thus expressed himself: "I have taken paines
+ in my nowne heart to clear my lord's offences, which now have leade me from the
+ contemplation of his virtues; for I knowe him vertuous, wyse, valiaunte, and of use
+ and ornamente to the state.... The cause of this combustion was the papistes seekinge
+ to restore their religion. Non libens dico, sed res ipsa loquitur."&mdash;Hawarde,
+ <i>Les Reportes</i>, etc.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN436" id="FN436"></a><a href="#FN436A">[436]</a></sup>
+ <i>History</i>, vii. 84, note. On this subject Mr. Sawyer, the editor of Winwood
+ (1715), has the following remark: "We meet with some account of his
+ [Northumberland's] offence, though couched in such tender terms, that 'tis a little
+ difficult to conceive it deserved so heavy a punishment as a fine of &pound;30,000
+ and perpetual imprisonment." (<i>Memorials</i>, iii. 287, note.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN437" id="FN437"></a><a href="#FN437A">[437]</a></sup>
+ To Winwood, <i>Memorials</i>, iii. 287.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN438" id="FN438"></a><a href="#FN438A">[438]</a></sup>
+ <i>Traditional Memoirs</i>, p. 214.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN439" id="FN439"></a><a href="#FN439A">[439]</a></sup>
+ <i>An Answere to certaine Scandalous Papers, scattered abroad under colour of a
+ Catholicke Admonition.</i> "Qui facit vivere, docet orare." Imprinted at London by
+ Robert Barker, Printer to the King's most Eccellent Majestie. Anno 1606.</p>
+
+ <p>This was published in January, 1605-6, on the 28th of which month Sir W. Browne,
+ writing from Flushing, mentions that "my lord of Salisbury hath lately published a
+ little booke as a kynd of answer to som secrett threatning libelling letters cast
+ into his chamber." (Stowe MSS., 168, 74, f. 308.)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN440" id="FN440"></a><a href="#FN440A">[440]</a></sup>
+ On this subject Cornwallis wrote to Salisbury (Winwood, ii. 193): "Many reports are
+ here spread of the Combination against your Lordship, and that five English Romanists
+ would resolve your death. It seems that since they cannot be allowed <i>Sacrificium
+ incruentum</i>, they will now altogether put in use their sacrifices of blood. But I
+ hope and suppose that their hearts and their hands want much of the vigour that rests
+ in their wills and their pens. Your Lordship doth take especial courage in this, that
+ they single you out as the chief and principal watch Tower of your Country and
+ Commonwealth, and turn the strength of their malice to you whom they hold the
+ discoverer of all their unnatural and destructive inventions against their prince and
+ country," etc.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN441" id="FN441"></a><a href="#FN441A">[441]</a></sup>
+ P.R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> xviii. 97, February 27th, N.S., 1606. The original, which
+ is in Latin, has been utterly misunderstood by the Calendarer of State Papers.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN442" id="FN442"></a><a href="#FN442A">[442]</a></sup>
+ Stonyhurst MSS., <i>Anglia</i>, iii. 72.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN443" id="FN443"></a><a href="#FN443A">[443]</a></sup>
+ Thomas Howard, cr. 1603.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN444" id="FN444"></a><a href="#FN444A">[444]</a></sup>
+ To the ambassadors.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN445" id="FN445"></a><a href="#FN445A">[445]</a></sup>
+ Father Blount's account is undoubtedly in keeping with what we know of the Earl, and
+ especially of his Countess, who was a sister of Sir Thomas Knyvet, the captor of Guy
+ Faukes. Suffolk, in 1614, became Lord High Treasurer, but four years afterwards grave
+ irregularities were discovered in his office; he was accused of embezzlement and
+ extortion, in which work his wife was proved to have been even more active than
+ himself. They were sentenced to restore all money wrongfully extorted, to a fine of
+ &pound;30,000, and to imprisonment during pleasure.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN446" id="FN446"></a><a href="#FN446A">[446]</a></sup>
+ In this letter all proper names are in cipher, as well as various other words.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN447" id="FN447"></a><a href="#FN447A">[447]</a></sup>
+ <i>Church History</i>, x. 40.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN448" id="FN448"></a><a href="#FN448A">[448]</a></sup>
+ We have four Latin epigrams of Milton's, <i>In proditionem Bombardicam</i>, which,
+ though pointless, are bitterly anti-Catholic. A longer poem, of 226 lines, <i>In
+ quintum Novembris</i>, is still more virulent.</p>
+
+ <p>It is somewhat remarkable that the universal Shakespeare should make no allusion
+ to the Plot, beyond the doubtful reference to equivocation in <i>Macbeth</i> (ii. 3).
+ He was at the time of its occurrence in the full flow of his dramatic activity.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN449" id="FN449"></a><a href="#FN449A">[449]</a></sup>
+ See Appendix L, <i>Myths and Legends of the Powder Plot</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN450" id="FN450"></a><a href="#FN450A">[450]</a></sup>
+ Brit. Mus. Print Room, Crace Collection, portf. xv. 28. This is reproduced, as our
+ frontispiece.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN451" id="FN451"></a><a href="#FN451A">[451]</a></sup>
+ There was a new moon at 11.30 p.m. on October 31st.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN452" id="FN452"></a><a href="#FN452A">[452]</a></sup>
+ The reasons assigned in the proclamation for this prorogation are plainly
+ insufficient: viz., "That the holding of it [the Parliament] so soone is not
+ convenient, as well for that the ordinary course of our subjects resorting to the
+ citie for their usuall affaires at the Terme is not for the most part till
+ Allhallowtide or thereabouts." Why, then, had the meeting been fixed for so
+ unsuitable a date?</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN453" id="FN453"></a><a href="#FN453A">[453]</a></sup>
+ November 7th, 1605. (<i>Dom. James I.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN454" id="FN454"></a><a href="#FN454A">[454]</a></sup>
+ Tanner MSS. lxxv. 44.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN455" id="FN455"></a><a href="#FN455A">[455]</a></sup>
+ <i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN456" id="FN456"></a><a href="#FN456A">[456]</a></sup>
+ On his arrival in England, as Osborne tells us (<i>Memoirs</i>, p. 276), King James
+ "brought a new holiday into the Church of England, wherein God had publick thanks
+ given him for his majestie's deliverance out of the hands of Earle Goury;" but the
+ introduction was not a success, Englishmen and Scots alike ridiculing it. Gunpowder
+ Plot Day was more fortunate.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN457" id="FN457"></a><a href="#FN457A">[457]</a></sup>
+ <i>Harleian Miscellany</i>, iv. 251.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_A" id="APPENDIX_A"></a>APPENDIX A.</h2>
+
+ <h3>NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS.</h3>
+
+ <h4 class="c16"><a href="#image1">Frontispiece.</a> The Powder Plot. I.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">From</span> the Crace Collection, British Museum,
+ <i>Portf.</i> xv. 20. Thus described in the catalogue of the collection:</p>
+
+ <p>"A small etching of the House of Lords. Guy Fawkes in the foreground. W.E. exc.
+ 1605."</p>
+
+ <p>This plate is of exceptional interest as having been executed within five months of
+ the discovery of the Plot, <i>i.e.</i>, previously to March 25th, 1606, the first day
+ of the year, Old Style.</p>
+
+ <p>Guy Faukes is represented as approaching the House of Commons (St. Stephen's
+ Chapel), not the House of Lords, as the catalogue says.</p>
+
+ <h4 class="c16"><a href="#image2">Title-Page.</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Obverse, or reverse, of a medal struck, by order of the Dutch senate, to commemorate
+ the double event of the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot and the expulsion of the
+ Jesuits from Holland. Drawn from a copy of the medal in pewter, by Paul Woodroffe. The
+ design here exhibited is thus described in Hawkins and Frank's <i>Medallic
+ Illustrations</i>:</p>
+
+ <p>"The name of Jehovah, in Hebrew, radiate, within a crown of thorns.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>"Legend, chronogrammatic,</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><span class="smcap">Non DorMItastI AntIstes IaCobI</span>"</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p class="ni">[which gives the date 1605]</p>
+
+ <p>On its other face the medal bears a snake gliding amid roses and lilies [symbolizing
+ Jesuit intrigues in England and France], with the legend <i>Detectus qui latuit.
+ S.C.</i> [Senatus Consulto]."</p>
+
+ <p>This is reproduced on the cover.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Group of Conspirators</i> <a href="#image3">(p. 3).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From a print published at Amsterdam.</p>
+
+ <p>Eight conspirators are represented, five being omitted, viz., Grant, Keyes, Digby,
+ Rokewood, and Tresham.</p>
+
+ <p>Bates, as a servant, wears no hat.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>The Houses of Parliament in the time of James I.</i> <a href="#image4">(pp.
+ 56-7).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Restored from the best authorities, and drawn for the author by H.W. Brewer.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Ground Plan of House of Lords and adjacent Buildings</i> <a href="#image6">(p.
+ 59).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Extracted from the "Foundation plan of the Ancient Palace of Westminster; measured,
+ drawn and engraved by J.T. Smith" (<i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, p. 125)</p>
+
+ <h4><i>The House of Lords in 1807</i> <a href="#image7">(p. 61).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From J.T. Smith's <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>This sketch, made from the east, or river, side, was taken during the demolition of
+ the buildings erected <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg
+ 237]</a></span>against the sides of the Parliament House. These were put up previously
+ to the time when Hollar made his drawing of the interior (temp. Charles II.), which
+ shows the walls hung with tapestry, the windows having been blocked up.</p>
+
+ <p>According to a writer in the <i>Gentleman's Magazine</i> (No. 70, July, 1800), who
+ signs himself "Architect," in a print of the time of James I. the tapestry is not seen,
+ and the House "appears to have preserved much of its original work." The only print
+ answering to this description which I have been able to find exhibits the windows, but
+ is of no value for historical purposes, as it is a reproduction of one of the time of
+ Queen Elizabeth, the figure of the sovereign alone being changed. This engraving is
+ said to be "taken from a painted print in the Cottonian Library," of which I can find
+ no trace. [B. Mus., K. 24. 19. b.]</p>
+
+ <p>To the left of our illustration is seen the gable of the Prince's Chamber. The door
+ to the right of this opened into the cellar, and by it, according to tradition, Faukes
+ was to have made his exit.</p>
+
+ <p>In front of this is seen part of the garden attached to Percy's lodging.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Interior of "Guy Faukes' Cellar"</i> <a href="#image8">(p. 71).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Two views of the interior of the "cellar," drawn by H.W. Brewer, from elevations in
+ J.T. Smith's <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, p. 39.</p>
+
+ <p>The remains of a buttery-hatch, at the southern end, testify to the ancient use of
+ the chamber as the palace kitchen; of which the Earl of Northampton made mention at
+ Father Garnet's trial.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>The very ancient doorway in the eastern wall, seen on the left of the picture, was
+ of Saxon workmanship, and, like the foundations beneath, probably dated from the time
+ of Edward the Confessor, who first erected this portion of the palace, most of which
+ had been rebuilt about the time of Henry III. By this doorway, according to some
+ accounts, Faukes intended to escape after firing the train, though others assign this
+ distinction to one near the other end.</p>
+
+ <p>These two illustrations were originally prepared for the <i>Daily Graphic</i> of
+ November 5th, 1894, and it is by the courtesy of the proprietors of that journal that
+ they are here reproduced.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Vault under the East End of the Painted Chamber</i> <a href="#image9">(p.
+ 73).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From Brayley and Britton's <i>Palace of Westminster</i>, p. 247.</p>
+
+ <p>This has been constantly depicted and described as "Guy Faukes' Cellar."</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Arches from Guy Faukes' Cellar</i> <a href="#image10">(p. 75).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Drawn for the author by H.W. Brewer.</p>
+
+ <p>Sir John Soane, who in 1823 took down the old House of Lords, removed the arches
+ from the "cellar" beneath it, to his own house in Lincoln's Inn Fields, now the Soane
+ Museum, where they are still to be seen in a small court adjoining the building. They
+ do not, however, appear to have been set up precisely in their original form, being
+ dwarfed by the omission of some stones, presumably that they might occupy less space.
+ In our illustration they are represented exactly as they <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>now stand, with the modern building behind
+ them. Some incongruous relics of other stonework which have been introduced amongst
+ them have, however, been omitted.</p>
+
+ <p>The architecture of these arches, and of the adjacent Prince's Chamber, assigns them
+ to the best period of thirteenth century Gothic.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Cell at S.E. corner of Painted Chamber</i> <a href="#image11">(p. 83).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Often styled "Guy Faukes' Cell."</p>
+
+ <p>From Brayley and Britton, <i>op. cit.</i>, p. 360.</p>
+
+ <p>There appears to be no reason for associating this with Faukes.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>The Powder Plot. II.</i> <a href="#image12">(p. 90).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>"Invented by Samuel Ward, Preacher, of Ipswich. Imprinted at Amsterdam, 1621."
+ [British Museum, <i>Political and Personal Satires</i>, i. 41.]</p>
+
+ <p>This is the portion to the right of a composition representing on the left the
+ Spanish Armada, and in the centre a council table at which are gathered the Devil, the
+ Pope, the King of Spain, the General of the Jesuits, and others. An eye above is fixed
+ on the cellar. Faukes in this case is going to blow up the Painted Chamber.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Interior of the old House of Lords (Scene on occasion of the King's Speech,
+ 1755)</i> <a href="#image13">(p. 97).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>This plate represents the House in the reign of George II. In the century and a half
+ since the time of the Powder Plot it is probable that the windows <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>in the side walls had
+ been blocked up, and the tapestry hung. The latter represented the defeat of the
+ Armada.</p>
+
+ <p>[From Maitland's <i>London</i> (1756), ii. 1340.]</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Lord Monteagle and the Letter</i> <a href="#image14">(p. 115).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From <i>Mischeefes Mystery</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>King James enthroned, with crown and sceptre, upon a da&iuml;s, at the foot of which
+ stands the Earl of Salisbury. An eagle bears a letter in its beak, to receive which the
+ king and his minister extend their left hands.</p>
+
+ <p>The English poem, by John Vicars, embellished with this woodcut, was published in
+ 1617, being a much expanded version of one in Latin hexameters, entitled <i>Pietas
+ Pontificia</i>, by Francis Herring, which appeared in 1606.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Arrest of Guy Faukes</i> <a href="#image15">(p. 125).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From <i>Mischeefes Mystery</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Guy Faukes booted and spurred, and with his lantern, prepares to open a door at the
+ extremity of the Painted Chamber. Sir Thomas Knyvet with his retinue approaches unseen.
+ The stars and the beams from the lantern show that it is the middle of the night.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot</i> <a href="#image16">(p. 136).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From a print in the Guildhall Library.</p>
+
+ <p>Catesby, Faukes, and Garnet (the latter in what is apparently meant for the Jesuit
+ habit) stand in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg
+ 241]</a></span>middle of the street conspiring secretly. Through the open door of the
+ "cellar" the powder barrels are seen.</p>
+
+ <p>This illustration (without the coins) stands at the head of Book XVIII. of M. Rapin
+ de Thoyras' <i>History of England</i>, translated by N. Tindal.</p>
+
+ <h4>"<i>Guy Faukes' Lantern</i>" <a href="#image17">(p. 139).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Drawn by H.W. Brewer.</p>
+
+ <p>This object, the authenticity of which is not unquestionable, is exhibited in the
+ Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. It bears the inscription, "Laterna illa ipsa qua usus est, et
+ cum qua deprehensus Guido Faux in crypta subterranea ubi domo Parliamenti
+ diffland&aelig; operam dabat. Ex dono Robti Heywood nuper Academiae Procuratoris, Ap.
+ 4<sup>o</sup>, 1641."</p>
+
+ <p>It will be remembered that the honour of having arrested Faukes has been claimed for
+ one of the name of Heywood.</p>
+
+ <p>The history of the famous lantern has not escaped the variations which we are
+ accustomed to meet with on other points. Faukes is generally said to have been found
+ with it in his hands, and it has consequently become an inseparable adjunct in pictures
+ of him. On the other hand, we are told, "In a corner, behind the door, was a dark
+ lantern containing a light" (Brayley and Britton, <i>Palace of Westminster</i>, p.
+ 377).</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Thomas Percy</i> <a href="#image18">(p. 149).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>From Grainger.</p>
+
+ <p>Around the portrait are four small engravings representing:</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span></p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>The arrest of Guy Faukes, who is here called "Thomas Ichrup."</li>
+
+ <li>The presentation of Thomas Ichrup to the King of Jerusalem (<i>i.e.</i>, the
+ British Solomon).</li>
+
+ <li>The assault and bombardment of the "citadel" to which Percy has fled.</li>
+
+ <li>Percy killed by an arrow.</li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <h4><i>Thomas Winter's Confession</i> <a href="#image19">(p. 168).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>A portion of the copy of Winter's confession, in the handwriting of Levinus Munck,
+ Lord Salisbury's private secretary, and dated November 23rd. In the margin is a note in
+ the handwriting of King James, objecting to a certain "uncleare phrase," which has been
+ altered in accordance with the royal wish. In the printed version it appears in the
+ amended form.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Signatures exemplifying the Effects of Torture</i> <a href="#image20">(p.
+ 173).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>Three signatures of Faukes (November 9th, 1605), and three of Father Edward Oldcorne
+ (March 6th, 1605-6), at different stages of the same examination.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Guy Faukes' Confession of November 9th, 1605</i> <a href="#image21">(p.
+ 199).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>A portion of this confession, in which Faukes speaks of the oath taken by the
+ conspirators and of their reception of the sacrament at the hands of Father John
+ Gerard, adding, however, that "Gerard was not acquainted with their purpose." The last
+ clause has been marked for omission by Sir Edward Coke who has written in the margin
+ <i>hucusq</i>. ("thus far").</p>
+
+ <p>The letter B in the margin is also inserted by Coke, <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>who habitually indicated by such letters
+ which portions of the depositions were to be read in court and which omitted, all being
+ always suppressed which told in any way in favour of the accused.</p>
+
+ <p>The document is written by a clerk, and signed by Faukes at the foot of each
+ page.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>The Powder Plot. III.</i> <a href="#image22">(p. 215).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>This is taken from a large plate [British Museum, <i>Political and Personal
+ Satires</i>, i. 67], of which only the lower portion is here reproduced. At the top is
+ the inscription:</p>
+
+ <p><span class="smcap">The Powder Treason</span>, Propounded by Sathan, Approved by
+ Anti-Christ, Enterprised by Papists, Practized by Traitors, Reveled by an Eagle,
+ Expounded by an Oracle.&mdash;Founded in Hell, Confounded in Heaven.</p>
+
+ <p>Beneath are many emblematical devices.</p>
+
+ <p>In the portion here exhibited, King James is seen on his throne with Lords and
+ Commons before him. Under the floor is a diminutive figure of Faukes with an ample
+ store of barrels. At the bottom, in the left hand corner, some of the conspirators
+ receive the sacrament from Father Gerard: on the right they are executed. On a lunette
+ are the thirteen conspirators, with the arch-traitor Garnet in the centre, the band
+ being described as "The Pope's Saltpeeter Saints." Within the lunette are the Jesuits
+ in Hell.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>The Powder Plot. IV.</i> <a href="#image23">(p. 227).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>This is the portion on the left of a composite picture [British Museum, <i>Political
+ and Personal <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg
+ 244]</a></span>Satires</i>, 63], on the right being represented the catastrophe known
+ as the "Blackfriars Downfall." On Sunday, October 26th, 1623, many Catholics having
+ assembled in an upper room of the French ambassador's house, in Blackfriars, to hear a
+ sermon from the Jesuit, Father Drury, the floor collapsed, and many, including the
+ preacher, were killed. As October 26th, O.S., corresponded to November 5th, N.S., it
+ was ingeniously discovered that the accident was meant to signalize Gunpowder Plot day,
+ though this fell on November 5th, O.S., or November 15th, N.S.</p>
+
+ <p>In our illustration the Parliament House is represented by a nondescript edifice,
+ the wall of which is partially removed, showing King James and some of the Peers. An
+ oven-like vault beneath represents the "cellar," well stored with barrels, which Faukes
+ is preparing to light with a torch fanned by a crowned fiend with a pair of bellows. A
+ company of halberdiers approaches under the guidance of an angel. In the background is
+ a royal funeral procession.</p>
+
+ <p>A Latin inscription is attached which runs thus:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><small>"Anno 1623, Quinto Novembris, eo scripto die quo Angli&aelig; Parliamentum,
+ a<sup>o</sup> 1605, proditione et insidiis Jesuitarum, pulvere nitreo inflammari et
+ in &aelig;thera spargi debuit, Jesuitarum conventus Londini, ... ad missam et
+ conciones audiendas congregatus, fatali providentia, &aelig;dium ruina
+ pr&aelig;cipitatus et dissipatus est, oppressis centum et plus totidem
+ vulneratis.</small></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><small>Loiolides sanctos efflare volebat ad astra;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Astra repercutiunt fulmine Loiolidem.<br />
+ Loiolides, sine te penetrabit astra fidelis:<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tu fato ad Stygias pr&aelig;cipitaris aquas."</small></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h4><i>The Powder Plot. V.</i> <a href="#image24">(p. 229).</a></h4>
+
+ <p>This is an edition of Samuel Ward's print described above, improved and embellished
+ by a "Transmariner" in 1689. [British Museum, <i>Political and Personal Satires</i>, i.
+ 43.]</p>
+
+ <p>The tent in which the council table stands is ornamented at the four corners with
+ figures of a wolf, a parrot, an owl, and a dragon: a cockatrice is on the table; on the
+ top lie a gun, a sword, and a brace of pistols. A demon, bearing behind him a Papal
+ Bull, accompanies Faukes, beneath whose lantern, as a play on his name, is written
+ <i>Fax</i>. At the door of the cellar are scorpions and a serpent. On the top of the
+ barrels within are seen the "yron barres," placed there to make the breach the
+ greater.</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_B_p_33" id="APPENDIX_B_p_33"></a>APPENDIX B. <a href=
+ "#Page_33">(p. 33).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">Sir Everard Digby's letter to Salisbury.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">It</span> seems to have been always assumed that this
+ celebrated letter, which is undated, was written after the failure of the Gunpowder
+ Plot, and the consequent arrest of Sir Everard, and doubtless to some extent internal
+ evidence supports this view, as the writer speaks of himself as deserving punishment,
+ and of "our offence." It is, moreover, clear that the letter, which is undated, cannot
+ have been written before May 4th, 1605, the date of Cecil's earldom. On the other hand,
+ the whole tone of the document appears utterly inconsistent with the supposition that
+ it was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg
+ 246]</a></span>written by one branded with the stigma of such a crime as the Powder
+ Plot. Some of the expressions used, especially in the opening sentence, appear,
+ likewise, incompatible with such a supposition, and the letter bears the usual form of
+ address for those sent in ordinary course of post, "To the Right Hon. the Earl of
+ Salisburie give these"; it has moreover been sealed with a crest or coat-of-arms; all
+ of which is quite unlike a document prepared by a prisoner for those who had him under
+ lock and key. It is noteworthy, too, that at the trial, according to the testimony of
+ the official account itself, on the very subject of the treatment of Catholics,
+ Salisbury acknowledged "that Sir E. Digby was his ally."</p>
+
+ <p>It seems probable, therefore, that the letter was written before Digby had been
+ entangled by Catesby in the conspiracy (<i>i.e.</i>, between May and September, 1605).
+ If so, what was the "offence" of which he speaks? The answer to this question would
+ throw an interesting light on this perplexed history. The following is Sir Everard's
+ letter:</p>
+
+ <p>"Right Honourable, I have better reflected on your late speeches than at the present
+ I could do, both for the small stay which I made, and for my indisposition that day,
+ not being very well, and though perhaps your Lordship may judge me peremptory in
+ meddling, and idle in propounding, yet the desire I have to establish the King in
+ safety will not suffer me to be silent."</p>
+
+ <p>"One part of your Lordship's speech (as I remember) was that the King could not get
+ so much from the Pope (even then when his Majesty had done nothing against Catholics)
+ as a promise that he would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg
+ 247]</a></span> not excommunicate him, so long as that mild course was continued,
+ wherefore it gave occasion to suspect, that if Catholics were suffered to increase, the
+ Pope might afterwards proceed to excommunication, if the King would not change his
+ religion. But to take away that doubt, I do assure myself that his Holiness may be
+ drawn to manifest so contrary a disposition of excommunicating the King, that he will
+ proceed with the same course against all such as shall go about to disturb the King's
+ quiet and happy reign; and the willingness of Catholics, especially of priests and
+ Jesuits, is such as I dare undertake to procure any priest in England (though it were
+ the Superior of the Jesuits) to go himself to Rome to negotiate this business, and that
+ both he and all other religious men (till the Pope's pleasure be known) shall take any
+ spiritual course to stop the effect that may proceed from any discontented or
+ despairing Catholic."</p>
+
+ <p>"And I doubt not but his return would bring both assurance that such course should
+ not be taken with the King, and that it should be performed against any that should
+ seek to disturb him for religion. If this were done, there could then be no cause to
+ fear any Catholic, and this may be done only with those proceedings (which as I
+ understood your lordship) should be used. If your Lordship apprehend it to be worth the
+ doing, I shall be glad to be the instrument, for no hope to put off from myself any
+ punishment, but only that I wish safety to the King and ease to Catholics. If your
+ Lordship and the State think it fit to deal severely with Catholics, within brief there
+ will be massacres, rebellions, and desperate attempts against the King and State. For
+ it is a general received reason<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id=
+ "Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> amongst Catholics, that there is not that expecting and
+ suffering course now to be run that was in the Queen's time, who was the last of her
+ line, and last in expectance to run violent courses against Catholics; for then it was
+ hoped that the King that now is would have been at least free from persecuting, as his
+ promise was before his coming into this realm, and as divers his promises have been
+ since his coming, saying that he would take no soul money nor blood. Also, as it
+ appeared, was the whole body of the Council's pleasure, when they sent for divers of
+ the better sort of Catholics (as Sir Thos. Tressam and others) and told them it was the
+ King's pleasure to forgive the payment of Catholics, so long as they should carry
+ themselves dutifully and well. All these promises every man sees broken, and to thrust
+ them further in despair, most Catholics take note of a vehement book written by Mr.
+ Attorney, whose drift (as I have heard) is to prove that the only being a Catholic is
+ to be a traitor, which book coming forth, after the breach of so many promises, and
+ before the ending of such a violent parliament, can work no less effect in men's minds
+ than a belief that every Catholic will be brought within that compass before the King
+ and State have done with them. And I know, as the priest himself told me, that if he
+ had not hindered there had somewhat been attempted, before our offence, to give ease to
+ Catholics. But being so safely prevented, and so necessary to avoid, I doubt not but
+ your Lordship and the rest of the Lords will think of a more mild and undoubted safe
+ course, in which I will undertake the performance of what I have promised and as much
+ as can be expected, and when I have done, I shall be as<span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> willing to die as I am ready to offer my
+ service, and expect not nor desire favour for it, either before the doing it, nor in
+ the doing it, nor after it is done, but refer myself to the resolved course for me. So,
+ leaving to trouble your Lordship any further, I humbly take my leave. Your Lordship's
+ poor bedesman, <span class="smcap">Ev. Digby</span>."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Addressed</i> "To the Right Honourable the Earl of Salisburie give these."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Sealed.</i><br />
+ [P.R.O. <i>Dom. James I.</i> xvii. 10.]</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_C_p_34" id="APPENDIX_C_p_34"></a>APPENDIX C. <a href=
+ "#Page_34">(p. 34).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">The Question of Succession.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">Father Parsons'</span> well-known book on this
+ subject, written under the pseudonym of Doleman, was denounced by Sir Edward Coke as
+ containing innumerable treasons and falsehoods. In fact, as may be seen in the work
+ itself, it is an exhaustive and careful statement of the descent of each of the
+ possible claimants, and of other considerations which must enter into the settlement.
+ Sir Francis Inglefield wrote that it was necessary to take some step of this kind, to
+ set men thinking on so important a question which would soon have to be decided, for
+ that the anti-Catholic party had made it treason to discuss it during the queen's life,
+ with intent to foist a successor of their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id=
+ "Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>own selection on the nation, when the moment should
+ arrive, trusting to the ignorance universally prevalent as to the rights of the matter;
+ but that such lack of information could not help the people to a sound decision.
+ [Stonyhurst MSS., <i>Anglia</i>, iii. 32.]</p>
+
+ <p>The Spanish sympathies of Parsons and his party were afterwards made much of as
+ evidence of their traitorous disposition. On this subject it must be noted (1) the
+ Infanta of Spain was amongst those whose claim was urged on genealogical grounds; (2)
+ the project was to marry her to an English nobleman. As Parsons tells us, when she
+ married and was endowed with another estate, English Catholics ceased to think of her.
+ [<i>Ibid.</i> ii. 444.] (3) Father Garnet notes that, "since the old king of Spain died
+ [1598], there hath been no pretence ... for the Infanta, or the King [of Spain], or any
+ of that family, but for any that should maintain Catholic religion, and principally for
+ His Majesty" [James I.]. [<i>Ibid.</i> iii. n. 41.]</p>
+
+ <p>A remark of Parsons' on this point, which at the time was considered almost
+ blasphemous, will seem now almost a truism, viz., that the title of particular
+ succession in kingdoms is founded only upon the positive laws of several countries,
+ since neither kingdoms nor monarchies are of the essence of human society, and
+ therefore every nation has a right to establish its own kings in what manner it likes,
+ and upon what conditions. Wherefore, as each of the other great parties in England
+ (whom he designates as Protestants and Puritans) will look chiefly to its own political
+ interests, and exact from the monarch of its choice pledges to secure them, it behoves
+ Catholics, being so large a part of the nation, to take their proper <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>share in the settlement,
+ and therefore to study betimes the arguments on which the claims of the competitors are
+ severally based.</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_D_p_36" id="APPENDIX_D_p_36"></a>APPENDIX D. <a href=
+ "#Page_36">(p. 36).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">The Spanish Treason.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">The</span> history of the alleged treasonable
+ negotiations with Spain, conducted by various persons whose names were afterwards
+ connected with the Gunpowder Plot, appears open to the gravest doubt and suspicion. It
+ would be out of place to discuss the question here, but two articles on the subject, by
+ the present writer, will be found in the <i>Month</i> for May and June, 1896.</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_E_p_60" id="APPENDIX_E_p_60"></a>APPENDIX E. <a href=
+ "#Page_60">(p. 60).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4><i>Site of Percy's lodging</i> [<i>see</i> View, <a href="#Page_56">p. 56</a>, and
+ Plan, <a href="#Page_59">p. 59.</a>]</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">That</span> the lodging hired by Percy stood near the
+ south-east corner of the old House of Lords (<i>i.e</i>. nearer to the river than that
+ building, and adjacent to, if not adjoining, the Prince's Chamber) is shown by the
+ following arguments.</p>
+
+ <ol>
+ <li>John Shepherd, servant to Whynniard, gave evidence as to having on a certain
+ occasion seen from the river "a boat lye cloase to the pale of Sir Thomas Parreys
+ garden, and men going to and from the water <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252"
+ id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>through the back door that leadeth into Mr. Percy
+ his lodging." [<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, 40, part 2.]</li>
+
+ <li>Faukes, in his examination of November 5th, 1605, speaks of "the windowe in his
+ chamber neere the parliament house towards the water side."</li>
+
+ <li>It is said that when digging their mine the conspirators were troubled by the
+ influx of water from the river, which would be impossible if they were working at the
+ opposite side of the Parliament House.</li>
+ </ol>
+
+ <p>[It has always been understood that Percy's house stood at the south end of the
+ House of Lords, but Smith (<i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, p. 39) places it to the
+ south-west instead of the south-east, saying that it stood on the site of what was
+ afterwards the Ordnance Office.]</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_F_p_64" id="APPENDIX_F_p_64"></a>APPENDIX F. <a href=
+ "#Page_64">(p. 64).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">Enrolment of Conspirators.</h4>
+
+ <p>The evidence on this point is most contradictory.</p>
+
+ <p>1. The Indictment, on the trial of the conspirators, mentions the following
+ dates.</p>
+
+ <p><i>May 20th, 1604.</i> [Besides Garnet, Greenway, Gerard, "and other Jesuits,"]
+ there met together T. Winter, Faukes, Keyes, Bates, Catesby, Percy, the two Wrights,
+ and Tresham, by whom the Plot was approved and undertaken.</p>
+
+ <p><i>March 31st, 1605</i>, R. Winter, Grant, and Rokewood were enlisted.</p>
+
+ <p>[No mention is made of Digby, who was separately arraigned, nor in his arraignment
+ is any date specified.]</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>2. According to Faukes' confession of November 17th, 1605, Percy, Catesby, T.
+ Winter, J. Wright, and himself were the first associates. Soon afterwards C. Wright was
+ added. After Christmas, Keyes was initiated and received the oath. At a later period,
+ Digby, Rokewood, Tresham, Grant, and R. Winter were brought in. Bates is not
+ mentioned.</p>
+
+ <p>[In this document the names of Keyes and R. Winter have been interchanged, in
+ Cecil's writing, and thus it was printed: the latter being made to appear as an earlier
+ confederate.]</p>
+
+ <p>3. According to T. Winter's declaration of November 23rd, 1605, Catesby, J. Wright,
+ and himself were the first associates, Percy and Faukes being presently added. Keyes
+ was enlisted before Michaelmas, C. Wright after Christmas, Digby at a later period, and
+ Tresham "last of all." No others are mentioned.</p>
+
+ <p>4. Keyes&mdash;November 30th, 1605&mdash;says that he was inducted a little before
+ Midsummer, 1604.</p>
+
+ <p>5. R. Winter and Grant (January 17th, 1605-6) fix January, 1604-5, for their
+ introduction to the conspiracy, and Bates (December 4th, 1605) gives the preceding
+ December for his. Neither date agrees with that of the indictment in support of which
+ these confessions were cited.</p>
+
+ <p>6. There is, of course, no evidence of any kind to show that Father Garnet and the
+ "other Jesuits" ever had any conference with the conspirators, nor was such a charge
+ urged on his trial.</p>
+
+ <p>7. Sir Everard Digby's case is exceptionally puzzling. All the evidence represents
+ him as having been initiated late in September, or early in October, 1605. Among the
+ Hatfield MSS., however, there is a letter addressed <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>to Sir Everard, by one G.D., and dated June
+ 11th, 1605, which treats ostensibly of a hunt for "the otter that infesteth your
+ brooks," to be undertaken when the hay has been cut, but has been endorsed by Cecil
+ himself, "Letter written to Sir Everard Digby&mdash;<i>Powder Treason</i>;" the
+ minister thus attributing to him a knowledge of the Plot, more than three months before
+ it was ever alleged that he heard of it.</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_G_p_94" id="APPENDIX_G_p_94"></a>APPENDIX G. <a href=
+ "#Page_94">(p. 94).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">Henry Wright the Informer.</h4>
+
+ <p>1. <i>Letter to Sir T. Challoner, April, 1604.</i> [<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, n.
+ 236.]</p>
+
+ <p>Good Sir Thomas, I am as eager for setting of the lodgings as you can be, and in
+ truth whereas we desired but twenty, the discoverer had set and (if we accept it) can
+ set above three score, but I told him that the State would take it for good service if
+ he set twenty of the most principal Jesuits and seminary priests, and therewithal I
+ gave him thirteen or fourteen names picked out of his own notes, among the which five
+ of them were sworn to the secresy. He saith absolutely that by God's grace he will do
+ it ere long, but he stayeth some few days purposely for the coming to town of Tesmond
+ [Greenway] and Kempe, two principals; their lodgings are prepared, and they will be
+ here, as he saith for certain, within these two days. For the treason, Davies neither
+ hath nor will unfold <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg
+ 255]</a></span>himself for the discovery of it till he hath his pardon for it under
+ seal, as I told you, which is now in great forwardness, and ready to be sealed so that
+ you shall know all.... Your worship's most devoted,</p>
+
+ <p class="right"><span class="smcap">Hen. Wright</span>.<br /></p>
+
+ <p>[A pardon to Joseph Davies for all treasons and other offences appears on the Pardon
+ Roll, April 25th, 1605, thus supplying the approximate date of the above letter.]</p>
+
+ <p>2. <i>Application to the King.</i> [<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>, n. 237.]</p>
+
+ <p>"If it may please your Majesty, can you remember that the Lord Chief Justice Popham
+ and Sir Thomas Challoner, Kt., had a hand in the discovery of the practices of the
+ Jesuits in the powder, and did from time reveal the same to your Majesty, for two
+ years' space almost before the said treason burst forth by an obscure letter to the
+ Lord Mounteagle, which your Majesty, like an angel of God, interpreted, touching the
+ blow, then intended to have been given by powder. The man that informed Sir Thomas
+ Challoner and the Lord Popham of the said Jesuitical practices, their meetings and
+ traitorous designs in that matter, whereof from time to time they informed your
+ Majesty, was one Wright, who hath your Majesty's hand for his so doing, and never
+ received any reward for his pains and charges laid out concerning the same. This
+ Wright, if occasion serve, can do more service."</p>
+
+ <p>[<i>Addressed</i>, "Mr. Secretary Conway."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Headed</i>, "Touching Wright and his services performed in the damnable plot of
+ the Powder treason."]</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_H_p_119" id="APPENDIX_H_p_119"></a>APPENDIX H. <a href=
+ "#Page_119">(p. 119).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4><i>Lord Monteagle to King James</i>, (British Museum MSS. Add. 19402, f. 146.)</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni">"<span class="smcap">Most</span> gracious Soveraine.&mdash;Your maiestyes
+ tender and fatherly love over me, In admonishinge me heartofore, to seake resolution In
+ matter of religion, geves me both occasion, and Incouragement, as humbly to thanke your
+ maiestye for this care of my soules good, so to crave leave of gevinge into your
+ maiestyes hand this accompt, that your wisdome, seinge the course and end of my
+ proceadinges, might rest assured that by the healp of god, I will [live and] dye, In
+ that religion which I have nowe resolved to profes.</p>
+
+ <p>"It may please your maiestye therfore to knowe, that as I was breed upp In the
+ Romish religion and walked in that, because I knew no better, so have I not sodainely
+ or lightly made the chaunge, which nowe I desire to be seane In, for I speake, Sir, as
+ before him that shall Judg my soule, I have by praier, for god his gidance, and with
+ voues to him, to walk in that light he should shew me, and by longe carefull and
+ diligent readinge, and conference with lerned men, on both sides, and impartiall
+ examination of ther profes and argumentes, come to discerne the Ignorance I was
+ formerly wrapped In, as I nowe wonder that ether my self, or any other of common
+ understandinge, showld bee so blynded, as to Imbrace that gods trewth, [<i>sic</i>]
+ which I nowe perseyue to be grounded uppon so weake foundations. And as I never could
+ digest all poyntes therin, wherof not few seamed to bee made for gaine <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>and ambition, of the
+ papacye, so nowe I fynde that the hole frame and bodye of that religion (wherin they
+ oppose us) difereth from the platforme, which god him self hath recorded In the holy
+ scriptures, and hath In length of tyme, by the Ignorance and deceiptfulness of men,
+ bene peaced together, and is now maintayned by factious obstinacye, and certain
+ coulerable pretences, such as the wittes and learninge of men, are able to cast uppon
+ any humaine errors, which they list to uphowld. Nether have I left any thinge I doubted
+ of untried or unresolued, becawse I did Intend and desire to so take up the trewth of
+ god, once discouered to me, as neuer to suffer yt to bee questioned any more In my owne
+ consienc. And In all this, Sir, I protest to your maiestye, before almightye god, I
+ have simply and only propounded to my self the trew seruise of god, and saluation of my
+ owne soule, Not gaine, not honor, no not that which I doe most highly valew, your
+ maiestyes fauour, or better opinion of me. Nether on the other side am I affraide of
+ those censures of men whether of the partye I have abandoned, or of others which I
+ shall Incur by this alteration, howldinge yt contentment Innough to my self, That god
+ hath in mercye enlightened my mynde to see his sacred trewth, with desire to serue [the
+ paper here is mutilated].... And rest, your maie[styes] most loyall and obedient
+ servant W. Mownteagle."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Addressed</i>, "To the Kinge his most excellent Maiestye."</p>
+
+ <p>From the absence of any allusion to the Powder Plot and its "discovery," it appears
+ certain that this letter must have been written previously to it.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>On August 1st, 1609, Sir Wm. Waad wrote to Salisbury that the disorders of Lord
+ Monteagle's house were an offence to the country. At this period he appears to have
+ been suspected of concealing Catholic students from St. Omers. [<i>Calendar of State
+ Papers.</i>]</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_I_p_140" id="APPENDIX_I_p_140"></a>APPENDIX I. <a href=
+ "#Page_140">(p. 140).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4><i>Epitaph in St. Anne's, Aldersgate.</i> [Maitland, London (1756), p. 1065.]</h4>
+
+ <p>"<i>Peter Heiwood</i>, younger son of <i>Peter Heiwood</i>, one of the Counsellors
+ of <i>Jamaica</i>, ... Great Grandson to <i>Peter Heiwood</i> of <i>Heywood</i> in the
+ County Palestine of <i>Lancaster</i>; who apprehended <i>Guy Faux</i> with his dark
+ Lanthorn; and for his zealous prosecution of Papists, as Justice of Peace, was stabbed
+ in <i>Westminster-Hall</i> by <i>John James</i>, a <i>Dominican</i> Friar, An. Dom.
+ 1640. Obiit <i>Novem. 2. 1701</i>.</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni">Reader, if not a Papist bred<br />
+ Upon such Ashes gently tread."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>It is to be presumed that the person who died in 1701 is not the same who was
+ stabbed in 1640, or who discovered Guy Faukes in 1605.</p>
+
+ <p>The Dominican records contain no trace of any member of the Order named John James,
+ nor does so remarkable an event as the stabbing of a Justice of Peace in Westminster
+ Hall appear to be chronicled elsewhere.</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>Peter Heywood, J.P. for Westminster, was active as a magistrate as late as December
+ 15th, 1641. [<i>Calendar of State Papers.</i>]</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_K_p_173" id="APPENDIX_K_p_173"></a>APPENDIX K. <a href=
+ "#Page_173">(p. 173).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">The Use of Torture.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">There</span> can be no doubt that torture was freely
+ employed to extract evidence from the conspirators and others who fell into the hands
+ of the government.</p>
+
+ <p>The Earl of Salisbury, in his letter to Favat, of December 4th, 1605, clearly
+ intimates that this was the case, when he complains "most of the prisoners have
+ wilfully forsworn that the priests knew anything in particular, and obstinately refuse
+ to be accusers of them, <i>yea, what torture soever they be put to</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>About the middle of November, Lord Dunfermline wrote to Salisbury [<i>Dom. James
+ I.</i> xvi. 81] recommending that the prisoners should be confined apart and in
+ darkness, that they should be examined by torchlight, and that the tortures should be
+ slow and at intervals, as being thus most effectual.</p>
+
+ <p>There is every reason to believe that the Jesuit lay-brother, Nicholas Owen,
+ <i>alias</i> Littlejohn, actually died upon the rack. [<i>Vide</i> Father Gerard's
+ <i>Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot</i>, p. 189.]</p>
+
+ <p>Finally we have the king's instructions as to Faukes [<i>Gunpowder Plot Book</i>,
+ No. 17]. "The gentler tortours are to be first usid unto him, <i>et sic per gradus
+ ad</i> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span><i>ima
+ tenditur</i>,<sup><a name="FN458A" id="FN458A"></a><a href="#FN458">[458]</a></sup> and
+ so God speede your goode worke."<sup><a name="FN459A" id="FN459A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN459">[459]</a></sup> Guy's signature of November 9th is sufficient evidence that it
+ was none of the "gentler tortours" which he had endured.</p>
+
+ <p>In the violently Protestant account of the execution of the traitors,<sup><a name=
+ "FN460A" id="FN460A"></a><a href="#FN460">[460]</a></sup> we read: "Last of all came
+ the great Devil of all Faukes, who should have put fire to the powder. His body being
+ weak with torture and sickness, he was scarce able to go up the ladder, but with much
+ ado, by the help of the hangman, went high enough to brake his neck with the fall."</p>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_L_p_227" id="APPENDIX_L_p_227"></a>APPENDIX L. <a href=
+ "#Page_227">(p. 227).</a></h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">Myths and Legends of the Powder Plot.</h4>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">Around</span> the Gunpowder Plot has gathered a mass
+ of fabulous embellishment too curious to be passed over in silence. This has chiefly
+ attached itself to Guy Faukes, who, on account of the desperate part allotted to him
+ has impressed the public mind far more than any of his associates, and has come to be
+ erroneously regarded as the moving spirit of the enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the best authenticated facts regarding him is that when apprehended he was
+ booted and spurred for a journey, though it is usually said that he was to have
+ travelled by water.</p>
+
+ <p>There is, however, a strange story, told with much circumstantiality, which gives an
+ elaborate but incomprehensible account of a tragic underplot in connection with him.
+ This is related at considerable length in a Latin hexameter poem, <i>Venatio
+ Catholica</i>, published in 1609, in the <i>History of the Popish Sham Plots</i>, and
+ elsewhere. According to this tangled tale the other conspirators wished both to get rid
+ of Faukes, when he had served their purpose, and to throw the suspicion of their deed
+ upon their enemies, the Puritans. To this end they devised a notable scheme. A certain
+ Puritan, named Pickering, a courtier, but a godly man, foremost amongst his party, had
+ a fine horse ("Bucephalum egregium"). This, Robert Keyes, his brother-in-law, purchased
+ or hired, and placed at the service of Faukes for his escape. The steed was to await
+ him at a certain spot, but in a wood hard by assassins were to lurk, who, when Guy
+ appeared, should murder him, and having secured the money with which he was furnished,
+ should leave his mangled corpse beside the Bucephalus, known as Mr. Pickering's. Thus
+ Faukes would be able to tell no tales, and&mdash;though it does not appear
+ why&mdash;suspicion would be sure to fall on the <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>Puritan, and he would be proclaimed as the
+ author of the recent catastrophe.</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="ni"><small>"Hoc astu se posse rati convertere in hostes<br />
+ Flagitii infamiam, causamque capessere vulgo<br />
+ Qua Puritanos invisos reddere possent,<br />
+ Ut tant&aelig; authores, tam immanis proditionis.<br />
+ Cognito equo, et facta (pro more) indagine c&aelig;dis,<br />
+ Aulicus hic sceleris tanquam fabricator atrocis<br />
+ Proclamandus erat, Falso (ne vera referre<br />
+ Et socios sceleris funesti prodere possit)<br />
+ Sublato."</small></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Many curious circumstances have likewise been imported into the history, and many
+ places connected with it which appear to have no claim whatever to such a
+ distinction.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus we hear (<i>England's Warning Peece</i>) that the Jesuit Cresswell came over
+ from Spain for the occasion "to bear his part with the rest of his society in a
+ victorial song of thanksgiving." Also that on November 5th, a large body of
+ confederates assembled at Hampstead to see the House of Parliament go up in the
+ air.</p>
+
+ <p>In the <i>Gentleman's Magazine</i>, February, 1783, is a remarkable description of a
+ summer house, in a garden at Newton Hall, near Kettering, Northamptonshire, in which
+ the plotters used to meet and conspire, the place then belonging to the Treshams; "and
+ for greater security, they placed a conspirator at each window, Guy Faukes, the arch
+ villain, standing in the doorway, to prevent anybody overhearing them."</p>
+
+ <p>According to a wide-spread belief Guy Faukes was a Spaniard.<sup><a name="FN461A"
+ id="FN461A"></a><a href="#FN461">[461]</a></sup> He has also been called a Londoner,
+ and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>his name
+ being altered to Vaux, has been said to have a family connection with Vauxhall. He was
+ in fact a Yorkshireman of good family, though belonging to a younger branch of no great
+ estate. His father, Edward Faukes, was a notary at York, where he held the office of
+ registrar and advocate of the cathedral church. Guy himself was an educated man, more
+ than commonly well read. He is always described in the process as "Guido Faukes,
+ Gentleman."</p>
+
+ <p>Another most extraordinary example of an obvious myth, which was nevertheless
+ treated as sober history, is furnished by the absurd statement that the astute and wily
+ Jesuits not only contrived the Plot, but published its details to the world long before
+ its attempted execution, in order to vindicate to themselves the credit of so glorious
+ a design. Thus Bishop Kennet, in a fifth of November sermon, preached at St. Paul's
+ before the Lord Mayor, in 1715, tells us:<sup><a name="FN462A" id="FN462A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN462">[462]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>"It was a general surmise at least among the whole Order of Jesuits in foreign
+ parts: or else one of them could hardly have stated the case so exactly some four or
+ five years before it broke out. Father Del-Rio, in a treatise printed An. 1600, put the
+ case, as if he had already looked into the Mine and Cellars, and had surveyed the
+ barrels of powder in them, and had heard the whole confessions of Faux and
+ Catesby."</p>
+
+ <p>This "general surmise" does not appear to have been confined to the Jesuits
+ themselves. Another ingenious writer, nearly a century earlier,<sup><a name="FN463A"
+ id="FN463A"></a><a href="#FN463">[463]</a></sup> tells a wonderful story concerning the
+ sermon of a Dominican, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg
+ 264]</a></span>preached in the same year, 1600, wherein it was related how there was a
+ special hell, beneath the other, for Jesuits, so thick and fast did they arrive as to
+ need extra accommodation. The preacher avowed that he had, in his vision of the place,
+ given warning to the demon in charge of it, "to search them with speed, for fear that
+ they had conveyed hither some gunpowder with them, for they are very skilfull in
+ Mine-workes, and in blowing up of whole States and Parliament-houses, and if they can
+ blow you all up, then the Spanyards will come and take your kingdom from you."</p>
+
+ <p>Another notable specimen of the way in which reason and probability were cast to the
+ winds is afforded by two letters written from Naples in 1610, one to King James and the
+ other to Salisbury, by Sir Edwin Rich,<sup><a name="FN464A" id="FN464A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN464">[464]</a></sup> who announced that Father Greenway&mdash;who of all the
+ Jesuits was said to be most clearly convicted as a traitor&mdash;intended to send to
+ the king a present of an embroidered satin doublet and hose, which, being craftily
+ poisoned, would be death to him if he put them on.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN458" id="FN458"></a><a href="#FN458A">[458]</a></sup>
+ "And so by degrees to the uttermost."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN459" id="FN459"></a><a href="#FN459A">[459]</a></sup>
+ These instructions furnish an interesting specimen of the king's broad Scotch,
+ <i>e.g.</i>, "Quhat Gentlewomans Letter it was y<sup>t</sup> was founde upon him, and
+ quhairfor doth she give him an other Name in it y<sup>n</sup> he giues to himself. If
+ he was ever a papiste; and if so, quho brocht him up in it. If otherwayes, hou was he
+ convertid, quhair, quhan, and by quhom."</p>
+
+ <p>The following passage is very characteristic of the writer:</p>
+
+ <p>"Nou last, ye remember of the crewellie villanouse pasquille y<sup>t</sup> rayled
+ upon me for y<sup>e</sup> name of Brittanie. If I remember richt it spake something
+ of harvest and prophecyed my destructi[<span class="c11">o</span> about y<sup>t</sup>
+ tyme. Ye may think of y<sup>s</sup>, for it is lyke to be by y<sup>e</sup> Laboure of
+ such a desperate fellow as y<sup>s</sup> is."</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN460" id="FN460"></a><a href="#FN460A">[460]</a></sup>
+ <i>The Arraignment and execution of the late traitors</i>, etc., 1606.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN461" id="FN461"></a><a href="#FN461A">[461]</a></sup>
+ See, for instance, <i>London and the Kingdom</i> (mainly from the Guildhall
+ Archives), by Reginald R. Sharpe, ii. 13.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN462" id="FN462"></a><a href="#FN462A">[462]</a></sup>
+ P. 9.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN463" id="FN463"></a><a href="#FN463A">[463]</a></sup>
+ Lewis Owen, <i>Unmasking of all popish Monks</i>, etc. (1628), p. 49.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN464" id="FN464"></a><a href="#FN464A">[464]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> lvii. 92-93, October 5th.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_M" id="APPENDIX_M"></a>APPENDIX M.</h2>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">Sir William Waad's Memorial Inscriptions.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">In</span> a room of the Queen's House in the Tower,
+ in which the conspirators are supposed to have been examined by the Lords of the
+ Council, Sir William <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg
+ 265]</a></span>Waad has left a series of inscriptions as memorials of the events in
+ which he played so large a part. Of these the most noteworthy are the following:</p>
+
+ <p class="center">I.</p>
+
+ <p class="center"><small>Jacobus Magnus, Magn&aelig; Britanni&aelig;<br />
+ rex, pietate, justitia, prudentia, doctrina, fortitudine,<br />
+ clementia, ceterisq. virtutibus regiis clariss'; Christian&aelig;<br />
+ fidei, salutis public&aelig;, pacis universalis propugnator, fautor<br />
+ auctor acerrimus, augustiss', auspicatiss'.<br />
+ Anna Regina Frederici 2. Danorum Regis invictiss' filia sereniss<sup>a</sup>,<br />
+ Henricus princeps, natur&aelig; ornamentis, doctrin&aelig; pr&aelig;sidiis,
+ grati&aelig;<br />
+ Muneribus, instructiss', nobis et natus et a deo datus,<br />
+ Carolus dux Eboracensis divina ad omnem virtutem indole,<sup><a name="FN465A" id=
+ "FN465A"></a><a href="#FN465">[465]</a></sup><br />
+ Elizabetha utriusq. soror Germana, utroque parente dignissima<br />
+ Hos velut pupillam oculi tenellam<br />
+ providus muni, procul impiorum<br />
+ impetu alarum tuarum intrepidos<br />
+ conde sub umbra.</small></p>
+
+ <p>[This is evidently intended for a Sapphic stanza, but the last two words of v. 3
+ have been transposed, destroying the metre.]</p>
+
+ <p class="center">II.</p>
+
+ <p class="center"><small>Robertus Cecil, Comes Sarisburiensis, summus et regis<br />
+ Secretarius, et Angli&aelig; thesaurarius, clariss' patris<br />
+ et de repub. meritissimi filius, in paterna munera<br />
+ successor longe dignissimus;<br />
+ Henricus, comes Northamptoni&aelig;, quinq. portuum pr&aelig;fectus et<br />
+ privati sigilli custos, disertorum litteratissimus, litteratorum<br />
+ disertissimus;<br />
+ Carolus comes Nottingami&aelig;, magnus Angli&aelig; admirallus<br />
+ victoriosus;<br />
+ Thomas Suffolci&aelig; comes, regis camerarius splendidissimus,<br />
+ tres viri nobilissimi ex antiqua Howardorum familia, ducumq.<br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg
+ 266]</a></span>Norfolci&aelig; prosapia;<br />
+ Edwardus Somersetus, comes Wigorni&aelig;, equis regiis pr&aelig;fectus<br />
+ ornatissimus;<br />
+ Carolus Blunt, comes Devoni&aelig;, Hyberni&aelig; prorex et pacificator,<br />
+ Joannes Areskinus,<sup><a name="FN466A" id="FN466A"></a><a href=
+ "#FN466">[466]</a></sup> illustris Marri&aelig; comes, pr&aelig;cipuarum in
+ Scotia<br />
+ arcium pr&aelig;fectus;<br />
+ Georgius Humius, Dunbari comes, Scoti&aelig; thesaurarius<br />
+ prudentiss'<br />
+ omnes illustriss' ordinis garteri milites;<br />
+ Joannes Popham, miles, justiciarius Angli&aelig; capitalis,<br />
+ et justiti&aelig; consultissimus:<br /></small></p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><small>Hi omnes illustrissimi viri, quorum nomina ad sempiternam eorum
+ memoriam posteritati consecrandam proxime supra ad lineam posita sunt, ut regi a
+ consiliis, ita ab eo delegati qu&aelig;sitores, reis singulis incredibili diligentia ac
+ cura s&aelig;pius appellatis, nec minore solertia et dexteritate pertentatis eorum
+ animis, eos suis ipsorum inter se collatis responsionibus convictos, ad voluntariam
+ confessionem adegerunt: et latentem nefarie conjurationis seriem, remq. omnem ut
+ hactenus gesta et porro per eos gerenda esset, summa fide erutam, &aelig;terna cum
+ laude sua, in lucem produxerunt, adeo ut divina singulari providentia effectum sit, ut
+ tam pr&aelig;sens, tamq. f&oelig;da tempestas, a regia majestate, liberisq. regiis, et
+ omni regno depulsa, in ipsos autores eorumq. socios redundarit.</small></p>
+
+ <p class="center">III.</p>
+
+ <p><small>Conjuratorum Nomina, ad perpetuam ipsorum infamiam et tant&aelig; diritatis
+ detestationem sempiternam.</small></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center"><small><i>Monachi<br />
+ salutare<br />
+ Jesu<br />
+ nom<span class="c11">e</span><br />
+ ementiti</i></small></td>
+
+ <td>{<br />
+ {<br />
+ {<br />
+ {<br />
+ {</td>
+
+ <td align="center"><small>Henry Garnet<br />
+ John Gerrard<br />
+ Oswald Tesond<br />
+ Ham<span class="c11">o</span><br />
+ Baldw<span class="c11">i</span></small></td>
+
+ <td><small>Thomas Winter<br />
+ Robert Winter<br />
+ John Winter<br />
+ Guy Fawkes<br />
+ Thomas Bates<br />
+ Everard Digby, K.<br />
+ Am' Rookewood<br />
+ John Gaunt<br />
+ Robert Keyes<br />
+ Henry Morg<span class="c11">a</span></small></td>
+
+ <td><small>Thomas Percy<br />
+ Robert Catesby<br />
+ John Wright<br />
+ Christopher Wright<br />
+ Francis Tresham<br />
+ Thomas Abbington<br />
+ Edmond Baineham, K.<br />
+ William Stanley, K.<br />
+ Hughe Owen.</small></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">IV.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides the above there is a prolix description of the Plot, devised against the
+ best of sovereigns, "a Jesuitis Romanensibus, perfidi&aelig; Catholic&aelig; et
+ impietatis viperin&aelig; autoribus et assertoribus, aliisq. ejusdem amenti&aelig;
+ scelerisq. patratoribus et sociis suscept&aelig;, et in ipso pestis derepente
+ inferend&aelig; articulo (salutis anno 1605, mensis Novembris die quinto), tam
+ pr&aelig;ter spem quam supra fidem mirifice et divinitus detect&aelig;."</p>
+
+ <p>There is, moreover, a sentence in Hebrew, with Waad's cipher beneath, and a number
+ of what seem to be meant for verses. The following lines are evidently the Lieutenant's
+ description of his own office:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p><small>"Custodis Custos sum, Carcer Carceris, arcis<br />
+ <span class="c10">Arx, atque Argu' Argus; sum specul&aelig; specula;</span><br />
+ Sum vinclum in vinclis; compes cum compede, clav<span class="c11">u</span><br />
+ <span class="c10">Firmo h&aelig;rens, teneo tentus, habens habeor.</span><br />
+ Dum regi regnoq. salus stet firma quieta,<br />
+ <span class="c10">Splendida sim Compes Compedis usque licet."</span></small></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>This is considerably more metrical and intelligible than some of the rest.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1613 Waad was dismissed from his post, one of the charges against him being that
+ he had embezzled the jewels of Arabella Stuart.<sup><a name="FN467A" id=
+ "FN467A"></a><a href="#FN467">[467]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p>In Theobald's <i>Memoirs of Sir Walter Raleigh</i> (p. 16), Waad is described as
+ "the Lieutenant of the Tower, and Cecil's great Creature."</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN465" id="FN465"></a><a href="#FN465A">[465]</a></sup>
+ At the time of the Plot Charles was not quite five years old.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN466" id="FN466"></a><a href="#FN466A">[466]</a></sup>
+ Erskine.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN467" id="FN467"></a><a href="#FN467A">[467]</a></sup>
+ <i>Dom. James I.</i> lxxii. 129.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <h2><a name="APPENDIX_N" id="APPENDIX_N"></a>APPENDIX N.</h2>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="rpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenuml'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg
+ 268]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h4><span class="smcap">The Published Confession of Guy Faukes. A.</span></h4>
+
+ <h4><i>The draft, November 8th, 1605</i> (G.P.B. 49).</h4>
+
+ <p class="center"><sup>*</sup><sub>*</sub><sup>*</sup> Passages between square
+ brackets have been cancelled.<br />
+ Those marked * have been ticked off for omission.</p>
+
+ <h4 class="c16">The Confession of Guy Fawkes, taken the 8 of November, 1605.</h4>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">He</span> confesseth that a Practise in
+ generall was first broken unto him, agaynst his Majesty, for the Catholique
+ cause, and not invented or propounded by himself, and this was first propounded
+ unto him about Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the seas in the Low
+ countreyes, by an English Lay-man, and that English man came over with him in his
+ company into England, and they tow and three more weare the first five mencioned
+ in the former examination. And they five resolving to do some thinge for the
+ Catholick cause,&mdash;a vowe being first taken by all of them for
+ secrecye,&mdash;one of the other three propounded to perform it with Powder, and
+ resolved that the place should be,&mdash;where this action should be performed
+ and justice done,&mdash;in or neere the place of the sitting of the Parliament,
+ wherein Religion had been uniustly suppressed. This beeinge resolved the manner
+ [of it] was as followeth.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="lpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h4><span class="smcap">The Published Confession of Guy Faukes. B.</span></h4>
+
+ <h4><i>As signed by Faukes, November 17th, 1605</i> (G.P.B. 101).</h4>
+
+ <p><sup>*</sup><sub>*</sub><sup>*</sup> Square brackets indicate an erasure.
+ Italics an addition or substitution.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><span class="smcap">The</span> [deposition] <i>declaration</i> of
+ Guy Fawkes prisonner in the Tower of London <i>taken the 17 of Nov. 1605,
+ acknowledged before the Lords Commissioners.</i><sup><a name="FN468A" id=
+ "FN468A"></a><a href="#FN468">[468]</a></sup></p>
+
+ <p><i>A.</i> I confesse that a practise in generall was first broken unto me
+ against his Majestie, for releife of the Catholique cause, and not invented or
+ propounded by my self.</p>
+
+ <p>And this was first propounded unto me about Easter last was twelvemonth,
+ beyond the Seas, in the Low countries of the Archdukes obeysance by Thomas
+ Wynter, who came thereupon with me into England, and there wee imparted our
+ purpose to three other Englishmen more, namely Rob<sup>t</sup> Catesby,
+ Tho<sup>s</sup> Percy, and John Wright, who all five consulting together of the
+ meanes how to execute the same, and taking a vowe among our selves for secresie
+ Catesby propounded to have it performed by Gunpowder, and by making a myne under
+ the upper house of Parliament, which place wee made choice of the rather,</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="rpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenuml'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg
+ 270]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>A. The draft.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p>First they hyred the Howse at Westminster of one Ferris,<sup><a name="FN469A"
+ id="FN469A"></a><a href="#FN469">[469]</a></sup> and havinge the howse they
+ sought to make a myne under the upper howse of Parliament, and they begann to
+ make the myne in or about the xi of December, and they five first entered into
+ the worke, and soone after toke an other unto them, havinge first sworne him and
+ taken the Sacrament, for secrecye. And when they came to the wall,&mdash;that was
+ about three yards thicke,&mdash;and found it a matter of great difficultie, they
+ tooke to them an other in like manner, with oath and Sacrament as afore sayd. All
+ which seaven, were gentlemen of name and bloode, and not any man was employed in
+ or about that action,&mdash;noe not so much as in digginge and myning that was
+ not a gentleman. And having wrought to the wall before Christmas, they reasted
+ untill after the holydayes, and the day before Christmas,&mdash;having a masse of
+ earth that came out of the myne,&mdash;they carryed it into the Garden of the
+ said Howse, and after Christmas they wrought on the wall till Candlemas, and
+ wrought the wall half through, and sayeth that all the tyme while the others
+ wrought he stood as Sentynell to descrie any man that came neere, and when any
+ man came neere to the place, uppon warninge given by him they rested untill they
+ had notyce to proceed from hym, and sayeth that they seaven all lay in the Howse,
+ and had shott and powder, and they all resolved to dye in that place before they
+ yeilded or weare taken.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="lpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>B. The Confession as signed.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p class="ni">because Religion having been unjustly suppressed there, it was
+ fittest that Justice and punishment should be executed there.</p>
+
+ <p><i>B.</i> This being resolved amongst us, Thomas Percy hired a howse at
+ Westminster for that purpose, neare adjoyning the Parl<sup>t</sup> howse, and
+ there wee beganne to make a myne about the xi of December 1604. The fyve that
+ entered into the woorck were Thomas Percye, Robert Catesby, Thomas Wynter, John
+ Wright, and my self, and soon after we tooke another unto us, Christopher Wright,
+ having sworn him also, and taken the Sacrament for secrecie.</p>
+
+ <p><i>C.</i> When wee came to the verie foundation of the Wall of the house,
+ which was about 3 yeards thick, and found it a matter of great difficultie, we
+ took to us another gentleman Robert [Wynter] <i>Keys</i><a name="FN470A" id=
+ "FN470A"></a><sup><a href="#FN470">[470]</a></sup> in like manner with our oathe
+ and Sacrament as aforesaid.</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p><i>D.</i> It was about Christmas when wee brought our myne unto the Wall, and
+ about Candlemas we had wrought the Wall half through. And whilst they were a
+ working, I stood as sentinell, to descrie any man that came neare, whereof I gave
+ them warning, and so they ceased untill I gave them notice agayne to proceede.
+ All wee seaven lay in the house, and had shott and powder, being resolved to dye
+ in that place before we should yeild or be taken.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="rpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenuml'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg
+ 272]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>A. The draft.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p>And as they weare workinge, they heard a rushinge in the cellar which grew by
+ <i>one</i><a name="FN471A" id="FN471A"></a><sup><a href="#FN471">[471]</a></sup>
+ Brights selling of his coles whereuppon this Examinant, fearinge they had been
+ discovered, went into the cellar and viewed the cellar, and perceivinge the
+ commoditye thereof for their purposs, and understandinge how it would be letten
+ his maister, M<sup>r</sup> Percy, hyred the Cellar for a yeare, for 4 pounds
+ rent. And confesseth that after Christmas 20<sup>ty</sup> barrells of Powder
+ weare brought by themselves to a Howse which they had on the Banksyde in Hampers,
+ and from that Howse removed the powder to the sayd Howse, neere the upper Howse
+ of Parliament. And presently upon hyringe the cellar, they themselfs removed the
+ powder into the cellar, and couvered the same with faggots which they had before
+ layd into the sellar.</p>
+
+ <p>After, about Easter, he went into the Low Countryes,&mdash;as he before hath
+ declared in his former examination,&mdash;and that the trew purpos of his goinge
+ over was least beinge a dangerous man he should be known and suspected, and in
+ the meane tyme he left the key [of the cellar] with M<sup>r</sup> Percye, whoe in
+ his absence caused more Billetts to be layd into the Cellar, as in his former
+ examination he confessed, and retourned about the end of August or the beginninge
+ of September, and went agayne to the sayd howse, nere to the sayd cellar, and
+ received the key of the cellar agayne of one of the five. And then they brought
+ in five or six barrells of powder more into the cellar, which all soe they
+ couvered with billetts, saving fower little barrells covered with ffaggots, and
+ then this examinant went into the Country about the end of September.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="lpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>B. The Confession as signed.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p><i>E.</i> As they were working upon the wall, they heard a rushing in a cellar
+ of removing of coles; whereupon wee feared wee had been discovered, and they sent
+ me to go to the cellar, who fynding that the coles were a selling, and that the
+ Cellar was to be lett, viewing the commoditye thereof for our purpose, Percy went
+ and hired the same for yearly Rent.</p>
+
+ <p>Wee had before this provyded and brought into the house 20 barrells of Powder,
+ which wee removed into the Cellar, and covered the same with billets and fagots,
+ which we provided for that purpose.</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p><i>F.</i> About Easter, the Parliament being proroged tyll October next, wee
+ dispersed our selfs and I retired into the Low countryes, <i>by advice and
+ direction of the rest, as well to acquaint Owen with the particulars of the plot,
+ as also</i><a name="FN472A" id="FN472A"></a><sup><a href="#FN472">[472]</a></sup>
+ lest by my longer staye I might have grown suspicious, and so have come in
+ question.</p>
+
+ <p>In the meane tyme Percy, having the key of the Cellar, layd in more powder and
+ wood into it.</p>
+
+ <p>I returned about the beginning of September next and then receyving the key
+ againe of Percy, we brought in more powder and billets to cover the same
+ againe.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="rpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenuml'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg
+ 274]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>A. The draft.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p>* It appeareth the powder was in the cellar, placed as it was found the 5 of
+ November, when the Lords came to proroge the Parliament, and sayeth that he
+ returned agayne to the sayd Howse neare the cellar on Wednesday the 30 of
+ October.</p>
+
+ <p>[He confesseth he was at the Erle of Montgomeryes marriage, but as he sayeth
+ with noe intention of evill, havinge a sword about him, and was very neere to his
+ Majesty and the Lords there present.]</p>
+
+ <p>Forasmuch as they knew not well how they should come by the person of the Duke
+ Charles, beeinge neere London, where they had no forces,&mdash;if he had not been
+ all soe blowne upp,&mdash;He confesseth that it was resolved amonge them, that
+ the same day that this detestable act should have been performed, the same day
+ should other of their confederacye have surprised the person of the Lady
+ Elizabeth, and presently have proclaimed her queen [to which purpose a
+ Proclamation was drawne, as well to avowe and justify the Action, as to have
+ protested against the Union, and in no sort to have meddeled with Religion
+ therein. And would have protested all soe agaynst all strangers] and this
+ proclamation should have been made in the name of the Lady Elizabeth.</p>
+
+ <p>* Beinge demanded why they did not surprise the Kinges person and draw him to
+ the effectinge of their purpose, sayeth that soe many must have been acquaynted
+ with such an action as it could not have been kept secrett.</p>
+
+ <p>He confesseth that if their purpose had taken effect untill they had power
+ enough they would not have avowed the deed to be theirs; but if their
+ power,&mdash;for their defence and safetye,&mdash;had been sufficient they
+ themselfes would have taken it upon them.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="lpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>B. The Confession as signed.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p>And so [I] went for a tyme into the country, till the 30 of October.</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p><i>G.</i> It was farther resolved amongst us that the same day that this
+ action should have been performed some other of our confederates should have
+ surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth the Kings eldest daughter, who was
+ kept in Warwickshire at the Lo. Harringtons house, and presently have proclaimed
+ her for Queene, having a project of a Proclamation ready for the purpose, wherein
+ we made no mention of altering of Religion,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p>&mdash;&mdash; nor would have avowed the deed to be ours untill we should have
+ had power enough to make our partie good, and then we would have avowed both.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="rpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenuml'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg
+ 276]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>A. The draft.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p>* They meant all soe to have sent for the Prisoners in the Tower to have come
+ to them, of whom particularly they had some consultation.</p>
+
+ <p>* He confesseth that the place of Rendez-vous was in Warwickshire, and that
+ armour was sent thither, but the particuler thereof he knowes not.</p>
+
+ <p>He confesseth that they had consultation for the takinge of the Lady Marye
+ into their possession, but knew not how to come by her.</p>
+
+ <p>And confesseth that provision was made by some of the conspiracye of some
+ armour of proofe this last Summer for this Action.</p>
+
+ <p>* He confesseth that the powder was bought of the common Purse of the
+ Confederates.</p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="rpad">L. Admyrall<br />
+ L. Chamberlayne<br />
+ Erle of Devonshire<br />
+ Erle of Northampton<br />
+ Erle of Salisbury<br />
+ Erle of Marr<br />
+ L. cheif Justice</td>
+
+ <td class="td6">}<br />
+ }<br />
+ }<br />
+ }<br />
+ }<br />
+ }<br />
+ }</td>
+
+ <td class="lpad">attended by M<sup>r</sup><br />
+ Attorney generall.</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>[<i>Endorsed</i>] Examination of Guy Fauks, Nov<sup>r</sup> 8th, 1605.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="lpad">
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p class="center">[<i>B. The Confession as signed.</i>]</p>
+
+ <p><i>H.</i> Concerning Duke Charles, the Kings second son, we hadd sundrie
+ consultations how to sease on his person, but because wee found no meanes how to
+ compasse it,&mdash;the Duke being kept near London,&mdash;where we had not forces
+ enough, wee resolved to serve ourselves with the Lady Elizabeth.</p>
+ <hr class='c14' />
+
+ <p><i>J.</i> The names of other principall persons that were made privie
+ afterwards to this horrible conspiracie.</p>
+
+ <p class="right">[<i>Signed</i>] <span class="smcap">Guido Faukes.</span></p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Everard Digby, Knight<br />
+ Ambrose Ruckwood<br />
+ Francis Tresham<br />
+ John Grant<br />
+ Robert [Keys] <i>Wynter</i><br /></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>[<i>Witnessed</i>] Edw. Coke&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;W. Waad.</p>
+
+ <p>[<i>Endorsed</i>] Fawkes his [deposition] <i>declaration 17 Nov.
+ 1605</i>.<a name="FN473A" id="FN473A"></a><sup><a href=
+ "#FN473">[473]</a></sup></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN468" id="FN468"></a><a href="#FN468A">[468]</a></sup>
+ Alterations and additions (in italics) made by Sir Edward Coke.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN469" id="FN469"></a><a href="#FN469A">[469]</a></sup>
+ This name has seemingly been tampered with.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN470" id="FN470"></a><a href="#FN470A">[470]</a></sup>
+ Changed by Cecil; but on November 14th, writing to Edmondes, he included Keyes
+ amongst those that "wrought not in the myne," and R. Winter amongst those who
+ did.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN471" id="FN471"></a><a href="#FN471A">[471]</a></sup>
+ Interlined.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN472" id="FN472"></a><a href="#FN472A">[472]</a></sup>
+ The words italicised are added in the published version.</p>
+
+ <p class="ni"><sup><a name="FN473" id="FN473"></a><a href="#FN473A">[473]</a></sup>
+ Words in italics added by Coke.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="c2" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2 class="g"><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX.</h2>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Abbot, Robert, Bishop of Salisbury, his version of the missing
+ confessions of Faukes, <a href="#Page_192">192</a> <i>seq.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Acton, Robert, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Alabaster, Thomas, a priest in government employ, <a href=
+ "#Page_204">204</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Andrew, William, servant to Sir E. Digby, evidence of, <a href=
+ "#Page_78">78</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>Annals of England</i>, cited, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>Answere to Scandalous papers</i> (Cecil's manifesto), <a href=
+ "#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a> <i>seq.</i><br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Babington's Plot, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Baldwin, Father William, S.J.; allegations against him, <a href=
+ "#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a> <i>seq.</i>; which are not
+ substantiated, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>; correspondence with Father
+ Schondonck, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Bancroft, Richard, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href=
+ "#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Barlow, Thomas, Bishop of Lincoln, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_70">70</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Barnes, a government agent, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Bartlett, George, servant to Catesby, his evidence reported,
+ <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Bates, Thomas, servant to Catesby, his introduction to the
+ Conspiracy, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>; his alleged
+ evidence against Greenway, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-<a href=
+ "#Page_183">183</a>; trial and execution, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>. <i>See
+ also</i> <a href="#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Batty, Matthew, evidence regarding Monteagle, <a href=
+ "#Page_78">78</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"Blackfriars Downfall," the, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Blount, Father Richard, S.J., on government intelligence,
+ <a href="#Page_77">77</a>; on Suffolk's proposal of toleration, <a href=
+ "#Page_224">224</a>; on Cecil's "new stratagem," <a href="#Page_224">224</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Brayley and Britton (<i>Palace of Westminster</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_79">79</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Brewer, Rev. John Sherren, on the fate of Parry, the conspirator,
+ <a href="#Page_14">14</a>; on government devices, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>; on
+ Cecil's knowledge of the Plot, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>; on the Monteagle
+ letter, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Bromley, Sir Henry, Sheriff of Worcestershire, <a href=
+ "#Page_167">167</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Buck, Mr., alleged warning given to, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Burnet, Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury, <a href=
+ "#Page_46">46</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"Bye," the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a> <i>note</i>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Camden, William, the historian, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Capon, William, on the old Palace of Westminster, <a href=
+ "#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>; on traces of the mine, <a href=
+ "#Page_87">87</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Carleton, Dudley, afterwards Viscount Dorchester, patronized by
+ Cecil, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>; assists Percy to hire the house at Westminster,
+ <a href="#Page_61">61</a>; reports the French version of the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_140">140</a>; and its contradiction, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>; his
+ mysterious connection with the Conspiracy, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>
+ <i>note</i>; his opinion of Percy, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Castlemaine, Earl of (Roger Palmer), on State plots, <a href=
+ "#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>; on Osborne's qualifications as an
+ historian, <a href="#Page_44">44</a> <i>note</i>; on the fate of decoy ducks,
+ <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Carte, Thomas (<i>General History of England</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_46">46</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Carey, &mdash;&mdash;, evidence regarding Percy, <a href=
+ "#Page_150">150</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Catesby, Robert, a ringleader in the Conspiracy, <a href=
+ "#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>; his character and antecedents,
+ <a href="#Page_35">35</a> <i>seq.</i>; persuades his associates not to reveal
+ their project to priests, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>; undertakes to proclaim the
+ new sovereign, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>; his death, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_152">152</a> <i>seq.</i>; suspicions concerning him, <a href=
+ "#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Catholics, their numbers, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>; their
+ condition under Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>; their hopes from James,
+ <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>; his promises to them, <a href=
+ "#Page_29">29</a>; they welcome his accession, <i>ibid</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_34">34</a>; temporary relief at his hands, <i>ibid</i>; their consequent
+ increase, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>; Cecil's
+ hostility, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_105">105</a>; attempt to charge them with the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_4">4</a>-<a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_108">108</a>; legislation against them on account of it, <a href=
+ "#Page_212">212</a> <i>seq.</i>; its lasting effects in their regard, <a href=
+ "#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil"><a name="Cecil_R" id="Cecil_R"></a>Cecil, Robert, first Earl of
+ Salisbury, his character, <a href="#Page_19">19</a> <i>seq.</i>; dignities
+ conferred by James I., <a href="#Page_19">19</a> <i>note</i>; and nicknames,
+ <a href="#Page_19">19</a> <i>note</i>; his unpopularity, <a href=
+ "#Page_21">21</a> <i>seq.</i>; difficulties and dangers of his position, <a href=
+ "#Page_26">26</a> <i>seq.</i>; in the pay of Spain, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;
+ and probably of France, <a href="#Page_22">22</a> <i>note</i>; his secret
+ correspondence with King James, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>; his intrigues against
+ Northumberland and Raleigh, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>; hostility to the Catholics,
+ <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_105">105</a>; anxiety on account of the king's attitude, <a href=
+ "#Page_28">28</a>; and dealings with Pope Clement VIII., <a href=
+ "#Page_104">104</a>; endeavours to commit James to a policy of intolerance,
+ <a href="#Page_105">105</a>; his political methods, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_111">111</a>; employs the services of forgers, <a href=
+ "#Page_112">112</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>; his knowledge of
+ the Plot, <a href="#Page_94">94</a> <i>seq.</i>; alleged secret dealings with
+ Percy, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>; Tresham, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>; and
+ Catesby, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>; contradicts himself concerning the
+ "discovery," <a href="#Page_123">123</a> <i>seq.</i>; his inexplicable delay in
+ making it, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>; and conduct afterwards, <a href=
+ "#Page_137">137</a>; was not taken by surprise, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>; at
+ once turns the Plot to his advantage, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>; his
+ determination to incriminate priests, <a href="#Page_4">4</a> <i>seq.</i>,
+ <a href="#Page_130">130</a>; advantages reaped by him, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_213">213</a> <i>seq.</i>; his Manifesto, <a href=
+ "#Page_218">218</a> <i>seq.</i>; suspected of having originated or manipulated
+ the Conspiracy, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>seq.</i>; alleged attempt to float a
+ second Plot, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Cecil, Thomas, first Earl of Exeter, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><a name="Cecil_W" id="Cecil_W"></a>Cecil, William, second Earl of
+ Salisbury, his testimony reported, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Cecil, William, a priest in government employ, <a href=
+ "#Page_45">45</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"Cellar," the, its situation and character, <a href=
+ "#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a> <i>note</i>; hired by the
+ conspirators, <a href="#Page_69">69</a> <i>seq.</i>; problems concerning it,
+ <a href="#Page_87">87</a> <i>seq.</i>; its after history, <a href=
+ "#Page_137">137</a>; accompanies the migrations of the House of Lords, <a href=
+ "#Page_80">80</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Challoner, Sir Thomas, information addressed to, <a href=
+ "#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Chamberlain, John, M.P., on Cecil's death and character, <a href=
+ "#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>; account of the "discovery,"
+ <a href="#Page_128">128</a>; on the King's lucky day, <a href=
+ "#Page_231">231</a>; on Percy's character, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Charles, Duke of York, afterwards Charles I.; plans of the
+ conspirators regarding him, <a href="#Page_81">81</a> <i>seq.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Chichester, Sir Arthur, Deputy in Ireland, <a href=
+ "#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Coal, Father Greenway's description of, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Cobham, eighth Lord (Henry Brooke), his charge of forgery against
+ Waad, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Cobham, ninth Lord (William Brooke), his evidence reported,
+ <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Coke, Sir Edward, Attorney-General, his falsification of
+ evidence, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>; Cecil's instructions to him, <a href=
+ "#Page_116">116</a> <i>note</i>; his assertions, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_88">88</a>; interrogatories prepared by him, <a href=
+ "#Page_176">176</a>; his humour, <a href="#Page_63">63</a> <i>note</i>; proofs
+ against Owen, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>; witnesses Thomas Winter's declaration,
+ <a href="#Page_169">169</a>; and that of Faukes, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>; his
+ treatment of Raleigh and Northumberland, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice, on the English penal laws,
+ <a href="#Page_29">29</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil"><a name="Conspirators" id="Conspirators"></a>Conspirators, the,
+ list of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>; their character and
+ antecedents, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_41">41</a>; their
+ enrolment, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_252">252</a>; their plans and proceedings, <a href=
+ "#Page_9">9</a>-<a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a> <i>seq.</i>;
+ mining operations, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;
+ incredibility of the story, <a href="#Page_65">65</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_76">76</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>; they hire the
+ "cellar," <a href="#Page_69">69</a> <i>seq.</i>; purchase and store gunpowder,
+ <a href="#Page_78">78</a>; difficulties concerning it, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-<a href=
+ "#Page_137">137</a>; further designs, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_80">80</a>-<a href="#Page_82">82</a>; alarmed by the prorogation, <a href=
+ "#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>; flight and attempted rebellion,
+ <a href="#Page_2">2</a>; their fate, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>-<a href=
+ "#Page_6">6</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Cope, Sir Walter, on the character of Cecil, <a href=
+ "#Page_27">27</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Cornwallis, Sir Charles, English Ambassador in Spain, on the
+ character of the conspirators, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>; letter to Father
+ Cresswell, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>; on the Catholic design to murder Cecil,
+ <a href="#Page_221">221</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Cresswell, Father Joseph, S.J., allegations concerning him,
+ <a href="#Page_195">195</a>; Cornwallis' letter to him, <i>ibid</i>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dacre, Francis, titular Lord, efforts to connect him with the
+ Plot, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Darnley, Henry, Lord, father of James I., the victim of a
+ gunpowder plot, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Davenport, Father Christopher, O.P. (Francis &agrave; S. Clara),
+ <a href="#Page_145">145</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Davies, Joseph, a government "discoverer," <a href=
+ "#Page_94">94</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">De Beaumont, M., French Ambassador, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">De la Boderie, M., French Ambassador, on Cecil's insecurity,
+ <a href="#Page_26">26</a>; on the ruin of Northumberland, <a href=
+ "#Page_23">23</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Del-Rio, Father Martin, S.J., said to have described the Plot
+ <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1600, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Derby, Earl of (William Stanley), attempt to incriminate him,
+ <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">De Ros, Lord, on Faukes' plan of escape, <a href=
+ "#Page_144">144</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Devonshire, Earl of (Charles Blount), <a href="#Page_168">168</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Digby, Sir Everard, joins the Conspiracy, <a href=
+ "#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>; difficulties and contradictions
+ regarding him, <a href="#Page_79">79</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_253">253</a>; his letter to Salisbury, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_245">245</a>; part assigned to him, <a href="#Page_78">78</a> <i>note</i>;
+ his fate, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Digby, Sir John, English Ambassador in Spain, <a href=
+ "#Page_22">22</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Digby, Sir Kenelm, his evidence reported, <a href=
+ "#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Digby, Sir Robert, <a href="#Page_38">38</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dixon, Hepworth (<i>Her Majesty's Tower</i>), on government
+ intelligence, <a href="#Page_111">111</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dodd, Rev. Charles, on the origin of the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dorset, Earl of (Thomas Sackville), his esteem for Cecil,
+ <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dunbar, Earl of (George Hume), <a href="#Page_168">168</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dunfermline, Earl of (Alexander Seaton), on the effective use of
+ torture, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Dunsmoor Heath, projected hunting match on, <a href=
+ "#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Edmondes, Sir Thomas, English Ambassador at Brussels, account of
+ the "discovery" sent to him, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_124">124</a>; version of Faukes' confession sent to him, <a href=
+ "#Page_186">186</a>; proofs against Owen sent to him, <a href=
+ "#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>; his negotiations with the
+ archdukes, 186 <i>seq.</i>; letters of, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;
+ letters to, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Elizabeth, Princess, daughter of James I., designs of the
+ conspirators regarding her, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>England's Warning Peece</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>English Protestants' Plea</i>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_195">195</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Eudaemon-Joannes, Father Andrew, S.J., <a href=
+ "#Page_204">204</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Faukes, Guy or Guido, <i>alias</i> John Johnson, his position and
+ character, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>; his Spanish
+ mission, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>; introduced to the Conspiracy, <a href=
+ "#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>; passes as Percy's servant, <a href=
+ "#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>; keeps guard while the others work,
+ <a href="#Page_66">66</a>; discovers the "cellar," <a href="#Page_70">70</a>; has
+ charge of the premises, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_142">142</a>; visits Flanders, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_162">162</a>; appointed to fire the powder, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>; plans
+ for his escape, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>; arrest, <a href=
+ "#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_128">128</a>; published confession, <a href=
+ "#Page_169">169</a> <i>seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a> <i>seq.</i>;
+ evidence falsified, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>; missing depositions, <a href=
+ "#Page_191">191</a>; tortured, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>; trial and execution, <a href=
+ "#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>; fables respecting him, <a href=
+ "#Page_261">261</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Favat, Mr., Cecil's letter to, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_182">182</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Ferrers, Henry, sub-lets the house at Westminster to Percy,
+ <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Fifth of November, a propitious day for the "discovery," <a href=
+ "#Page_231">231</a>; the day solemnized, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Floyde, Griffith, a government spy, <a href=
+ "#Page_49">49</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">French historians on the Plot, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">French official accounts of the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Fuller, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Fuller, Thomas (<i>Church History of Britain</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Fulman MSS., <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Gardiner, Professor Samuel Rawson, his favourable estimate of
+ Cecil's character, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>; on the Spanish pension, <a href=
+ "#Page_22">22</a> <i>note</i>; repudiates imputations against the government,
+ <a href="#Page_18">18</a>; on the conspirators' plans, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;
+ on the Monteagle letter, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>; on the king's
+ interpretation, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>note</i>; on the desire to
+ incriminate priests, <a href="#Page_4">4</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Garnet, Father Henry, S.J., proclaimed as a principal
+ conspirator, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>; his capture, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_166">166</a>; lack of evidence, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>; trial and
+ execution, <i>ibid</i>.; his account of the conspirators' proceedings, <a href=
+ "#Page_208">208</a>; his evidence against Catesby, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;
+ on the accession of James, <a href="#Page_29">29</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>Gentleman's Magazine</i>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Gerard, Col. John, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Gerard, Father John, S.J., proclaimed as a principal conspirator,
+ <a href="#Page_5">5</a>; exonerated by historians, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;
+ his history of the Plot, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>; his experiences in the
+ Tower, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>; on the persecution of Catholics, <a href=
+ "#Page_32">32</a>; opinion of the "discovery," <a href="#Page_49">49</a>; and of
+ the official narrative, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>; on the death of Percy and
+ Catesby, <a href="#Page_156">156</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Goodman, Godfrey, Bishop of Gloucester, on the origin of the
+ Conspiracy, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>; on the king's promises to Catholics,
+ <a href="#Page_29">29</a> <i>note</i>; on the persecution of Catholics, <a href=
+ "#Page_32">32</a>; on the "discovery," <a href="#Page_134">134</a> <i>note</i>;
+ on the death of Whynniard, <a href="#Page_92">92</a> <i>note</i>; on Percy's
+ intercourse with Cecil, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>; on the death of Percy and
+ Catesby, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>; his religious views, <a href=
+ "#Page_145">145</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Gowrie Conspiracy, the, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_232">232</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"Great Horses," <a href="#Page_2">2</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Grange, Justice E., <a href="#Page_148">148</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Grant, John, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>. <i>See also</i>
+ Conspirators.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Green, Mrs. Everett, wrongly describes Owen as a Jesuit, <a href=
+ "#Page_185">185</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Green, John Richard (<i>History of the English People</i>),
+ <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Greenway, <i>alias</i> Tesimond, Father Oswald, S.J., proclaimed
+ as a principal conspirator, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>; Bates' alleged evidence
+ against him, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-<a href="#Page_183">183</a>; his history
+ of the Plot, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>; opinion of the official narrative,
+ <a href="#Page_134">134</a>; on the effects of an explosion, <a href=
+ "#Page_133">133</a>; on government despatches concerning Percy, <a href=
+ "#Page_155">155</a>; his visit to the rebels at Huddington, <a href=
+ "#Page_206">206</a> <i>note</i>; fables respecting him, <a href=
+ "#Page_264">264</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Gregory, Arthur, a forger employed by government, <a href=
+ "#Page_203">203</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Grene, Father Martin, S.J., notes on the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_45">45</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Gunpowder, amount procured by the conspirators, <a href=
+ "#Page_78">78</a>; difficulties concerning it, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>
+ <i>seq.</i><br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Hagley Hall, R. Winter and S. Littleton captured there, <a href=
+ "#Page_4">4</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Hallam, Henry (<i>Constitutional History</i>), repudiates
+ imputations against the government, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>; on Father Garnet's
+ capture, <i>ibid</i>., <i>note</i>; on King James's title to the crown, <a href=
+ "#Page_34">34</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Harington, Sir John, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Hawarde, John (<i>Les Reportes del Cases in Camera Stellata</i>),
+ <a href="#Page_165">165</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Heiwood, or Heywood, Peter, 139 <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_258">258</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Hendlip House (Thomas Abbington's), the scene of Father Garnet's
+ capture, <a href="#Page_18">18</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Henry, Prince of Wales, anticipations concerning him, <a href=
+ "#Page_33">33</a>; the conspirators' plans in his regard, <a href=
+ "#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Herring, Francis (<i>Pietas Pontificia</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_27">27</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Higgons, Bevil (<i>English History</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_47">47</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Hoby, Sir Edward, on the death of Percy, <a href=
+ "#Page_154">154</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Holbeche House (Stephen Littleton's), the conspirators there
+ slain or captured, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">House of Lords, its situation and subsequent migrations, <a href=
+ "#Page_55">55</a> <i>seq.</i>; never represented in pictures of the Plot,
+ <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">House, Percy's, at Westminster, its position, <a href=
+ "#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>; circumstances of the bargain for
+ it, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>; difficulties concerning it, <a href=
+ "#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_88">88</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Howes, Edmund (continuation of Stowe's <i>Chronicle</i>),
+ <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Huddington House (Robert Winter's), <a href="#Page_206">206</a>
+ <i>note</i>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Ichrup, Thomas, name given to Faukes, <a href=
+ "#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Inglefield, Sir Francis, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">James I., King of Great Britain, his claim to the succession,
+ <a href="#Page_34">34</a>; circumstances of his accession, <a href=
+ "#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>; hopes of the Catholics, <a href=
+ "#Page_28">28</a>; who support his cause, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>; his policy
+ at first favourable to them, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>; soon reversed, <a href=
+ "#Page_31">31</a>; his dealings with Pope Clement VIII., <a href=
+ "#Page_104">104</a>; his supposed interpretation of the letter, <a href=
+ "#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>; Tuesday his lucky day, <a href=
+ "#Page_230">230</a>; his speech to Parliament, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;
+ accuses Catholics in general and the Pope, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>; suspected of
+ previous knowledge of the Plot, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>; anxiety for evidence
+ against priests, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>; letter to the Archdukes, <a href=
+ "#Page_187">187</a> <i>note</i>; alleged subsequent opinion of the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_45">45</a>; instructions for the torture of Faukes, <a href=
+ "#Page_259">259</a>; his Scotch dialect, <a href="#Page_260">260</a> <i>note</i>;
+ gives his royal word against Owen and Baldwin, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>; his
+ policy permanently affected, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">James, John, a supposed Dominican, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Jardine, David, on the character of the official narrative,
+ <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>; on the falsification of
+ evidence, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>; on the Monteagle letter, <a href=
+ "#Page_117">117</a>; on the king's interpretation, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>
+ <i>note</i>; on the established facts of the case, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>; not
+ perfectly impartial, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>; on
+ the results of the Plot, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Jessopp, Augustus, D.D., on the value of money, <a href=
+ "#Page_36">36</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a> <i>note</i>; on Father
+ Gerard's innocence, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Jesuits, efforts to incriminate, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>
+ <i>note</i>; Cecil on their "insolencies," <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Kennet, White, Bishop of Peterborough, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Keyes, Robert, contradictions respecting him, <a href=
+ "#Page_84">84</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>. <i>See also</i>
+ <a href="#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"King's Book," the, its character, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;
+ Cecil's description of it, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_220">220</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Knyvet, or Knevet, Sir Thomas, leads the party which captures
+ Faukes, <a href="#Page_124">124</a> <i>seq.</i>; receives a peerage, <a href=
+ "#Page_139">139</a> <i>note</i>; the Countess of Suffolk his sister, <a href=
+ "#Page_224">224</a> <i>note</i>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Lake, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_232">232</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Lenthal, William, Speaker of the Long Parliament, his evidence
+ reported, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Lindsay, Sir James, conveys messages between King James and Pope
+ Clement VIII., <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Lingard, John, D.D., <a href="#Page_68">68</a> <i>note</i>,
+ <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Littleton, Humphrey, <a href="#Page_167">167</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Littleton, Stephen, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Lodge, Edmund, F.S.A. (<i>Illustrations of British History</i>),
+ <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Lopez' Plot, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"Main," the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Mar, Earl of (John Erskine), <a href="#Page_168">168</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Mary, Princess, daughter of James I., <a href="#Page_81">81</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Milton, poems on the Plot, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Mine, the, story told respecting it, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>
+ <i>seq.</i>; difficulties respecting it, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>
+ <i>seq.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>Mischeefe's Mystery</i>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_153">153</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Money, value of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_117">117</a> <i>note</i>; amount raised by conspirators, <a href=
+ "#Page_39">39</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Monteagle, Lord (William Parker), his character and antecedents,
+ <a href="#Page_118">118</a>; relations with the king and court, <a href=
+ "#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>; letter to the king, <a href=
+ "#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>; connection with the
+ conspirators, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>; communicates the warning letter to
+ Cecil, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_160">160</a>; attends parliament on the day of the "discovery," <a href=
+ "#Page_137">137</a> <i>note</i>; devices of the government on his behalf,
+ <a href="#Page_116">116</a>; rewards conferred, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;
+ subsequent conduct, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Moore, Sir Francis, his evidence reported, <a href=
+ "#Page_151">151</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Moore, Sir Jonas, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">More, Father Henry, S.J., <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Morgan, Harry, <a href="#Page_81">81</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Morgan, Thomas, <a href="#Page_157">157</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_193">193</a> <i>note</i>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Naunton, Sir Robert, on Cecil's character, <a href=
+ "#Page_19">19</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Northampton, Earl of (Henry Howard), a nominal Catholic promoted
+ by King James, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>; Cecil's agent in his secret
+ correspondence, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>note</i>; on Cecil's death, <a href=
+ "#Page_23">23</a>; on the history of the "cellar," <a href="#Page_58">58</a>
+ <i>note</i>; not admitted to all Cecil's secrets, <a href=
+ "#Page_112">112</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Northumberland, Earl of (Henry Percy), a rival of Cecil's,
+ <a href="#Page_26">26</a>; who secretly traduces him, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>; the Plot
+ turned to his ruin, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_216">216</a>-<a href="#Page_218">218</a>; which is attributed to
+ Cecil, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, his
+ sentiments in return, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Nottingham, Earl of, Lord Admiral (Charles Howard), <a href=
+ "#Page_170">170</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Oates, Titus, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_138">138</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Oath taken by the conspirators, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Oldcorne, <i>alias</i> Hall, Father Edward, S.J., captured along
+ with Garnet, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>; never accused of complicity <i>ib.</i>;
+ Catholic demonstration at his execution, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>note</i>;
+ tortured, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Oldmixon (<i>Royal House of Stuart</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_25">25</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Osborne, Francis, on Cecil's unpopularity, <a href=
+ "#Page_25">25</a>; on the "discovery," <a href="#Page_44">44</a>; on the 5th of
+ August celebration, <a href="#Page_232">232</a> <i>note</i>; on Northumberland
+ and Cecil, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>; his qualifications as an historian,
+ <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Owen, Captain Hugh, falsely described as a Jesuit, <a href=
+ "#Page_173">173</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a> <i>note</i>;
+ particularly obnoxious to the government, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_185">185</a>; evidence fabricated against him, <a href=
+ "#Page_174">174</a>; Cecil's instruction respecting him, <a href=
+ "#Page_116">116</a> <i>note</i>; efforts made to secure him, <a href=
+ "#Page_185">185</a> <i>seq.</i>; his intercourse with Phelippes, <a href=
+ "#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Owen, Lewis, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Paris, Henry, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Parliament, its successive adjournments, <a href=
+ "#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;
+ meets on the day of the "discovery," <a href="#Page_136">136</a>; activity
+ against Catholics, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>
+ <i>seq.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Parry, Sir Thomas, English Ambassador at Paris, instructions
+ given to, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>note</i>; intelligence supplied by,
+ <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_102">102</a>; account of the discovery furnished to, <a href=
+ "#Page_126">126</a> <i>seq.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Parry, Dr. William, his Plot, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_153">153</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Parsons, Father Robert, S.J., letters to, <a href=
+ "#Page_29">29</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_223">223</a>; his views as to the succession, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;
+ on Walsingham's "spyery," <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Percy, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_192">192</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Percy, Thomas, one of the first and principal conspirators,
+ <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>; his antecedents, <a href=
+ "#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>; house
+ hired by him, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>; and "cellar," <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;
+ strange conduct in both transactions, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>; conduct
+ afterwards, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>; undertakes to
+ seize Duke Charles or Princess Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>; his death,
+ <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a> <i>seq.</i>; profession of
+ religious zeal, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>; bigamy, <i>ibid</i>; Catholics
+ suspicious of him, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>; alleged secret dealings with
+ Cecil, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>; the case against him, <a href=
+ "#Page_148">148</a>-<a href="#Page_156">156</a>. <i>See also</i>
+ Conspirators.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Phelippes, Thomas, the "decipherer," employed by the government,
+ <a href="#Page_111">111</a>; their devices against him, <a href=
+ "#Page_112">112</a>; correspondence with Hugh Owen, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Pickering, Mr., and his horse, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.
+ <i>Plain and Rational Account of the Catholick Faith</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_49">49</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Plots under Elizabeth and James I., <a href="#Page_14">14</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_157">157</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a> <i>note</i>; their
+ common feature, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><a name="Politicians_C" id="Politicians_C"></a><i>Polititian's
+ Catechism</i>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Pope Clement VIII., interchanges communications with James I.,
+ <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Pope Paul V., represented as an accomplice in the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Popham, Sir John, Lord Chief Justice, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Raleigh, Sir Walter, Cecil's enmity towards him, <a href=
+ "#Page_26">26</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_198">198</a>; his ruin, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_216">216</a>; attempt to implicate him in the Powder Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Ratcliffe, Ralph, a government spy, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Rich, Sir Edwin, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Richardot, President, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Rogers, Professor Thorold, on the value of money, <a href=
+ "#Page_117">117</a> <i>note</i>; on James's title to the throne, <a href=
+ "#Page_34">34</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Rokewood, Ambrose, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> <i>note</i>.
+ <i>See also</i> <a href="#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Salisbury, first Earl of. <i>See</i> <a href="#Cecil_R">Cecil,
+ Robert</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Salisbury, second Earl of. <i>See</i> <a href="#Cecil_W">Cecil,
+ William</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Sanderson, Sir William, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Schondonck, Father Giles, S.J., Rector of St. Omers, on the
+ innocence of the Jesuits, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>; on Cecil's manifesto,
+ <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Scott, Sir Walter, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Shakespeare, never alludes to the Plot, <a href=
+ "#Page_226">226</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Sharpe, Dr. R.R., <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Shepherd, John, evidence of, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Smith, John Thomas (<i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>), <a href=
+ "#Page_58">58</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a> <i>note</i>, <a href=
+ "#Page_89">89</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Soane, Sir John, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Southwaick, or Southwell, a government spy, <a href=
+ "#Page_99">99</a>-<a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Speed, John (<i>Historie</i>), <a href="#Page_62">62</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_63">63</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Squires, Edward, his plot, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Stanley, Sir William, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_192">192</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Strange, Father Thomas, S.J., <a href="#Page_96">96</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Streete, John, pensioned for killing Percy and Catesby, <a href=
+ "#Page_155">155</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Strype, John (<i>Annals</i>), <a href="#Page_28">28</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Suffolk, Earl of, Lord Chamberlain (Thomas Howard), his venality,
+ <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Talbot, John, of Grafton, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>
+ <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Talbot, Peter, Archbishop of Dublin. <i>See <a href=
+ "#Politicians_C">Polititian's Catechism</a>.</i></p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Theobald, Lewis, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Topcliffe, Richard, priest-hunter, <a href=
+ "#Page_202">202</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Torture, use of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_201">201</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_260">260</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Tresham, Francis, enlisted in the enterprise, <a href=
+ "#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a> <i>seq.</i>; his previous record,
+ <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>; his action on behalf of
+ King James, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>; suspected of writing the warning letter,
+ <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>; and of collusion with
+ Cecil, <i>ibid.</i>; his conduct after the "discovery," <a href="#Page_3">3</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_158">158</a>; his death in the Tower, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Tresham, Sir Thomas, proclaims King James, <a href=
+ "#Page_34">34</a>; summoned to Court, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>True and Perfect Relation</i>, character of the narrative,
+ <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Tytler, Patrick Fraser, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Usher, James, Archbishop of Armagh, his evidence reported,
+ <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>Venatio Catholica</i>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil"><i>Vetusta Monumenta</i>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_86">86</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Villeroy, M., on Cecil's duplicity, <a href=
+ "#Page_23">23</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">"Vinegar House," <a href="#Page_60">60</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Vowell, Peter, evidence reported, <a href=
+ "#Page_160">160</a>.<br />
+ &nbsp;</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Waad, Sir William, lieutenant of the Tower, charged by Cobham
+ with forgery of evidence, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>; dismissed from his post,
+ <a href="#Page_203">203</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>; his
+ inscriptions in the Tower, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_267">267</a>; letters to Cecil, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_258">258</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span></p>
+
+ <table>
+ <tr valign="top">
+ <td class="td80jhil">
+ <p class="jhil">Walsh, Sir Richard, sheriff of Worcestershire, <a href=
+ "#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Ward, Samuel, preacher and artist, <a href=
+ "#Page_239">239</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Webb, John, evidence reported, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Weldon, Sir Anthony, on Cecil's unpopularity, <a href=
+ "#Page_25">25</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Welwood, James (<i>Memoirs</i>), <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Westmoreland, titular Earl of (Henry Neville), attempt to
+ implicate him, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Whynniard, Mr., landlord of Percy's house, <a href=
+ "#Page_61">61</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>; his sudden death,
+ <a href="#Page_92">92</a> <i>note</i>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Whynniard, Mrs., evidence of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_142">142</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Willaston, William, intelligence supplied by, <a href=
+ "#Page_99">99</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wimbledon, Viscount (Edward Cecil), his evidence reported,
+ <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Windsor, Lord, his house plundered by the conspirators, <a href=
+ "#Page_2">2</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Winter, Robert, introduced to the conspiracy, <a href=
+ "#Page_10">10</a>; captured at Hagley, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>; evidences of foul
+ play in his regard, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;
+ trial and execution, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="td80jhir">
+ <p class="jhil">Winter, Thomas, one of the first conspirators, <a href=
+ "#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>; character, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;
+ Spanish mission, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>; brings
+ Faukes from Flanders, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>; attends the prorogation, Oct. 3rd,
+ <a href="#Page_74">74</a> <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>; captured at
+ Holbeche, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>; his published confession, <a href=
+ "#Page_167">167</a> <i>seq.</i>; probably tortured, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;
+ trial and execution, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wood, Anthony &agrave;, notes addressed to, <a href=
+ "#Page_159">159</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Worcester, Earl of (Edward Somerset), <a href="#Page_168">168</a>
+ <i>note</i>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wotton, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wren, Sir Christopher, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wright, Christopher, his introduction to the Conspiracy, <a href=
+ "#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>; character, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_37">37</a>; previous employment in Spain, <a href=
+ "#Page_36">36</a>; killed at Holbeche, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_152">152</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wright, Henry, his informations, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</p>
+
+ <p class="jhil">Wright, John, one of the first conspirators, <a href=
+ "#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>; character, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_37">37</a>; killed at Holbeche, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href=
+ "#Page_152">152</a>. <i>See also</i> <a href=
+ "#Conspirators">Conspirators</a>.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <h5 class="smcap"><span class="c17">chiswick press:&mdash;charles whittingham and
+ co.</span><br />
+ tooks court, chancery lane, london.</h5>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <p class="ni">TRANSCRIBERS' NOTES</p>
+
+ <ul>
+ <li>p 14: there is no closing quotation mark following the line '"making and
+ fomenting plots was then in fashion; nor can it be denied that good grounds for
+ such an opinion were not lacking.' The closing mark is placed at the end of this
+ sentence, though this may be incorrect.</li>
+
+ <li>p 20: continuation of footnote 37 from previous page begins with 'avor'; this
+ is a typo for 'favor'.</li>
+
+ <li>p 24: 'the' repeated in footnote 49, epigram 2; one 'the' removed.</li>
+
+ <li>p 32: added a closing quotation mark following 'and prepared for them'.</li>
+
+ <li>p 36: added . to end of footnote 87, after 'The Spanish Treason'.</li>
+
+ <li>p 49: inserted , into footnote 124; 'James I., lxxxi.'</li>
+
+ <li>p 120: footnote 257: missing closing bracket; corrected.</li>
+
+ <li>p 154: inserted , into footnote 310; 'James I., i. 588'.</li>
+
+ <li>p 160: changed ' to " to match quote mark style, footnote 329.</li>
+
+ <li>p 194: footnote 396: 'Englands' changed to 'England's'.</li>
+
+ <li>p 248: added missing full-stop: 'give ease to Catholics'.</li>
+
+ <li>p 255: added opening double-quote marks to the passage entitled 'Application to
+ the King.'</li>
+
+ <li>p 281: 'incrediblty' changed to 'incredibility', 'o' changed to 'of'.</li>
+ </ul>
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's What was the Gunpowder Plot?, by John Gerard
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? ***
+
+***** This file should be named 34807-h.htm or 34807-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/4/8/0/34807/
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Adam Styles and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+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 1.F.3. 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, are 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>
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image1.png b/34807-h/images/image1.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ada9f1a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image1.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image10.png b/34807-h/images/image10.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..51b87a1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image10.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image11.png b/34807-h/images/image11.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2ac2453
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image11.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image12.png b/34807-h/images/image12.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2afc5b4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image12.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image13.png b/34807-h/images/image13.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..089c661
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image13.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image14.png b/34807-h/images/image14.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..73ba43f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image14.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image15.png b/34807-h/images/image15.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1807b25
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image15.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image16.png b/34807-h/images/image16.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..599abff
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image16.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image17.png b/34807-h/images/image17.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5b74f12
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image17.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image18.png b/34807-h/images/image18.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ec1dcab
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image18.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image19.png b/34807-h/images/image19.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7dbb5d1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image19.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image2.png b/34807-h/images/image2.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0a19e0d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image2.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image20.png b/34807-h/images/image20.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a0de5b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image20.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image21.png b/34807-h/images/image21.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e96764b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image21.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image22.png b/34807-h/images/image22.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7357618
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image22.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image23.png b/34807-h/images/image23.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6953980
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image23.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image24.png b/34807-h/images/image24.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5026fa1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image24.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image3.png b/34807-h/images/image3.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b8788ae
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image3.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image4.png b/34807-h/images/image4.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..103d762
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image4.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image5.png b/34807-h/images/image5.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b0cc142
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image5.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image6.png b/34807-h/images/image6.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..056c820
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image6.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image7.png b/34807-h/images/image7.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3c5796f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image7.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image8.png b/34807-h/images/image8.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7115828
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image8.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807-h/images/image9.png b/34807-h/images/image9.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e00641d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807-h/images/image9.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/34807.txt b/34807.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2830ef1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9687 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of What was the Gunpowder Plot?, by John Gerard
+
+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: What was the Gunpowder Plot?
+ The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence
+
+Author: John Gerard
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2011 [EBook #34807]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Adam Styles and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES: Text in italics is enclosed by underscore
+characters. Where small capitals were used, text has been presented in
+uppercase. Abbreviations use superscript; the caret, ^, is used before
+superscript characters. Where multiple superscript characters are used
+they are enclosed in curly braces, {}. A small number of macron
+diacritical marks are used in the text and appear as an overlined
+letter. These marks are indicated by [=a] where a is the overlined
+character.
+
+This text makes extensive use of archaic spellings in quoted material
+which has not been amended or modernized. Where typographic errors have
+been repaired, they are detailed in further transcribers' notes at the
+end of the text.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT]
+
+
+
+
+
+ WHAT WAS THE
+ GUNPOWDER PLOT?
+
+ THE TRADITIONAL STORY TESTED BY
+ ORIGINAL EVIDENCE
+
+ BY
+ JOHN GERARD, S.J.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ LONDON
+ OSGOOD, McILVAINE & CO.
+ 45, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
+ 1897
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+THE following study of the Gunpowder Plot has grown out of the
+accidental circumstance that, having undertaken to read a paper before
+the Historical Research Society, at Archbishop's House, Westminster, as
+the day on which it was to be read chanced to be the 5th of November,[1]
+I was asked to take the famous conspiracy for my subject. It was with
+much reluctance that I agreed to do so, believing, as I then did, that
+there was absolutely nothing fresh to say upon this topic, that no
+incident in our annals had been more thoroughly threshed out, and that
+in regard of none, so far, at least, as its broader outlines are
+concerned, was the truth more clearly established.
+
+When, however, I turned to the sources whence our knowledge of the
+transaction is derived, and in particular to the original documents upon
+which it is ultimately based, I was startled to find how grave were the
+doubts and difficulties which suggested themselves at every turn, while,
+though slowly and gradually, yet with ever gathering force, the
+conviction forced itself upon me, that, not merely in its details is the
+traditional story unworthy of credit, but that all the evidence points
+to a conclusion fundamentally at variance with it. Nothing contributed
+so powerfully to this conviction as to find that every fresh line of
+reasoning or channel of information which could be discovered inevitably
+tended, in one way or another, towards the same result. In the following
+pages are presented to the reader the principal arguments which have
+wrought this change of view in my own mind.[2]
+
+I cannot pretend to furnish any full or wholly satisfactory answer to
+the question which stands upon the title-page. The real history of the
+Plot in all its stages we shall, in all probability, never know. If,
+however, we cannot satisfy ourselves of the truth, it will be much to
+ascertain what is false; to convince ourselves that the account of the
+matter officially supplied, and almost universally accepted, is
+obviously untrue, and that the balance of probability lies heavily
+against those who invented it, as having been the real plotters,
+devising and working the scheme for their own ends.
+
+Neither have I any wish to ignore, or to extenuate, the objections which
+militate against such a conclusion, objections arising from
+considerations of a general character, rather than from any positive
+evidence. Why, it may reasonably be asked, if the government of the day
+were ready to go so far as is alleged, did they not go further? Why,
+being supremely anxious to incriminate the priests, did they not
+fabricate unequivocal evidence against them, instead of satisfying
+themselves with what appears to us far from conclusive? Why did they
+encumber their tale with incidents, which, if they did not really occur,
+could serve only to damage it, inasmuch as we, at this distance of
+time, can argue that they are impossible and absurd? How is it,
+moreover, that the absurdity was not patent to contemporaries, and was
+not urged by those who had every reason to mislike and mistrust the
+party in power?
+
+Considerations such as these undoubtedly deserve all attention, and must
+be fully weighed, but while they avail to establish a certain
+presumption in favour of the official story, I cannot but think that the
+sum of probabilities tells strongly the other way. It must be remembered
+that three centuries ago the intrinsic likelihood or unlikelihood of a
+tale did not go for much, and the accounts of plots in particular appear
+to have obtained general credence in proportion as they were incredible,
+as the case of Squires a few years earlier, and of Titus Oates somewhat
+later, sufficiently testify. It is moreover as difficult for us to enter
+into the crooked and complex methods of action which commended
+themselves to the statesmen of the period, as to appreciate the force of
+the cumbrous and abusive harangues which earned for Sir Edward Coke the
+character of an incomparable pleader. On the other hand, it appears
+certain that they who had so long played the game must have understood
+it best, and, whatever else may be said of them, they always contrived
+to win. In regard of Father Garnet, for example, we may think the
+evidence adduced by the prosecution quite insufficient, but none the
+less it in fact availed not only to send him to the gallows, but to
+brand him in popular estimation for generations, and even for centuries,
+as the arch-traitor to whose machinations the whole enterprise was due.
+In the case of some individuals obnoxious to the government, it seems
+evident that downright forgery was actually practised.
+
+The question of Father Garnet's complicity, though usually considered as
+the one point in connection with the Plot requiring to be discussed, is
+not treated in the following pages. It is doubtless true that to prove
+the conspiracy to have been a trick of State, is not the same thing as
+proving that he was not entangled in it; but, at the same time, the
+first point, if it can be established, will deprive the other of almost
+all its interest. Nevertheless, Father Garnet's case will still require
+to be fully treated on its own merits, but this cannot be done within
+the limits of such an inquiry as the present. It is not by confining our
+attention to one isolated incident in his career, nor by discussing once
+again the familiar documents connected therewith, that we can form a
+sound and satisfactory judgment about him. For this purpose, full
+consideration must be given to what has hitherto been almost entirely
+ignored, the nature and character of the man, as exhibited especially
+during the eighteen years of his missionary life in England, during most
+of which period he acted as the superior of his brother Jesuits. There
+exist abundant materials for his biography, in his official and
+confidential correspondence, preserved at Stonyhurst and elsewhere, and
+not till the information thus supplied shall have been duly utilized
+will it be possible to judge whether the part assigned to him by his
+enemies in this wild and wicked design can, even conceivably, represent
+the truth. It may, I trust, be possible at no distant date to attempt
+this work, but it is not possible now, and to introduce this topic into
+our present discussion would only confuse the issue which is before us.
+
+Except in one or two instances, I have judged it advisable, for the sake
+of clearness, to modernize the spelling of documents quoted in the text.
+In the notes they are usually given in their original form.
+
+I have to acknowledge my indebtedness in many particulars to Mr. H.W.
+Brewer, who not only contributes valuable sketches to illustrate the
+narrative, but has furnished many important notes and suggestions, based
+upon his exhaustive knowledge of ancient London. I have to thank the
+Marquis of Salisbury for permission to examine MSS. in the Hatfield
+collection, and his lordship's librarian, Mr. Gunton, for information
+supplied from the same source. Through the courtesy of the Deputy-Keeper
+of the Public Records, every facility has been afforded me for
+consulting the precious documents contained in the "Gunpowder Plot
+Book." The Dean of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, has kindly given me
+access to an important MS. in the College Library; and I have been
+allowed by the Rector of Stonyhurst to retain in my hands Father
+Greenway's MS. history of the Plot during the whole period of my work.
+The proprietors of the _Daily Graphic_ have allowed me to use two
+sketches of the interior of "Guy Faukes' Cellar," and one of his
+lantern, originally prepared by Mr. Brewer for that journal.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] 1894.
+
+[2] Some of these have been partially set forth in a series of six
+articles appearing in _The Month_, December 1894-May, 1895.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+
+ I. THE STATE OF THE QUESTION 1
+
+ Disclosure of the Plot--Arrest of Guy Faukes--Flight of his
+ associates--Their abortive insurrection--Their fate--The crime
+ charged on Catholics in general--Garnet and other Jesuits proclaimed
+ as the ringleaders--Capture of Garnet--Efforts to procure evidence
+ against him--His execution--Previous history of the Plot as
+ traditionally narrated; Proceedings and plans of the
+ conspirators--Manner of the discovery.
+
+ Reasons for suspecting the truth of this history--Previous plots
+ originated or manipulated by the government--Suspicious
+ circumstances respecting the Gunpowder Plot in particular--Essential
+ points of the inquiry.
+
+ II. THE PERSONS CONCERNED 19
+
+ Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury--His character variously
+ estimated--Discreditable incidents of his career--Contemporary
+ judgments of him--His unpopularity--His political difficulties
+ largely dissipated in consequence of the Plot.
+
+ His hatred of and hostility towards the Catholics--Their numbers and
+ importance--Their hopes from King James, and their
+ disappointment--The probability that some would have recourse to
+ violence--The conspirators known as men likely to seek such a
+ remedy--Their previous history--Difficulties and contradictions in
+ regard of their character.
+
+ III. THE OPINION OF CONTEMPORARIES AND HISTORIANS 42
+
+ The government at once suspected of having contrived or fomented the
+ Plot--Persistence of these suspicions, to which historians for more
+ than a century bear witness--No fresh information accounts for their
+ disappearance.
+
+ IV. THE TRADITIONAL STORY 54
+
+ The old House of Lords and its surroundings--House hired by the
+ conspirators--They attempt to dig a mine beneath the Peers'
+ Chamber--Difficulties and improbabilities of the account--The
+ "Cellar" hired--Its position and character--The gunpowder bought and
+ stored--Further problems concerning it--The conspirators'
+ plans--Contradictions respecting them--Their wild and absurd
+ character--Impossibility of the supposition that the proceedings
+ escaped the notice of the government.
+
+ V. THE GOVERNMENT INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT 93
+
+ Evidence that the government were fully aware of what was in
+ progress--Various intelligence supplied to them--Cecil's uneasiness
+ on account of the spread of Catholicity, and the king's
+ communication with the pope--His evident determination to force on
+ James a policy of intolerance--He intimates that a great move is
+ about to be made, and acknowledges to information concerning the
+ conspirators and their schemes--His political methods illustrated.
+
+ VI. THE "DISCOVERY" 114
+
+ Importance of the letter received by Lord Monteagle--Extraordinary
+ prominence given to it--Monteagle's character--He receives the
+ letter--Suspicious circumstances connected with its arrival--It is
+ shown to Cecil--Hopeless contradictions of the official narrative as
+ to what followed--Impossibility of ascertaining what actually
+ occurred--The French version of the story--The conduct of the
+ government at variance with their own professions--Their
+ inexplicable delay in making the discovery--They take no precautions
+ against the recurrence of danger--The mystery of the
+ gunpowder--Incredibility of the official narration.
+
+ VII. PERCY, CATESBY, AND TRESHAM 147
+
+ Probability that the government had an agent among the
+ conspirators--Suspicious circumstances regarding Percy--His private
+ life--His alleged intercourse with Cecil--His death.
+
+ Catesby and Tresham likewise accused of secret dealings with
+ Cecil--Catesby's falsehood towards his associates and Father
+ Garnet--Tresham's strange conduct after the discovery--His
+ mysterious death.
+
+ Alleged positive evidence against the government.
+
+ VIII. THE GOVERNMENT'S CASE 163
+
+ A monopoly secured for the official narrative, which is admittedly
+ untruthful--Suspicions suggested by such a course, especially in
+ such a case--The confessions of Faukes and Winter, on which this
+ narrative is based, deserve no credit--Nor does the evidence of
+ Bates against Greenway--Indications of foul play in regard of Robert
+ Winter--The case of Owen, Baldwin and Cresswell; assertions made
+ respecting them of which no proof can be produced--Efforts to
+ implicate Sir Walter Raleigh and others--Falsification of
+ evidence--The service of forgers employed.
+
+ Catholic writers have drawn their accounts from the sources provided
+ by the government.
+
+ IX. THE SEQUEL 209
+
+ Cecil well informed as to the real nature of the conspiracy, and
+ apprehends no danger from it--At once turns it to account by
+ promoting anti-Catholic legislation--Honour and popularity resulting
+ to him--Ruin of the Earl of Northumberland--Cecil's manifesto--His
+ alleged attempt to start a second plot.
+
+ The popular history of the Plot, and how it was circulated--Singular
+ suitability of the Fifth of November for the "Discovery."
+
+ Summary of the argument.
+
+
+ APPENDIX A. NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS 235
+
+ APPENDIX B. SIR EVERARD DIGBY'S LETTER TO SALISBURY 245
+
+ APPENDIX C. THE QUESTION OF SUCCESSION 249
+
+ APPENDIX D. THE SPANISH TREASON 251
+
+ APPENDIX E. SITE OF PERCY'S LODGING 251
+
+ APPENDIX F. ENROLMENT OF CONSPIRATORS 252
+
+ APPENDIX G. HENRY WRIGHT THE INFORMER 254
+
+ APPENDIX H. MONTEAGLE'S LETTER TO KING JAMES 256
+
+ APPENDIX I. EPITAPH ON PETER HEIWOOD 258
+
+ APPENDIX K. THE USE OF TORTURE 259
+
+ APPENDIX L. MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE PLOT 260
+
+ APPENDIX M. MEMORIAL INSCRIPTIONS IN THE TOWER 264
+
+ APPENDIX N. GUY FAUKES' PUBLISHED CONFESSION 268
+
+
+ INDEX 279
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ 1. MEDAL COMMEMORATIVE OF THE GUNPOWDER PLOT _Title-page_
+
+ 2. THE GUNPOWDER PLOT. I. _Frontispiece_
+
+ 3. " " " II. 90
+
+ 4. " " " III. 215
+
+ 5. " " " IV. 227
+
+ 6. " " " V. 229
+
+ 7. DISCOVERY OF THE GUNPOWDER PLOT 136
+
+ 8. MONTEAGLE AND LETTER 115
+
+ 9. ARREST OF FAUKES 125
+
+ 10. GUY FAUKES' LANTERN 139
+
+ 11. GROUP OF CONSPIRATORS 3
+
+ 12. THOMAS PERCY 149
+
+ 13. HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT IN 1605 56-7
+
+ 14. GROUND PLAN OF THE SAME 59
+
+ 15. HOUSE OF LORDS IN 1807 61
+
+ 16. INTERIOR OF HOUSE OF LORDS, 1755 97
+
+ 17. INTERIOR OF "CELLAR" 71
+
+ 18. ARCHES FROM "CELLAR" 75
+
+ 19. VAULT UNDER PAINTED CHAMBER 73
+
+ 20. CELL ADJOINING PAINTED CHAMBER 83
+
+ 21. FACSIMILE OF PART OF WINTER'S CONFESSION, NOV. 23 168
+
+ 22. SIGNATURES OF FAUKES AND OLDCORNE 173
+
+ 23. FACSIMILE OF PART OF FAUKES' CONFESSION OF NOV. 9 199
+
+
+
+
+ "Quis haec posteris sic narrare poterit, ut facta non ficta esse
+ videantur?"
+
+ "Ages to come will be in doubt whether it were a fact or a fiction."
+
+ _Sir Edw. Coke on the trial of the Conspirators._
+
+
+
+
+WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE STATE OF THE QUESTION.
+
+
+ON the morning of Tuesday, the 5th of November, 1605, which day was
+appointed for the opening of a new Parliamentary session, London rang
+with the news that in the course of the night a diabolical plot had been
+discovered, by which the king and legislature were to have been
+destroyed at a blow. In a chamber beneath the House of Lords had been
+found a great quantity of gunpowder, and with it a man, calling himself
+John Johnson, who, finding that the game was up, fully acknowledged his
+intention to have fired the magazine while the royal speech was being
+delivered, according to custom, overhead, and so to have blown King,
+Lords, and Commons into the air. At the same time, he doggedly refused
+to say who were his accomplices, or whether he had any.
+
+This is the earliest point at which the story of the Gunpowder Plot can
+be taken up with any certainty. Of what followed, at least as to the
+main outlines, we are sufficiently well informed. Johnson, whose true
+name was presently found to be Guy, or Guido, Faukes,[3] proved, it is
+true, a most obstinate and unsatisfactory witness, and obstinately
+refused to give any evidence which might incriminate others. But the
+actions of his confederates quickly supplied the information which he
+withheld. It was known that the "cellar" in which the powder was found,
+as well as a house adjacent, had been hired in the name of one Thomas
+Percy, a Catholic gentleman, perhaps a kinsman, and certainly a
+dependent, of the Earl of Northumberland. It was now discovered that he
+and others of his acquaintance had fled from London on the previous day,
+upon receipt of intelligence that the plot seemed at least to be
+suspected. Not many hours later the fugitives were heard of in
+Warwickshire, Worcestershire, and Staffordshire, the native counties of
+several amongst them, attempting to rally others to their desperate
+fortunes, and to levy war against the crown. For this purpose they
+forcibly seized cavalry horses[4] at Warwick, and arms at Whewell
+Grange, a seat of Lord Windsor's. These violent proceedings having
+raised the country behind them, they were pursued by the sheriffs with
+what forces could be got together, and finally brought to bay at
+Holbeche, in Staffordshire, the residence of one Stephen Littleton, a
+Catholic gentleman.
+
+There proved to have been thirteen men in all who had undoubtedly been
+participators in the treason. Of these Faukes, as we have seen, was
+already in the hands of justice. Another, Francis Tresham, had not fled
+with his associates, but remained quietly, and without attempting
+concealment, in London, even going to the council and offering them his
+services; after a week he was taken into custody. The eleven who either
+betook themselves to the country, or were already there, awaiting the
+issue of the enterprise, and prepared to co-operate in the rising which
+was to be its sequel, were Robert Catesby, Thomas Percy, Robert and
+Thomas Winter, John and Christopher Wright, John Grant, Robert Keyes,
+Ambrose Rokewood, Sir Everard Digby, and Thomas Bates. All were
+Catholics, and all, with the exception of Bates, Catesby's servant, were
+"gentlemen of blood and name," some of them, notably Robert Winter,
+Rokewood, Digby, and Tresham, being men of ample fortune.
+
+[Illustration: THE CONSPIRATORS, FROM A PRINT PUBLISHED AT AMSTERDAM.]
+
+On Friday, November 8th, three days after the discovery, Sir Richard
+Walsh, sheriff of Worcestershire, attacked Holbeche. Catesby, Percy, and
+the two Wrights were killed or mortally wounded in the assault. The
+others were taken prisoners on the spot or in its neighbourhood, with
+the exception of Robert Winter, who, accompanied by their host, Stephen
+Littleton, contrived to elude capture for upwards of two months, being
+at last apprehended, in January, at Hagley Hall, Worcestershire. All the
+prisoners were at once taken up to London, and being there confined,
+were frequently and diligently examined by the council, to trace, if
+possible, farther ramifications of the conspiracy, and especially to
+inculpate the Catholic clergy.[5] Torture, it is evident, was employed
+with this object.
+
+Meanwhile, on November 9th, King James addressed to his Parliament a
+speech, wherein he declared that the abominable crime which had been
+intended was the direct result of Catholic principles, Popery being "the
+true mystery of iniquity." In like manner Chichester, the Lord Deputy in
+Ireland, was informed by Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, his Majesty's
+Secretary of State, that the Plot was an "abominable practice of Rome
+and Satan,"[6] while the monarch himself sent word to Sir John Harington
+that "these designs were not formed by a few," that "the whole legion of
+Catholics were consulted," that "the priests were to pacify their
+consciences, and the Pope confirm a general absolution for this glorious
+deed."[7]
+
+Then follows an interval during which we know little of the course of
+events which were proceeding in the seclusion of the council-room and
+torture-chamber; but on December 4th we find Cecil complaining that he
+could obtain little or no evidence against the really important persons:
+"Most of the prisoners," he writes,[8] "have wilfully forsworn that the
+priests knew anything in particular, and obstinately refuse to be
+accusers of them, yea, what torture soever they be put to."
+
+On January 15th, 1605-6, a proclamation was issued declaring that the
+Jesuit fathers, John Gerard, Henry Garnet, and Oswald Greenway, or
+Tesimond, were proved to have been "peculiarly practisers" in the
+treason, and offering a reward for their apprehension. On the 21st of
+the same month Parliament met, having been prorogued immediately after
+the king's speech of November 9th, and four days later an Act was passed
+for the perpetual solemnization of the anniversary of the projected
+crime, the preamble whereof charged its guilt upon "Many malignant and
+devilish papists, jesuits, and seminary priests, much envying the true
+and free possession of the Gospel by the nation, under the greatest,
+most learned, and most religious monarch who had ever occupied the
+throne."[9]
+
+In consequence of this Act, was introduced into the Anglican liturgy the
+celebrated Fifth of November service, in the collect of which the king,
+royal family, nobility, clergy, and commons are spoken of as having
+been "by Popish treachery appointed as sheep to the slaughter, in a most
+barbarous and savage manner, beyond the examples of former ages;" while
+the day itself was marked in the calendar as the "Papists' Conspiracy."
+
+It will thus be seen that the Powder Plot was by this time officially
+stigmatized as the work of the Catholic body in general, and in
+particular of their priests; thus acquiring an importance and a
+significance which could not be attributed to it were it but the wild
+attempt of a few turbulent men. As a natural corollary we find
+Parliament busily engaged upon measures to insure the more effectual
+execution of the penal laws.[10]
+
+On January 27th the surviving conspirators, Robert and Thomas Winter,
+Faukes, Grant, Rokewood, Keyes, Digby, and Bates,[11] were put upon
+their trial. In the indictment preferred against them, it was explicitly
+stated that the Plot was contrived by Garnet, Gerard, Greenway, and
+other Jesuits, to whose traitorous persuasions the prisoners at the bar
+had wickedly yielded. All were found guilty, Digby, Robert Winter,
+Grant, and Bates being executed at the west end of St. Paul's Church, on
+January the 30th, and the rest on the following day in Old Palace Yard.
+
+On the very day upon which the first company suffered, Father Garnet,
+whose hiding-place was known, and who had been closely invested for nine
+days, was captured, in company with another Jesuit, Father Oldcorne. The
+latter, though never charged with knowledge of the plot, was put to
+death for having aided and abetted Garnet in his attempt to escape.
+Garnet himself, being brought to London, was lodged first in the
+Gatehouse and afterwards in the Tower.
+
+As we have seen, he had already been proclaimed as a traitor, and
+"particular practiser" in the conspiracy, and had moreover been
+officially described as the head and front of the treason. Of the latter
+charge, after his capture, nothing was ever heard. Of his participation,
+proofs, it appeared, still remained to be discovered, for on the 3rd of
+March Cecil still spoke of them as in the future.[12] In order to obtain
+the required evidence of his complicity, Garnet was examined
+three-and-twenty times before the council, and, in addition, various
+artifices were practised which need not now be detailed. On the 28th of
+March, 1606, he was brought to trial, and on May 3rd he was hanged at
+St. Paul's. The Gunpowder Conspirators were thenceforth described in
+government publications as "Garnet, a Jesuit, and his confederates."
+
+Such is, in outline, the course of events which followed the discovery
+of November 5th, all circumstances being here omitted which are by
+possibility open to dispute.
+
+It will probably be maintained, as our best and most circumspect
+historians appear to have assumed, that we are in possession of
+information enabling us to construct a similar sketch of what preceded
+and led up to these events,--whatever obscurity there may be regarding
+the complicity of those whose participation would invest the plot with
+the significance which has been attributed to it. If it were indeed but
+the individual design of a small knot of men, acting for themselves and
+of themselves, then, though they were all Catholics, and were actuated
+by a desire to aid the Catholic cause, the crime they intended could not
+justly be charged upon the body of their co-religionists. It would be
+quite otherwise if Catholics in general were shown to have countenanced
+it, or even if such representative men as members of the priesthood were
+found to have approved so abominable a project, or even to have
+consented to it, or knowingly kept silence regarding it. Of the
+complicity of Catholics in general or of their priesthood as a body
+there is no proof whatever, nor has it ever been seriously attempted to
+establish such a charge. As to the three Jesuits already named, who
+alone have been seriously accused, there is no proof, the sufficiency of
+which may not be questioned. But as to the fact that they who originated
+the Plot were Catholics, that they acted simply with the object of
+benefiting their Church, and that the nation most narrowly escaped an
+appalling disaster at their hands, can there be any reasonable doubt? Is
+not the account of their proceedings, to be read in any work on the
+subject, as absolutely certain as anything in our history?
+
+This account is as follows. About a year after the accession of James
+I.,[13] when it began to be evident that the hopes of toleration at his
+hands, which the Catholics had entertained, were to be disappointed,
+Robert Catesby, a man of strong character, and with an extraordinary
+power of influencing others, bethought him in his wrath of this means
+whereby to take summary vengeance at once upon the monarch and the
+legislators, under whose cruelty he himself and his fellows were
+groaning. The plan was proposed to John Wright and Thomas Winter, who
+approved it. Faukes was brought over from the Low Countries, as a man
+likely to be of much service in such an enterprise. Shortly afterwards
+Percy joined them,[14] and somewhat later Keyes and Christopher Wright
+were added to their number.[15] All the associates were required to take
+an oath of secrecy,[16] and to confirm it by receiving Holy
+Communion.[17]
+
+These are the seven "gentlemen of blood and name," as Faukes describes
+them, who had the main hand in the operations which we have to study. At
+a later period six others were associated with them, Robert Winter,
+elder brother of Thomas, and Grant, both gentlemen of property, Bates,
+Catesby's servant, and finally, Rokewood, Digby, and Tresham, all rich
+men, who were brought in chiefly for the sake of their wealth, and were
+enlisted when the preparations for the intended explosion had all been
+completed, in view of the rising which was to follow.[18]
+
+Commencing operations about the middle of December, 1604, these
+confederates first endeavoured to dig a mine under the House of Lords,
+and afterwards hired a large room, described as a cellar, situated
+beneath the Peers' Chamber, and in this stored a quantity of gunpowder,
+which Faukes was to fire by a train, while the King, Lords, and Commons,
+were assembled above.
+
+Their enemies being thus destroyed, they did not contemplate a
+revolution, but were resolved to get possession of one of the king's
+sons, or, failing that, of one of his daughters, whom they would
+proclaim as sovereign, constituting themselves the guardians of the new
+monarch. They also contrived a "hunting match" on Dunsmoor heath, near
+Rugby, which was to be in progress when the news of the catastrophe in
+London should arrive; the sportsmen assembled for which would furnish,
+it was hoped, the nucleus of an army.
+
+Meanwhile, as we are assured--and this is the crucial point of the whole
+story--the government of James I. had no suspicion of what was going on,
+and, lulled in false security, were on the verge of destruction, when a
+lucky circumstance intervened. On October 26th, ten days before the
+meeting of Parliament, a Catholic peer, Lord Monteagle, received an
+anonymous letter, couched in vague and incoherent language, warning him
+to absent himself from the opening ceremony. This document Monteagle at
+once took to the king's prime minister, Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury,
+who promptly divined its meaning and the precise danger indicated,
+although he allowed King James to fancy that he was himself the first to
+interpret it, when it was shown to him five days later.[19] Not for
+four other days were active steps taken, that is, till the early morning
+of the fatal Fifth. Then took place the discovery of which we have
+already heard.
+
+Such is, in brief, the accepted version of the history, and of its
+substantial correctness there is commonly assumed to be no room for
+reasonable doubt. As Mr. Jardine writes,[20] "The outlines of the
+transaction were too notorious to be suppressed or disguised; that a
+design had been formed to blow up the Parliament House, with the King,
+the Royal Family, the Lords and Commons, and that this design was formed
+by Catholic men and for Catholic purposes, could never admit of
+controversy or concealment." In like manner, while acknowledging that in
+approaching the question of Father Garnet's complicity, or that of other
+priests, we find ourselves upon uncertain ground, Mr. Gardiner has no
+hesitation in declaring that "the whole story of the plot, as far as it
+relates to the lay conspirators, rests upon indisputable evidence."[21]
+
+Nevertheless there appear to be considerations, demanding more attention
+than they have hitherto received, which forbid the supposition that, in
+regard of what is most vital, this official story can possibly be true;
+while the extreme care with which it has obviously been elaborated,
+suggests the conclusion that it was intended to disguise facts, to the
+concealment of which the government of the day attached supreme
+importance.
+
+As has been said, the cardinal point of the tale, as commonly told, is
+that the Plot was a secret and dangerous conspiracy, conducted with so
+much craft as to have baffled detection, but for a lucky accident; that
+the vigilance of the authorities was completely at fault; and that they
+found themselves suddenly on the very brink of a terrible catastrophe of
+which they had no suspicion.[22] If, on the contrary, it should appear
+that they had ample information of what was going on, while feigning
+absolute ignorance; that they studiously devised a false account of the
+manner in which it came to their knowledge; and that their whole conduct
+is quite inconsistent with that sense of imminent danger which they so
+loudly professed--the question inevitably suggests itself as to whether
+we can rely upon the authenticity of the opening chapters of a history,
+the conclusion of which has been so dexterously manipulated.
+
+A French writer has observed[23] that the plots undertaken under
+Elizabeth and James I. have this feature in common, that they proved,
+one and all, extremely opportune for those against whom they were
+directed. To this law the Gunpowder Plot was no exception. Whatever be
+the true history of its origin, it certainly placed in the hands of the
+king's chief minister a most effective weapon for the enforcement of his
+favourite policy, and very materially strengthened his own position.
+Without doubt the sensational manner of its "discovery" largely
+contributed to its success in this respect; and if this were ingeniously
+contrived for such a purpose, may it not be that a like ingenuity had
+been employed in providing the material destined to be so artistically
+utilized?
+
+There can be no question as to the wide prevalence of the belief that
+previous plots had owed their origin to the policy of the statesmen who
+finally detected them, a belief witnessed to by Lord Castlemaine,[24]
+who declares that "it was a piece of wit in Queen Elizabeth's days to
+draw men into such devices," and that "making and fomenting plots was
+then in fashion; nor can it be denied that good grounds for such an
+opinion were not lacking". The unfortunate man Squires had been executed
+on the ridiculous charge that he had come over from Spain in order to
+poison the pommel of Queen Elizabeth's saddle. Dr. Parry, we are
+informed by Bishop Goodman, whose verdict is endorsed by Mr. Brewer,[25]
+was put to death by those who knew him to be guiltless in their regard,
+they having themselves employed him in the business for which he
+suffered. Concerning Babington's famous plot, it is absolutely certain
+that, whatever its origin, it was, almost from the first, fully known to
+Walsingham, through whose hands passed the correspondence between the
+conspirators, and who assiduously worked the enterprise, in order to
+turn it to the destruction of the Queen of Scots. As to Lopez, the
+Jewish physician, it is impossible not to concur in the verdict that
+his condemnation was at least as much owing to political intrigue as to
+the weight of evidence.[26] Concerning this period Mr. Brewer says: "The
+Roman Catholics seem to have made just complaints of the subtle and
+unworthy artifices of Leicester and Walsingham, by whom they were
+entrapped into the guilt of high treason. 'And verily,' as [Camden]
+expresses it, there were at this time crafty ways devised to try how men
+stood affected; counterfeit letters were sent in the name of the Queen
+of Scots and left at papists' houses; spies were sent up and down the
+country to note people's dispositions and lay hold of their words; and
+reporters of vain and idle stories were credited and encouraged."[27]
+Under King James,[28] as Bishop Goodman declares, the priest Watson was
+hanged for treason by those who had employed him.[29]
+
+It must farther be observed that the particular Plot which is our
+subject was stamped with certain features more than commonly suspicious.
+Even on the face of things, as will be seen from the summary already
+given, it was steadily utilized from the first for a purpose which it
+could not legitimately be made to serve. That the Catholics of England,
+as a body, had any connection with it there is not, nor ever appeared to
+be, any vestige of a proof; still less that the official superiors of
+the Church, including the Pope himself, were concerned in it. Yet the
+first act of the government was to lay it at the door of all these, thus
+investing it with a character which was, indeed, eminently fitted to
+sustain their own policy, but to which it was no-wise entitled. Even in
+regard of Father Garnet and his fellow Jesuits, whatever judgment may
+now be formed concerning them, it is clear that it was determined to
+connect them with the conspiracy long before any evidence at all was
+forthcoming to sustain the charge. The actual confederates were, in
+fact, treated throughout as in themselves of little or no account, and
+as important only in so far as they might consent to incriminate those
+whom the authorities wished to be incriminated.
+
+The determined manner in which this object was ever kept in view, the
+unscrupulous means constantly employed for its attainment, the vehemence
+with which matters were asserted to have been proved, any proof of which
+was never even seriously attempted--in a word, the elaborate system of
+falsification by which alone the story of the conspiracy was made to
+suit the purpose it so effectually served, can inspire us with no
+confidence that the foundation upon which such a superstructure was
+erected, was itself what it was said to be.
+
+On the other hand, when we examine into the details supplied to us as to
+the progress of the affair, we find that much of what the conspirators
+are said to have done is well-nigh incredible, while it is utterly
+impossible that if they really acted in the manner described, the public
+authorities should not have had full knowledge of their proceedings. We
+also find not only that the same authorities, while feigning ignorance
+of anything of the kind, were perfectly well aware that these very
+conspirators had something in hand, but that long before the
+"discovery," in fact, at the very time when the conspiracy is said to
+have been hatched, their officials were working a Catholic plot, by
+means of secret agents, and even making arrangements as to who were to
+be implicated therein.
+
+These are, in brief, some of the considerations which point to a
+conclusion utterly at variance with the received version of the story,
+the conclusion, namely, that, for purposes of State, the government of
+the day either found means to instigate the conspirators to undertake
+their enterprise, or, at least, being, from an early stage of the
+undertaking, fully aware of what was going on, sedulously nursed the
+insane scheme till the time came to make capital out of it. That the
+conspirators, or the greater number of them, really meant to strike a
+great blow is not to be denied, though it may be less easy to assure
+ourselves as to its precise character; and their guilt will not be
+palliated should it appear that, in projecting an atrocious crime, they
+were unwittingly playing the game of plotters more astute than
+themselves. At the same time, while fully endorsing the sentiment of a
+Catholic writer,[30] that they who suffer themselves to be drawn into a
+plot like fools, deserve to be hanged for it like knaves, it is
+impossible not to agree with another when he writes:[31] "This account
+does not excuse the conspirators, but lays a heavy weight upon the
+devils who tempted them beyond their strength."
+
+The view thus set forth will perhaps be considered unworthy of serious
+discussion, and it must be fully admitted, that there can be no excuse
+for making charges such as it involves, unless solid grounds can be
+alleged for so doing. That any such grounds are to be found historians
+of good repute utterly deny. Mr. Hallam roundly declares:[32] "To deny
+that there was such a plot, or, which is the same thing, to throw the
+whole on the contrivance and management of Cecil, as has sometimes been
+done, argues great effrontery in those who lead, and great stupidity in
+those who follow." Similarly, Mr. Gardiner,[33] while allowing that
+contemporaries accused Cecil of inventing the Plot, is content to
+dismiss such a charge as "absurd."
+
+Whether it be so or not we have now to inquire.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[3] So he himself always wrote it.
+
+[4] Also described as "Great Horses," or "Horses for the great Saddle."
+
+[5] "The great object of the Government now was to obtain evidence
+against the priests."--GARDINER, _History of England_, i. 267. Ed. 1883.
+
+[6] See his despatch in reply. _Irish State Papers_, vol. 217, 95.
+Cornwallis received Cecil's letter on November 22nd.
+
+[7] See Harington's account of the king's message, _Nugae Antiquae_, i.
+374.
+
+[8] To Favat. (Copy) Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, fol. 625.
+
+[9] Statutes: Anno 3^o Jacobi, c. 1.
+
+[10] This work was taken in hand by the Commons, when, in spite of the
+alarming circumstances of the time, they met on November 5th, and was
+carried on at every subsequent sitting. The Lords also met on the 5th,
+but transacted no business. _Journals of Parliament._
+
+[11] Tresham had died in the Tower, December 22nd. Although he had not
+been tried, his remains were treated as those of a traitor, his head
+being cut off and fixed above the gates of Northampton (_Dom. James I._
+xvii. 62.)
+
+[12] "That which remaineth is but this, to assure you that ere many
+daies you shall hear that Father Garnet ... is layd open for a
+principall conspirator even in the particular Treason of the
+Powder."--_To Sir Henry Bruncard, P.R.O. Ireland_, vol. 218, March
+3rd, 1605-6. Also (Calendar) _Dom. James I._ xix. 10.
+
+[13] In Lent, 1603-4. Easter fell that year on April 8th.
+
+[14] "About the middle of Easter Term."--_Thomas Winter's declaration_,
+of November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[15] "Keyes, about a month before Michaelmas."--_Ibid._ About
+Christopher Wright there is much confusion, Faukes (November 17th, 1605)
+implying that he was introduced before Christmas, and Thomas Winter
+(November 23rd, 1605) that it was about a fortnight after the following
+Candlemas, _i.e._, about the middle of February.
+
+[16] The form of this oath is thus given in the official account: "You
+shall swear by the blessed Trinity, and by the Sacrament you now propose
+to receive, never to disclose directly or indirectly, by word or
+circumstance, the matter that shall be proposed to you to keep secret,
+nor desist from the execution thereof until the rest shall give you
+leave." It is a singular circumstance that the form of this oath, which
+was repeated in official publications, with an emphasis itself
+inexplicable, occurs in only one of the conspirators' confessions, viz.,
+the oft-quoted declaration of T. Winter, November 23rd, 1605. This--as
+we shall see, a most suspicious document--was one of the two selected
+for publication, on which the traditional history of the plot depends.
+Curiously enough, however, the oath, with sundry other matters, was
+omitted from the published version of the confession.
+
+[Published in the "King's Book:" copy, or draft, for publication, in the
+Record Office: original at Hatfield. Copy of original Brit. Mus. Add.
+MSS., 6178, 75.]
+
+[17] T. Winter says: "Having upon a primer given each other the oath of
+secrecy, in a chamber where no other body was, we went after into the
+next room and heard mass, and received the blessed Sacrament upon the
+same."--_Declaration_, November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[18] Digby was enlisted "about Michaelmas, 1605;" Rokewood about a month
+before the 5th of November. Tresham gives October 14th as the date of
+his own initiation. _Examination_, November 13th, 1605.
+
+[19] This is clear from a comparison of Cecil's private letter to
+Cornwallis and others (Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 170), with the official
+account published in the _Discourse of the manner of the Discovery of
+the Gunpowder Plot_.
+
+[20] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 3.
+
+[21] _History of England_, i. 269 (1883).
+
+[22] "We had all been blowne up at a clapp, if God out of His Mercie and
+just Reuenge against so great an Abomination, had not destined it to be
+discovered, though very miraculously, even some twelve Houres before the
+matter should have been put in execution."--_Cecil to Cornwallis_,
+November 9th, 1605. Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 170.
+
+[23] M. l'Abbe Destombes, _La persecution en Angleterre sous le regne
+d'Elizabeth_, p. 176.
+
+[24] _Catholique Apology_, third edition, p. 403.
+
+[25] Goodman's _Court of King James_, i. 121.
+
+[26] Mr. Sidney Lee, _Dictionary of National Biography_, _sub nom._
+
+[27] Goodman's _Court of King James_, i. 121. Ed. J.S. Brewer.
+
+[28] _Court of King James_, p. 64.
+
+[29] Of this affair,--the "Bye" and the "Main,"--Goodman says, "[This] I
+did ever think to be an old relic of the treasons in Q. Elizabeth's
+time, and that George Brooks was the contriver thereof, who being
+brother-in-law to the Secretary, and having great wit, small means, and
+a vast expense, did only try men's allegiance, and had an intent to
+betray one another, but were all taken napping and so involved in one
+net. This in effect appears by Brooks' confession; and certainly K.
+James ... had no opinion of that treason, and therefore was pleased to
+pardon all save only Brooks and the priests."--_Court of King James_, i.
+160.
+
+[30] _A plain and rational account of the Catholick Faith_, etc. Rouen,
+1721, p. 200.
+
+[31] Dodd, _Church History of England_, Brussels, 1739, i. 334.
+
+[32] _Constitutional History_, i. 406, note, Seventh Edition. In the
+same note the historian, discussing the case of Father Garnet, speaks of
+"the damning circumstance that he was taken at Hendlip in concealment
+along with the other conspirators." He who wrote thus can have had but a
+slight acquaintance with the details of the history. None of the
+conspirators, except Robert Winter, who was captured at Hagley Hall,
+were taken in concealment, and none at Hendlip, where there is no reason
+to suppose they ever were. Father Garnet was discovered there, nearly
+three months later, in company with another Jesuit, Father Oldcorne, on
+the very day when the conspirators were executed in London, and it was
+never alleged that he had ever, upon any occasion, been seen in company
+with "the other conspirators."
+
+[33] _History_, i. 255, note.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE PERSONS CONCERNED.
+
+
+AT the period with which we have to deal the chief minister of James I.
+was Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury,[34] the political heir of his
+father, William Cecil, Lord Burghley,[35] and of Walsingham, his
+predecessor in the office of secretary. It is clear that he had
+inherited from them ideas of statesmanship of the order then in vogue,
+and from nature, the kind of ability required to put these successfully
+in practice. Sir Robert Naunton thus describes him:[36]
+
+"This great minister of state, and the staff of the Queen's declining
+age, though his little crooked person[37] could not provide any great
+supportation, yet it carried thereon a head and a headpiece of vast
+content, and therein, it seems, nature was so diligent to complete one,
+and the best, part about him, as that to the perfection of his memory
+and intellectuals, she took care also of his senses, and to put him in
+_Lynceos oculos_, or to pleasure him the more, borrowed of Argus, so to
+give him a perfective sight. And for the rest of his sensitive virtues,
+his predecessor had left him a receipt, to smell out what was done in
+the Conclave; and his good old father was so well seen in the
+mathematicks, as that he could tell you throughout Spain, every part,
+every ship, with their burthens, whither bound, what preparation, what
+impediments for diversion of enterprises, counsels, and resolutions."
+The writer then proceeds to give a striking instance to show "how
+docible was this little man."
+
+Of his character, as estimated by competent judges, his contemporaries,
+we have very different accounts. Mr. Gardiner, who may fairly be chosen
+to represent his apologists, speaks thus:[38]
+
+"Although there are circumstances in his life which tell against him, it
+is difficult to read the whole of the letters and documents which have
+come down to us from his pen, without becoming gradually convinced of
+his honesty of intention. It cannot be denied that he was satisfied with
+the ordinary morality of his time, and that he thought it no shame to
+keep a State secret or to discover a plot by means of a falsehood. If he
+grasped at power as one who took pleasure in the exercise of it, he used
+it for what he regarded as the true interests of his king and country.
+Nor are we left to his own acts and words as the only means by which we
+are enabled to form a judgment of his character. Of all the statesmen of
+the day, not one has left a more blameless character than the Earl of
+Dorset. Dorset took the opportunity of leaving upon record in his will,
+which would not be read till he had no longer injury or favour to expect
+in this world, the very high admiration in which his colleague was held
+by him."
+
+This, it must be allowed, is a somewhat facile species of argument.
+Though wills are not formally opened until after the testators' deaths,
+it is not impossible for their contents to be previously communicated to
+others, when there is an object for so doing.[39] But, however this may
+be, it can scarcely be said that the weight of evidence tends in this
+direction. Not to mention the fact that, while enjoying the entire
+confidence of Queen Elizabeth, Cecil was engaged in a secret
+correspondence with King James, which she would have regarded as
+treasonable--and which he so carefully concealed that for a century
+afterwards and more it was not suspected--there remains the other
+indubitable fact, that while similarly trusted by James, and while all
+affairs of State were entirely in his hands, he was in receipt of a
+secret pension from the King of Spain,[40] the very monarch any
+communication with whom he treated as treason on the part of others.[41]
+It is certain that the Earl of Essex, when on his trial, asserted that
+Cecil had declared the Spanish Infanta to be the rightful heir to the
+crown, and though the secretary vehemently denied the imputation, he
+equally repudiated the notion that he favoured the King of Scots.[42] We
+know, moreover, that one who as Spanish Ambassador had dealings with
+him, pronounced him to be a venal traitor, who was ready to sell his
+soul for money,[43] while another intimated[44] that it was in his
+power to have charged him with "unwarrantable practices." Similarly, we
+hear from the French minister of the ingrained habit of falsehood which
+made it impossible for the English secretary to speak the truth even to
+friends;[45] and, from the French Ambassador, of the resolution imputed
+to the same statesman, to remove from his path every rival who seemed
+likely to jeopardize his tenure of power.[46]
+
+What was the opinion of his own countrymen, appeared with startling
+emphasis when, in 1612, the Earl died. On May 22nd we find the Earl of
+Northampton writing to Rochester that the "little man" is dead, "for
+which so many rejoice, and so few even seem to be sorry."[47] Five days
+later, Chamberlain, writing[48] to his friend Dudley Carleton, to
+announce the same event, thus expresses himself: "As the case stands it
+was best that he gave over the world, for they say his friends fell from
+him apace, and some near about him, and however he had fared with his
+health, it is verily thought he would never have been himself again in
+power and credit. I never knew so great a man so soon and so openly
+censured, for men's tongues walk very liberally and freely, but how
+truly I cannot judge." On June 25th he again reports: "The outrageous
+speeches against the deceased Lord continue still, and there be fresh
+libels come out every day, and I doubt his actions will be hardly
+censured in the next parliament, if the King be not the more gracious to
+repress them." Moreover, his funeral was attended by few or none of the
+gentry, and those only were present whose official position compelled
+them. His own opinion Chamberlain expresses in two epigrams and an
+anagram, which, although of small literary merit, contrive clearly to
+express the most undisguised animosity and contempt for the late
+minister.[49]
+
+There is abundant proof that such sentiments were not first entertained
+when he had passed away, though, naturally, they were less openly
+expressed when he was alive and practically all powerful. Cecil seems,
+in fact, to have been throughout his career a lonely man, with no real
+friends and many enemies, desperately fighting for his own hand, and for
+the retention of that power which he prized above all else, aspiring, as
+a contemporary satirist puts it, to be "both shepherd and dog."[50]
+Since the accession of James he had felt his tenure of office to be
+insecure. Goodman tells us[51] that "it is certain the king did not love
+him;" Osborne,[52] "that he had forfeited the love of the people by the
+hate he expressed to their darling Essex, and the desire he had to
+render justice and prerogative arbitrary."[53] Sir Anthony Weldon speaks
+of him[54] as "Sir Robert Cecil, a very wise man, but much hated in
+England by reason of the fresh bleeding of that universally beloved Earl
+of Essex, and for that clouded also in the king's favour." De la
+Boderie, the French Ambassador, tells us[55] that the nobility were
+exceedingly jealous of his dignity and power, and[56] that he in his
+turn was jealous of the growing influence of Prince Henry, the heir
+apparent, who made no secret of his dislike of him. Meanwhile there were
+rivals who, it seemed not improbable, might supplant him. One of these,
+Sir Walter Raleigh, had already been rendered harmless on account of his
+connection with the "Main," the mysterious conspiracy which inaugurated
+the reign of James. There remained the Earl of Northumberland, and it
+may be remarked in passing that one of the effects of the Gunpowder Plot
+was to dispose of him likewise.[57] Even the apologists of the minister
+do not attempt to deny either the fact that he was accustomed to work by
+stratagems and disguises, nor the obloquy that followed on his
+death;[58] while by friends and foes alike he was compared to Ulysses of
+many wiles.[59]
+
+But amongst those whom he had to dread, there can be no doubt that the
+members of the Catholic party appeared to the secretary the most
+formidable. It was known on all hands, nor did he attempt to disguise
+the fact, that he was the irreconcilable opponent of any remission of
+the penal laws enacted for the purpose of stamping out the old
+faith.[60] The work, however, had as yet been very incompletely done. At
+the beginning of the reign of King James, the Catholics formed at least
+a half, probably a majority,[61] of the English people. There were
+amongst them many noblemen, fitted to hold offices of State. Moreover,
+the king, who before his accession had unquestionably assured the
+Catholics at least of toleration,[62] showed at his first coming a
+manifest disposition to relieve them from the grievous persecution under
+which they had groaned so long.[63] He remitted a large part of the
+fines which had so grievously pressed upon all recusants, declaring that
+he would not make merchandise of conscience, nor set a price upon
+faith;[64] he invited to his presence leading Catholics from various
+parts of the country, assuring them, and bidding them assure their
+co-religionists, of his gracious intentions in their regard;[65] titles
+of honour and lucrative employments were bestowed on some of their
+number;[66] one professed Catholic, Henry Howard, presently created Earl
+of Northampton, being enrolled in the Privy Council; and in the first
+speech which he addressed to his Parliament James declared that, as to
+the papists, he had no desire to persecute them, especially those of the
+laity who would be quiet.[67] The immediate effect of this milder
+policy was to afford evidence of the real strength of the Catholics,
+many now openly declaring themselves who had previously conformed to the
+State church. In the diocese of Chester alone the number of Catholics
+was increased by a thousand.[68]
+
+It is scarcely to be wondered at that men who were familiar with the
+political methods of the age should see in all this a motive sufficient
+to explain a great stroke for the destruction of those who appeared to
+be so formidable, devised by such a minister as was then in power, "the
+statesman," writes Lord Castlemaine,[69] "who bore (as everybody knew) a
+particular hatred to all of our profession, and this increased to hear
+his Majesty speak a little in his first speech to the two Houses against
+persecution of papists, whereas there had been nothing within those
+walls but invectives and defamations for above forty years together."
+
+This much is certain, that, whatever its origin, the Gunpowder Plot
+immensely increased Cecil's influence and power, and, for a time, even
+his popularity, assuring the success of that anti-Catholic policy with
+which he was identified.[70]
+
+Of no less importance is it to understand the position of the Catholic
+body, and the character of the particular Catholics who engaged in this
+enterprise. We have seen with what hopes the advent of King James had
+been hailed by those who had suffered so much for his mother's sake, and
+who interpreted in a too sanguine and trustful spirit his own words and
+deeds. Their dream of enjoying even toleration at his hands was soon
+rudely dispelled. After giving them the briefest of respites, the
+monarch, under the influence, as all believed, of his council, and
+especially of his chief minister,[71] suddenly reversed his line of
+action and persecuted his Catholic subjects more cruelly than had his
+predecessor, calling up the arrears of fines which they fancied had been
+altogether remitted, ruining many in the process who had hitherto
+contrived to pay their way,[72] and adding to the sense of injury which
+such a course necessarily provoked by farming out wealthy recusants to
+needy courtiers, "to make their profit of," in particular to the Scots
+who had followed their royal master across the border. Soon it was
+announced that the king would have blood; all priests were ordered to
+leave the realm under pain of death, and the searches for them became
+more frequent and violent than ever. In no long time, as Goodman tells
+us,[73] "a gentlewoman was hanged only for relieving and harbouring a
+priest; a citizen was hanged only for being reconciled to the Church of
+Rome; besides the penal laws were such and so executed that they could
+not subsist." Father Gerard says:[74] "This being known to Catholics, it
+is easy to be seen how first their hopes were turned into fears, and
+then their fears into full knowledge that all the contrary to that they
+had hoped was intended and prepared for them", and, as one of the victims
+of these proceedings wrote, "the times of Elizabeth, although most
+cruel, were the mildest and happiest in comparison with those of King
+James."[75]
+
+In such circumstances, the Catholic body being so numerous as it was, it
+is not to be wondered at that individuals should be found, who, smarting
+under their injuries, and indignant at the bad faith of which they
+considered themselves the dupes, looked to violent remedies for relief,
+and might without difficulty be worked upon to that effect. Their case
+seemed far more hopeless than ever. Queen Elizabeth's quarrel with Rome
+had been in a great degree personal; and moreover, as she had no direct
+heir, it was confidently anticipated that the demise of the crown would
+introduce a new era. King James's proceedings, on the other hand, seemed
+to indicate a deliberate policy which there was no prospect of
+reversing, especially as his eldest son, should he prove true to his
+promise, might be expected to do that zealously, and of himself, which
+his father was held to do under the constraint of others.[76] As Sir
+Everard Digby warned Cecil, in the remarkable letter which he addressed
+to him on the subject:[77] "If your Lordship and the State think fit to
+deal severely with the Catholics, within brief space there will be
+massacres, rebellions, and desperate attempts against the King and the
+State. For it is a general received reason among Catholics, that there
+is not that expecting and suffering course now to be run that was in the
+Queen's time, who was the last of her line, and last in expectance to
+run violent courses against Catholics; for then it was hoped that the
+King that now is, would have been at least free from persecuting, as his
+promise was before his coming into this realm, and as divers his
+promises have been since his coming. All these promises every man sees
+broken."[78]
+
+It must likewise be remembered that if stratagems and "practices" were
+the recognized weapons of ministers, turbulence and arms were, at this
+period, the familiar, and indeed the only, resource of those in
+opposition, nor did any stigma attach to their employment unless taken
+up on the losing side. Not a little of this kind of thing had been done
+on behalf of James himself. As is well known, he succeeded to the throne
+by a title upon which he could not have recovered at law an acre of
+land.[79] Elizabeth had so absolutely forbidden all discussion of the
+question of the succession as to leave it in a state of utter
+confusion.[80] There were more than a dozen possible competitors, and
+amongst these the claim of the King of Scots was technically not the
+strongest, for though nearest in blood his claims had been barred by a
+special Act of Parliament, excluding the Scottish line. As Professor
+Thorold Rogers says, "For a year after his accession James, if Acts of
+Parliament are to go for anything, was not legally King."[81]
+
+Nevertheless the cause of James was vigorously taken up in all
+directions, and promoted by means which might well have been styled
+treason against the authority of Parliament. Thus, old Sir Thomas
+Tresham, father of Francis Tresham, the Gunpowder Conspirator, who had
+been an eminent sufferer for his religion, at considerable personal
+risk, and against much resistance on the part of the local magistrates
+and the populace, publicly proclaimed the new king at Northampton, while
+Francis Tresham himself and his brother Lewis, with Lord Monteagle,
+their brother-in-law, supported the Earl of Southampton in holding the
+Tower of London on his behalf.[82] In London indeed everybody took to
+arms as soon as the queen's illness had been known; watch and ward were
+kept in the City; rich men brought their plate and treasure from the
+country, and placed them where they would be safest,[83] and the
+approaches were guarded. Cecil himself related in open court, in praise
+of the Londoners, how, when he himself, attended by most of the peers
+and privy councillors of the kingdom, wished to enter the City to
+proclaim the new sovereign, they found the gates closed against them
+till they had publicly declared that they were about to proclaim James
+and no one else.[84]
+
+In times when statesmen could approve such methods of political action,
+it was inevitable that violent enterprises should have come to be
+considered the natural resource of those out of power, and it is very
+clear that there were numerous individuals, of whom no one party had the
+monopoly, who were ready at any moment to risk everything for the cause
+they served, and such men, although their proclivities were well known,
+did not suffer much in public esteem.
+
+The Gunpowder Conspirators were eminently men of this stamp, and
+notoriously so. So well was their character known, that when, in 1596,
+eight years before the commencement of the Plot, Queen Elizabeth had
+been unwell, the Lords of the Council, as a precautionary measure
+arrested some of the principal amongst them, Catesby, the two Wrights,
+Tresham, and others, as being persons who would certainly give trouble
+should a chance occur.[85] Since that time they had not improved their
+record. All those above-named, as well as Thomas Winter, Christopher
+Wright, Percy, Grant, and perhaps others, had been engaged in the
+ill-starred rebellion of Essex, on which occasion Catesby was wounded,
+and both he and Tresham came remarkably near being hanged.[86] They had
+likewise been variously implicated in all the seditious attempts which
+had since been made--Catesby and Tresham being named by Sir Edward Coke
+as being engaged with Watson in the "Bye." Thomas Winter, Christopher
+Wright, and Faukes, had, if we may believe the same authority, been sent
+to Spain on treasonable embassies.[87] Grant made himself very
+conspicuous by frequently resisting the officers of the law when they
+appeared to search his house.[88] John Wright and Percy had, at least
+till a very recent period, been notorious bravoes, who made a point of
+picking a quarrel with any man who was reported to be a good swordsman,
+they being both expert with the weapon.[89]
+
+It is evident that men of this stamp were not unlikely to prove restive
+under such treatment as was meted out to the Catholics, from which
+moreover, as gentlemen, they themselves suffered in a special degree.
+Lord Castlemaine remarks that loose people may usually be drawn into a
+plot when statesmen lay gins, and that it was no hard thing for a
+Secretary of State, should he desire any such thing, to know of
+turbulent and ambitious spirits to be his unconscious instruments,[90]
+and it is obvious that no great perspicacity would have been required to
+fix upon those who had given such evidence of their disposition as had
+these men.
+
+It must, at the same time, be confessed that the character of the
+plotters is one of the most perplexing features of the Plot. The crime
+contemplated was without parallel in its brutal and senseless atrocity.
+There had, it is true, been powder-plots before, notably that which had
+effected the destruction of the king's own father, Lord Darnley, a fact
+undoubtedly calculated to make much impression upon the timorous mind
+of James. But what marked off our Gunpowder Plot from all others, was
+the wholesale and indiscriminate slaughter in which it must have
+resulted, and the absence of any possibility that the cause could be
+benefited which the conspirators had at heart. It was at once reprobated
+and denounced by the Catholics of England, and by the friends and near
+relatives of the conspirators themselves.[91] It might be supposed that
+those who undertook such an enterprise were criminals of the deepest
+dye, and ruffians of a more than usually repulsive type. In spite,
+however, of the turbulent element in their character of which we have
+seen something, such a judgment would, in the opinion of historians, be
+altogether erroneous. Far from their being utterly unredeemed villains,
+it appears, in fact, that apart from the one monstrous transgression
+which has made them infamous, they should be distinguished in the annals
+of crime as the least disreputable gang of conspirators who ever plotted
+a treason. On this point we have ample evidence from those who are by no
+means their friends. "Atrocious as their whole undertaking was," writes
+Mr. Gardiner,[92] "great as must have been the moral obliquity of their
+minds before they could have conceived such a project, there was at
+least nothing mean or selfish about them. They boldly risked their lives
+for what they honestly believed to be the cause of God and of their
+country. Theirs was a crime which it would never have entered into the
+heart of any man to commit who was not raised above the low aims of the
+ordinary criminal." Similarly Mr. Jardine, a still less friendly
+witness, tells us[93] that "several at least of the conspirators were
+men of mild and amiable manners, averse to tumults and bloodshed, and
+dwelling quietly amidst the humanities of domestic life," a description
+which he applies especially to Rokewood and Digby; while of Guy Faukes
+himself he says[94] that, according to the accounts which we hear of
+him, he is not to be regarded as a mercenary ruffian, ready for hire to
+do any deed of blood; but as a zealot, misled by misguided fanaticism,
+who was, however, by no means destitute either of piety or of humanity.
+Moreover, as Mr. Jardine farther remarks, the conspirators as a body
+were of the class which we should least expect to find engaged in
+desperate enterprises, being, as Sir E. Coke described them, "gentlemen
+of good houses, of excellent parts, and of very competent fortunes and
+estates," none of them, except perhaps Catesby, being in pecuniary
+difficulties, while several--notably Robert Winter, Rokewood, Digby,
+Tresham, and Grant--were men of large possessions. It has also been
+observed by a recent biographer of Sir Everard Digby,[95] that, for the
+furtherance of their projects after the explosion, the confederates were
+able to provide a sum equal at least to L75,000 of our money--a
+sufficient proof of their worldly position.
+
+That men of such a class should so lightly and easily have adopted a
+scheme so desperate and atrocious as that of "murdering a kingdom in its
+representatives," is undoubtedly not the least incomprehensible feature
+of this strange story. At the same time it must not be forgotten that
+there is another, and a very different account of these men, which comes
+to us on the authority of a Catholic priest living in England at the
+time,[96] who speaks of the conspirators as follows:
+
+"They were a few wicked and desperate wretches, whom many Protestants
+termed Papists, although the priests and the true Catholics knew them
+not to be such.... They were never frequenters of Catholic Sacraments
+with any priest, as I could ever learn; and, as all the Protestant
+Courts will witness, not one of them was a convicted or known Catholic
+or Recusant."[97]
+
+Similarly Cornwallis, writing from Madrid,[98] reported that the king
+and Estate of Spain were "much grieved that they being atheists and
+devils in their inward parts, should paint their outside with
+Catholicism."
+
+In view of evidence so contradictory, it is difficult, if not
+impossible, to form a confident judgment as to the real character of
+those whose history we are attempting to trace; but, leaving aside what
+is matter of doubt, the undisputed facts of their previous career
+appear to show unmistakably that they were just the men who would be
+ready to look to violence for a remedy of existing evils, and to whom it
+would not be difficult to suggest its adoption.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[34] When James came to the throne Cecil was but a knight. He was
+created Baron Cecil of Essendon, May 13th, 1603; Viscount Cranborne,
+August 20th, 1604; Earl of Salisbury, May 4th, 1605.
+
+[35] Robert, as the second son, did not succeed to his father's title,
+which devolved upon Thomas, the eldest, who was created Earl of Exeter
+on the same day on which Robert became Earl of Salisbury.
+
+[36] _Fragmenta Regalia_, 37. Ed. 1642.
+
+[37] He was but little above five feet in height, and, in the phrase of
+the time, a "Crouchback." King James, who was not a man of much delicacy
+in such matters, was fond of giving him nicknames in consequence. Cecil
+wrote to Sir Thomas Lake, October 24th, 1605: "I see nothing y^t I can
+doe, can procure me so much favor, as to be sure one whole day what
+title I shall have another. For from Essenden to Cranborne, from
+Cranborne to Salisbury, from Salisbury to Beagle, from Beagle to Thom
+Derry, from Thom Derry to Parret which I hate most, I have been so
+walked, as I think by y^t I come to Theobalds, I shall be called Tare or
+Sophie." (R.O. _Dom. James I._ xv. 105.)
+
+[38] _History_, i. 92.
+
+[39] In the same document James I. is spoken of as "the most judycious,
+learned, and rareste kinge, that ever this worlde produced." (R.O.
+_Dom. James I._ xxviii. 29.)
+
+[40] Digby to the King, S. P., _Spain_, Aug. 8. Gardiner, _History_, ii.
+216.
+
+[41] At the trial of Essex, Cecil exclaimed, "I pray God to consume me
+where I stand, if I hate not the Spaniard as much as any man living."
+(Bruce, _Introduction to Secret Correspondence of Sir R. Cecil_,
+xxxiii.)
+
+Of the Spanish pension Mr. Gardiner, after endeavouring to show that
+originally Cecil's acceptance of it may have been comparatively
+innocent, thus continues (_History of England_, i. 216): "But it is
+plain that, even if this is the explanation of his original intentions,
+such a comparatively innocent connection with Spain soon extended itself
+to something worse, and that he consented to furnish the ambassadors,
+from time to time, with information on the policy and intentions of the
+English Government.... Of the persistence with which he exacted payment
+there can be no doubt whatever. Five years later, when the opposition
+between the two governments became more decided, he asked for an
+increase of his payments, and demanded that they should be made in large
+sums as each piece of information was given."
+
+At the same time it appears highly probable that he was similarly in the
+pay of France. _Ibid._
+
+[42] Queen Elizabeth regarded as treasonable any discussion of the
+question of the succession.
+
+[43] Gardiner, i. 215.
+
+[44] _Chamberlain to Carleton_, July 9th, 1612, R.O.
+
+[45] "Tout ce que vous a dit le Comte de Salisbury touchant le mariage
+d'Espagne est rempli de deguisements et artifices a son accoutumee....
+Toutefois, je ne veux pas jurer qu'ils negocient plus sincerement et de
+meilleur foi avec lesdites Espagnols qu'avec nous. Ils corromproient par
+trop leur naturel, s'ils le faisoient, pour des gens qui ne leur
+scauroient guere de gre."--Le Fevre de la Boderie, _Ambassade_, i. 170.
+
+[46] (Of the Earl of Northumberland.) "On tient le Comte de Salisbury
+pour principal auteur de sa persecution, comme celui qui veut ne laisser
+personne en pied qui puisse lui faire tete." De la Boderie. _Ibid._ 178.
+
+[47] R.O. _Dom. James I._ lxix. 56.
+
+[48] _Ibid._, May 27, 1612. Bishop Goodman, no enemy of Cecil, is
+inclined to believe that at the time of the secretary's death there was
+a warrant out for his arrest. _Court of King James_, i. 45.
+
+[49] The first of these epigrams, in Latin, concludes thus:
+
+ Sero, Recurve, moreris sed serio;
+ Sero, jaces (bis mortuus) sed serio:
+ Sero saluti publicae, serio tuae.
+
+The second is in English:
+
+ Whiles two RR's, both crouchbacks, stood at the helm,
+ The one spilt the blood royall, the other the realm.
+
+A marginal note explains that these were, "Richard Duke of Gloster, and
+Robert Earl of Salisburie;" the anagram, of which title is "A silie
+burs." He also styles the late minister a monkey (_cercopithecus_) and
+hobgoblin (_empusa_).
+
+[50] Osborne, _Traditional Memoirs_, p. 236 (ed. 1811).
+
+[51] _Court of King James_, i. 44.
+
+[52] _Traditional Memoirs_, 181.
+
+[53] This feeling was expressed in lampoons quoted by Osborne, e.g.:
+
+ "Here lies Hobinall, our pastor while here,
+ That once in a quarter our fleeces did sheare.
+ For oblation to Pan his custom was thus,
+ He first gave a trifle, then offer'd up us:
+ And through his false worship such power he did gaine,
+ As kept him o' th' mountain, and us on the plaine."
+
+Again, he is described as
+
+ "Little bossive Robin that was so great,
+ Who seemed as sent from ugly fate,
+ To spoyle the prince, and rob the state,
+ Owning a mind of dismall endes,
+ As trappes for foes, and tricks for friends."
+
+ (_Ibid._ 236.)
+
+Oldmixon (_History of Queen Elizabeth_, p. 620) says of the Earl of
+Essex, "'Twas not likely that Cecil, whose Soul was of a narrow Size,
+and had no Room for enlarged Sentiments of Ambition, Glory, and Public
+Spirit, should cease to undermine a Hero, in comparison with whom he was
+both in Body and Mind a Piece of Deformity, if there's nothing beautiful
+in Craft."
+
+[54] _Court and Character of King James_, Sec. 10.
+
+[55] _Ambassade_, i. 58.
+
+[56] _Ibid._ 401.
+
+[57] Against Northumberland nothing was proved (_vide_ de la Boderie,
+_Ambassade_, i. 178), except that he had admitted Thomas Percy amongst
+the royal pensioners without exacting the usual oath. He in vain
+demanded an open trial, but was prosecuted in the Star Chamber, and
+there sentenced to a fine of L30,000 (equal to at least ten times that
+sum in our money), and to be imprisoned for life.
+
+Mr. Gardiner considers that, in regard both of Raleigh and of
+Northumberland, Cecil acted with great moderation. It must, however, be
+remembered that in his secret correspondence with King James, before the
+death of the queen, he had strenuously endeavoured to poison the mind of
+that monarch against these his rivals. Thus he wrote, December 4th, 1601
+(as usual through Lord Henry Howard): "You must remember that I gave you
+notice of the diabolical triplicity, that is, Cobham, Raleigh, and
+Northumberland, that met every day at Durham-house, where Raleigh lies,
+in consultation, which awaked all the best wits of the town ... to watch
+what chickens they could hatch out of these cockatrice eggs that were
+daily and nightly sitten on." (_Secret Correspondence of Sir Robert
+Cecil with James VI., King of Scotland_, Edinburgh, 1766, p. 29.) Coming
+after this, the speedy ruin of all these men appears highly suspicious.
+
+[58] Sir Walter Cope in his _Apology_ (Gutch, _Collectanea Curiosa_, i.
+No. 10) says: "When living, the world observed with all admiration and
+applause; no sooner dead, but it seeketh finally to suppress his
+excellent parts, and load his memory with all imputations of
+corruption."
+
+Among such charges are enumerated "His Falsehood in Friendship.--That he
+often made his friends fair promises, and underhand laid rubs to hinder
+their preferment.--The secret passage of things I know not.... Great
+Counsellors have their private and their publique ends...." etc.
+
+[59] Lord Castlemaine after mentioning the chief features of the
+Gunpowder Plot, goes on: "But let it not displease you, if we ask
+whether Ulysses be no better known?" (_Catholique Apology_, p. 30.)
+
+Francis Herring in his Latin poem, _Pietas Pontificia_ (published 1606),
+speaking of Monteagle (called "Morleius," from his father's title), who
+took the celebrated letter to Cecil, writes thus:
+
+ "Morleius Regis de consultoribus unum,
+ (Quem norat veteri nil quicquam cedere Ulyssi,
+ Juditio pollentem acri, ingenioque sagaci)
+ Seligit, atque illi Rem totam ex ordine pandit."
+
+[60] This is so evident that it appears unnecessary to occupy space with
+proofs in detail. De la Boderie remarks (_Ambassade_, i. 71) on the
+extraordinary rancour of the minister against Catholics, and especially
+against Jesuits, and that "he wishes to destroy them everywhere." Of
+this a remarkable confirmation is afforded by the instructions given to
+Sir Thomas Parry when he was sent as ambassador, "Leiger," to Paris, in
+1603, at the head of which stood these extraordinary articles:
+
+1. "To intimate to the French king the jealousy conceived in England
+upon the revocation of the Jesuits, against former edicts.
+
+2. "To inform the French king that the English were disgusted at the
+maintenance allowed to the French king's prelates and clergy, to priests
+and Jesuits that passed out of his dominions into England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, to do bad offices." (P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132, f. 314.)
+
+[61] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 5. Strype says of the time of
+Elizabeth: "The faction of the Catholics in England is great, and able,
+if the kingdom were divided into three parts, to make two of them."
+(_Annals_, iii. 313, quoted by Butler, _Historical Memoirs_, ii. 177.)
+
+At the execution of Father Oldcorne, 1606, a proof was given of their
+numbers which is said to have alarmed the king greatly. The Father
+having from the scaffold invited all Catholics to pray with him, almost
+all present uncovered.
+
+[62] Of this there can be no doubt, in spite of James's subsequent
+denial. Father Garnet wrote to Parsons (April 16th, 1603): "There hath
+happened a great alteration by the death of the Queen. Great fears were,
+but all are turned into greatest security, and a golden time we have of
+unexpected freedom abroade.... The Catholicks have great cause to hope
+for great respect, in that the nobility all almost labour for it, and
+have good promise thereof from his Majesty." (Stonyhurst MSS. _Anglia_,
+iii. 32.)
+
+Goodman says: "And certainly they [the Catholics] had very great
+promises from him." (_Court of King James_, i. 86.)
+
+[63] "The Penal Laws, a code as savage as any that can be conceived
+since the foundation of the world."--Lord Chief Justice Coleridge. (_To
+Lord Mayor Knill_, Nov. 9, 1892.)
+
+[64] Gardiner, i. 100.
+
+[65] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, 18.
+
+[66] _Ibid._ 20.
+
+[67] Gardiner, i. 166.
+
+[68] Green, _History of the English People_, iii. 62. Mr. Green adds:
+"Rumours of Catholic conversions spread a panic which showed itself in
+an Act of the Parliament of 1604 confirming the statutes of Elizabeth;
+and to this James gave his assent. He promised, indeed, that the statute
+should remain inoperative." In May, 1604, the Catholics boasted that
+they had been joined by 10,000 converts. (Gardiner, _Hist_. i. 202.)
+
+[69] _Catholique Apology_, 404.
+
+[70] Salisbury, in reward of his services on this occasion, received the
+Garter, May 20th, 1606, and was honoured on the occasion with an almost
+regal triumph.
+
+Of the proceedings subsequent to the Plot we are told: "In passing these
+laws for the security of the Protestant Religion, the Earl of Salisbury
+exerted himself with distinguished zeal and vigour, which gained him
+great love and honour from the kingdom, as appeared in some measure, in
+the universal attendance on him at his installation with the Order of
+the Garter, on the 20th of May, 1606, at Windsor." (Birch, _Historical
+View_, p. 256.)
+
+[71] This belief is so notorious that one instance must suffice as
+evidence for it. A paper of informations addressed to Cecil himself,
+April, 1604, declares that the Catholics hoped to see a good day yet,
+and that "his Majesty would suffer a kinde of Tolleracyon, for his
+inclynacyon is good, howsoever the Councell set out his speeches."
+(S.P.O. _Dom. James I._ vii. 86.)
+
+[72] Mr. Gardiner (_Hist._ i. 229, note) says that arrears were never
+demanded in the case of the fine of L20 per lunar month for
+non-attendance at the parish church. Father Gerard, however, a
+contemporary witness, distinctly states that they were. (_Narrative of
+the Gunpowder Plot_, ed. Morris, p. 62.)
+
+[73] _Court of King James_, i. 100.
+
+[74] _Narrative_, p. 46.
+
+[75] Stonyhurst MSS., _Anglia_, iii. 103.
+
+[76] Of the Prince of Wales it was prophesied:
+
+ "The eighth Henry did pull down Monks and their cells,
+ The ninth will pull down Bishops and their bells."
+
+[77] Concerning this letter see Appendix B, _Digby's Letter to
+Salisbury_.
+
+[78] R.O. _Dom. James I._ xvii. 10.
+
+[79] Hallam, _Constitutional Hist._ i. 392 (3rd ed.).
+
+[80] See Appendix C, _The Question of Succession_.
+
+[81] _Agriculture and Prices_, v. 5.
+
+[82] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 17.
+
+[83] Gardiner, _Hist._ i. 84.
+
+[84] Trial of Father Garnet (Cobbett's _State Trials_, ii. 243).
+
+[85] Camden, the historian, to Sir R. Cotton, March 15th, 1596. (Birch,
+_Original Letters_, 2nd series, iii. p. 179.) Various writers
+erroneously suppose this transaction to have occurred in March, 1603, on
+occasion of Elizabeth's last illness. The correct date, 1596, given by
+Sir Henry Ellis, is supplied by a statement contained in the letter,
+that this was her Majesty's "climacterick year," that is, her
+sixty-third, this number, as the multiple of the potent factors seven
+and nine, being held of prime importance in human life. Elizabeth was
+born in 1533.
+
+From Garnet's examination of March 14th, 1605-6 (_Dom. James I._ xix.
+44), we learn that Catesby was at large at the time of the queen's
+demise.
+
+For Cecil's description of the men, see Winwood's _Memorials_, ii. 172.
+
+[86] Catesby purchased his life for a fine of 4,000 marks, and Tresham
+of 3,000. Mr. Jessopp says that the former sum is equivalent at least to
+L30,000 at the present day. (_Dict. Nat. Biog., Catesby_.)
+
+[87] But see Appendix D, _The Spanish Treason_.
+
+[88] Father Gerard says of him that "he paid them [the pursuivants] so
+well for their labour not with crowns of gold, but with cracked crowns
+sometimes, and with dry blows instead of drink and other good cheer,
+that they durst not visit him any more unless they brought store of help
+with them." (_Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot_, p. 86.)
+
+[89] _Ibid._, p. 57.
+
+[90] _Catholique Apology_, p. 403.
+
+[91] _E.g._, by Mr. Talbot of Grafton, father-in-law of Robert Winter,
+who drove their envoys away with threats and reproaches (Jardine,
+_Gunpowder Plot_, p. 112), and by Sir Robert Digby, of Coleshill, cousin
+to Sir Everard, who assisted in taking prisoners. (R.O. _Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, 42.)
+
+[92] _History_, i. 263.
+
+[93] _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 151.
+
+[94] _Ibid._, p. 38.
+
+[95] _Life of a Conspirator, by one of his Descendants_, p. 150.
+
+[96] _English Protestants' Plea and Petition for English Priests and
+Papists._ The author of this book (published 1621) describes himself as
+a priest who has been for many years on the English mission. His title
+indicates that he draws his arguments from Protestant sources.
+
+[97] P. 56.
+
+[98] November 25th, 1605, _Stowe MSS._ 168, 61.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE OPINION OF CONTEMPORARIES AND HISTORIANS.
+
+
+WE have now for so long a period been accustomed to accept the official
+story regarding the Gunpowder Plot, that most readers will be surprised
+to hear that at the time of its occurrence, and for more than a century
+afterwards, there were, to say the least, many intelligent men who took
+for granted that in some way or other the actual conspirators were but
+the dupes and instruments of more crafty men than themselves, and in
+their mad enterprise unwittingly played the game of ministers of State.
+
+From the beginning the government itself anticipated this, as is
+evidenced by the careful and elaborate account of the whole
+affair drawn up on the 7th of November, 1605--two days after the
+"discovery"--seemingly for the benefit of the Privy Council.[99] This
+important document, which is in the handwriting of Levinus Munck,
+Cecil's secretary, with numerous and significant emendations from the
+hand of Cecil himself, speaks, amongst other things, of the need of
+circumspection, "considering how apt the world is nowadays to think all
+providence and intelligences to be but practices." The result did not
+falsify the expectation. Within five weeks we find a letter written from
+London to a correspondent abroad,[100] wherein it is said: "Those that
+have practical experience of the way in which things are done, hold it
+as certain that there has been foul play, and that some of the Council
+secretly spun the web to entangle these poor gentlemen, as did Secretary
+Walsingham in other cases," and it is clear that the writer has but
+recorded an opinion widely prevalent. To this the government again bear
+witness, for they found it advisable to issue an official version of the
+history, in the _True and Perfect Relation_, and the _Discourse of the
+Manner of the Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot_, the appearance of which
+was justified expressly on the ground that "there do pass from hand to
+hand divers uncertain, untrue, and incoherent reports and relations,"
+and that it is very important "for men to understand the birth and
+growth of the said abominable and detestable conspiracy." The accounts
+published with this object are, by the common consent of historians,
+flagrantly untruthful and untrustworthy.[101] We likewise find
+Secretary Cecil writing to instruct Sir E. Coke, the Attorney-General,
+as to his conduct of the case against the conspirators, in view of the
+"lewd" reports current in regard of the manner in which it had been
+discovered.[102] The same minister, in the curious political manifesto
+which he issued in connection with the affair,[103] again bears witness
+to the same effect, when he declares that the papists, after the manner
+of Nero, were throwing the blame of their crime upon others.
+
+Clearly, however, it was not to the papists alone that such an
+explanation commended itself. The Puritan Osborne[104] speaks of the
+manner in which the "discovery" was managed as "a neat device of the
+Treasurer's, he being very plentiful in such plots." Goodman, Anglican
+Bishop of Gloucester, another contemporary, is even more explicit. After
+describing the indignation of the Catholics when they found themselves
+deceived in their hopes at the hands of James, he goes on: "The great
+statesman had intelligence of all this, and because he would show his
+service to the State, he would first contrive and then discover a
+treason, and the more odious and hateful the treason were, his service
+would be the greater and the more acceptable."[105] Another notable
+witness is quoted by the Jesuit Father Martin Grene, in a letter to his
+brother Christopher, January 1st, 1665-6:[106] "I have heard strange
+things, which, if ever I can make out, will be very pertinent: for
+certain, the late Bishop of Armagh, Usher, was divers times heard to
+say, that if papists knew what he knew, the blame of the Gunpowder
+Treason would not lie on them." In like manner we find it frequently
+asserted on the authority of Lord Cobham and others,[107] that King
+James himself, when he had time to realize the truth of the matter, was
+in the habit of speaking of the Fifth of November as "Cecil's holiday."
+
+Such a belief must have been widely entertained, otherwise it could not
+have been handed on, as it was, for generations. It is not too much to
+say that historians for almost a century and a half, if they did not
+themselves favour the theory of the government's complicity, at least
+bore witness how widely that idea prevailed. Thus, to confine ourselves
+at present to Protestant writers, Sanderson,[108] acknowledging that the
+secretary was accused of having manipulated the transaction, says no
+word to indicate that he repudiates such a charge. Welwood[109] is of
+opinion that Cecil was aware of the Plot long before the "discovery,"
+and that the famous letter to Monteagle was "a contrivance of his own."
+Oldmixon writes[110] "notwithstanding the general joy, ... there were
+some who insinuated that the Plot was of the King's own making, or that
+he was privy to it from first to last." Carte[111] does not believe that
+James knew anything of it, but considers it "not improbable" that Cecil
+was better informed. Burnet[112] complains of the impudence of the
+papists of his day, who denied the conspiracy, and pretended it was an
+artifice of the minister's "to engage some desperate men into a plot,
+which he managed so that he could discover it when he pleased."
+Fuller[113] bears witness to the general belief, but considers it
+inconsistent with the well-known piety of King James. Bishop Kennet, in
+his Fifth of November sermon at St. Paul's, in 1715, talks in a similar
+strain. So extreme, indeed, does the incredulity and uncertainty appear
+to have been, that the Puritan Prynne[114] is inclined to suspect
+Bancroft, the Archbishop of Canterbury, of having been engaged in the
+conspiracy; while one of the furious zealots who followed the lead of
+Titus Oates, mournfully testified that there were those in his day who
+looked upon the Powder Treason "as upon a romantic story, or a politic
+invention, or a State trick," giving no more credence to it than to the
+histories of the "Grand Cyrus, or Guy of Warwick, or Amadis de
+Gaul,"--or, as we should now say, Jack the Giant Killer.
+
+The general scope and drift of such suspicions are well indicated by
+Bevil Higgons, "This impious design," he writes[115] of the Plot, "gave
+the greatest blow to the Catholic interest in England, by rendering that
+religion so odious to the people. The common opinion concerning the
+discovery of the Plot, by a letter to the Lord Mounteagle, has not been
+universally allowed to be the real truth of the matter, for some have
+affirmed that this design was first hammered in the forge of Cecil, who
+intended to have produced this plot in the time of Queen Elizabeth, but
+prevented by her death he resumed his project in this reign, with a
+design to have so enraged the nation as to have expelled all Roman
+Catholics, and confiscated their estates. To this end, by his secret
+emissaries, he enticed some hot-headed men of that persuasion, who,
+ignorant whence the design first came, heartily engaged in this
+execrable Powder Treason.... Though this account should not be true," he
+continues, "it is certain that the Court of England had notice of this
+Plot from France and Italy long before the pretended discovery; upon
+which Cecil ... framed that letter to the Lord Mounteagle, with a design
+to make the discovery seem the more miraculous, and at the same time
+magnify the judgment of the king, who by his deep penetration was to
+have the honour of unravelling so ambiguous and dark a riddle."
+
+It may be added that amongst modern historians who have given special
+attention to this period, several, though repudiating the notion that
+Cecil originated the Plot, are strongly of opinion that as to the
+important episode of the "discovery," the traditional story is a
+fabrication. Thus, Mr. Brewer[116] declares it to be quite certain that
+Cecil had previous knowledge of the design, and that the "discovery" was
+a fraud. Lodge[117] is of the same opinion, and so is the author of the
+_Annals of England_.[118] Jardine[119] inclines to the belief that the
+government contrived the letter to Monteagle in order to conceal the
+means by which their information had in reality been obtained. Mr.
+Gardiner, though dismissing the idea as "absurd," acknowledges that his
+contemporaries accused Cecil of inventing the whole Plot.[120]
+
+So much for the testimony of Protestants. As for those who had to suffer
+in consequence of the affair, there is no need to multiply testimonies.
+Lord Castlemaine tells us[121] that "the Catholics of England, who knew
+Cecil's ways of acting and their own innocence, suspected him from the
+beginning, as hundreds still alive can testify." Father Henry More,
+S.J., a contemporary, speaks to the same effect.[122] Father John
+Gerard, who was not only a contemporary, but one of those accused of
+complicity, intimates[123] his utter disbelief of the official narrative
+concerning the discovery, and his conviction that those who had the
+scanning of the redoubtable letter were "well able in shorter time and
+with fewer doubts to decipher a darker riddle and find out a greater
+secret than that matter was." One Floyde, a spy, testified in 1615[124]
+to having frequently heard various Jesuits say, that the government were
+aware of the Plot several months before they thought fit to "discover"
+it.
+
+The Catholic view is expressed with much point and force by an anonymous
+writer of the eighteenth century:[125] "I shall touch briefly upon a few
+particulars relating to this Plot, for the happy discovery whereof an
+anniversary holiday has now been kept for above a hundred years. Is it
+out of pure gratitude to God the nation is so particularly devout on
+this occasion? If so, it is highly commendable: for we ought to thank
+God for all things, and therefore I cannot deny but there is all the
+reason in the world to give him solemn thanks, for that the king and
+Parliament never were in any danger of being hurt by the Powder Plot....
+I am far from denying the Gunpowder Plot. Nay, I believe as firmly that
+Catesby, with twelve more popish associates, had a design to blow up K.
+James, as I believe that the father of that same king was effectually
+blown up by the Earls of Murray, Morton, Bothwell, and others of the
+Reformed Church of Scotland. However ... I humbly conceive I may say the
+king and Parliament were in no danger of being hurt by it, and my reason
+is because they had not less a man than the prime minister of state for
+their tutelar angel; a person deeply read in politics; who had inherited
+the double spirit of his predecessor Walsingham, knew all his tricks of
+legerdemain, and could as seasonably discover plots as contrive them....
+This much at least is certain, that the letter written to my Lord
+Mounteagle, by which the Plot was discovered, had not a fool, but a very
+wise sophister for its author: for it was so craftily worded, that
+though it was mysterious enough on the one hand to prevent a full
+evidence that it was written on purpose to discover the Plot, yet it was
+clear enough on the other to be understood with the help of a little
+consideration, as the event soon showed. Indeed, when it was brought to
+Secretary Cecil, he, poor gentleman, had not penetration enough to
+understand the meaning of it, and said it was certainly written by a
+madman. But there, I fear, he wronged himself. For the secretary was no
+madman. On the contrary, he had too much wit to explain it himself, and
+was too refined a politician to let slip so favourable an occasion of
+making his court to the king, who was to have the compliment made him of
+being the only Solomon wise enough to unfold this dark mystery. Which
+while his Majesty was doing with a great deal of ease, the secretary was
+all the while at his elbow admiring and applauding his wonderful
+sagacity.... So that, in all probability, the same man was the chief
+underhand contriver and discoverer of the Plot; and the greatest part of
+the bubbles concerned in it were trapanned into it by one who took sure
+care that none but themselves should be hurt by it.... But be that as it
+will, there is no doubt but that they who suffer themselves to be drawn
+into a plot like fools, deserve to be hanged for it like knaves."
+
+The opinion of Dodd, the historian, has already been indicated, which in
+another place he thus emphasizes and explains:[126] "Some persons in
+chief power suspecting the king would be very indulgent to Catholics,
+several stratagems were made use of to exasperate him against them, and
+cherishing the Gunpowder Plot is thought to be a masterpiece in this
+way."[127]
+
+It would not be difficult to continue similar citations, but enough has
+now been said to show that it is nothing new to charge the chief
+minister of James I. with having fostered the conspiracy for his own
+purposes, or even to have actually set it a-going. It appears perfectly
+clear that from the first there were not a few, and those not Catholics
+only, who entertained such a belief, and that the facts of the case are
+inadequately represented by historians, who imply, like Mr. Jardine,
+that such a theory was first broached long afterwards, and adopted by
+Catholics alone.[128]
+
+It is moreover apparent that if in recent times historians have
+forgotten that such a view was ever held, or consider it too
+preposterous for serious discussion, this is not because fuller
+knowledge of the details of the conspiracy have discredited it. The
+official version of the story has remained in possession of the field,
+and it has gradually been assumed that this must substantially be true.
+In consequence, as it seems, writers of history, approaching the subject
+with this conviction, have failed to remark many points suggested even
+by the documentary evidence at our disposal, and still more emphatically
+by the recorded facts, which cannot but throw grave doubt upon almost
+every particular of the traditional account, while making it impossible
+to believe that, as to what is most essential, the Plot was in reality
+what has for so long been supposed. That long before the "discovery" the
+Plot must have been, and in fact was, known to the government; that this
+knowledge was artfully dissimulated, in order to make political capital
+out of it; that for the same purpose the sensational circumstances of
+its discovery were deliberately arranged; and that there are grave
+reasons for suspecting the beginnings of the desperate enterprise, as
+well as its catastrophe, to have been dexterously manipulated for State
+purposes;--such are the conclusions, the evidence for which will now be
+considered.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[99] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 129. Printed in _Archaeologia_, xii. 202*.
+
+[100] R.O. _Roman Transcripts_ (Bliss), No. 86, December 10th, 1605
+(Italian).
+
+[101] Mr. Jardine writes (_Criminal Trials_, ii. p. 235), "_The True and
+Perfect Relation_ ... is certainly not deserving of the character which
+its title imports. It is not _true_, because many occurrences on the
+trial are wilfully misrepresented; and it is not _perfect_, because the
+whole evidence, and many facts and circumstances which must have
+happened, are omitted, and incidents are inserted which could not by
+possibility have taken place on the occasion. It is obviously a false
+and imperfect relation of the proceedings; a tale artfully garbled and
+misrepresented, like many others of the same age, to serve a State
+purpose, and intended and calculated to mislead the judgment of the
+world upon the facts of the case." Of the _Discourse_ he speaks in
+similar terms. (_Ibid._, p. 4.)
+
+[102] R.O. _Dom. James I._ xix. 94. Printed by Jardine, _Criminal
+Trials_, ii. 120 (note).
+
+[103] _Answere to certaine Scandalous Papers, scattered abroad under
+colour of a Catholic Admonition._ (Published in January, 1605-6.)
+
+[104] _Traditional Memoirs_, 36. Of this writer Lord Castlemaine says,
+"He was born before this plot, and was also an inquisitive man, a
+frequenter of company, of a noted wit, of an excellent family, and as
+Protestant a one as any in the whole nation."
+
+[105] _Court of King James_ (1839), i. 102.
+
+[106] Stonyhurst MSS., _Anglia_, v. 67.
+
+[107] _E.g._, in the _Advocate of Conscience Liberty_ (1673), p. 225.
+
+[108] _History of Mary Queen of Scots and James I._, p. 334. Bishop
+Kennet, in his Fifth of November Sermon, 1715, boldly declares that
+Sanderson speaks not of Cecil the statesman, but of Cecil "a busy Romish
+priest" (and, he might have added, a paid government spy). The assertion
+is utterly and obviously false.
+
+[109] _Memoirs_, p. 22.
+
+[110] _History of England, Royal House of Stuart_, p. 27.
+
+[111] _General History of England_, iii. 757.
+
+[112] _History of His Own Times_, i. 11.
+
+[113] _Church History_, Book X. Sec. 39.
+
+[114] _Antipathie of the English Lordly Prelacie, to the regall
+Monarchie and Civill Unity_, p. 151.
+
+[115] _A Short View of the English History_, p. 296.
+
+[116] Note to _Fuller's Church History_, x. Sec. 39, and to the _Student's
+Hume_.
+
+[117] _Illustrations_, iii. 172.
+
+[118] Parker and Co. This author says of Cecil and his rival Raleigh,
+"Both were unprincipled men, but Cecil was probably the worst. He is
+suspected not only of having contrived the strange plot in which Raleigh
+was involved, but of being privy to the proceedings of Catesby and his
+associates, though he suffered them to remain unmolested, in order to
+secure the forfeiture of their estates" (p. 338).
+
+[119] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 68.
+
+[120] _History of England_, i. 254, note.
+
+[121] _Catholique Apology_, p. 412.
+
+[122] _Hist. Prov. Angl. S.J._, p. 310.
+
+[123] _Condition of Catholics under James I._, p. 100.
+
+[124] R.O. _Dom. James I._, lxxxi. 70, August 29th, 1615.
+
+[125] _A Plain and Rational Account of the Catholick Faith_, Rouen,
+1721, p. 197.
+
+[126] _Certamen utriusque Ecclesiae_, James I.
+
+[127] The author of the _English Protestants' Plea_ (1621) says: "Old
+stratagems and tragedies of Queene Elizabeth's time must needs be
+renewed and playde againe, to bring not only the Catholikes of England,
+but their holy religion into obloquy" (p. 56).
+
+Peter Talbot, Bishop of Dublin, in the _Polititian's Catechisme_ (1658)
+writes: "That Cecil was the contriver, or at least the fomenter of [the
+Plot,] was testified by one of his own domestick Gentlemen, who
+advertised a certain Catholike, by name Master Buck, two months before,
+of a wicked designe his Master had against Catholikes" (p. 94).
+
+[128] A writer, signing himself "Architect," in an article describing
+the old palace of Westminster (_Gentleman's Magazine_, July, 1800, p.
+627), having occasion to mention the Gunpowder Plot, observes: "This
+Plot is now pretty well understood not to have been hatched by the
+Papists, but by an inveterate foe of the Catholicks of that day, the
+famous minister of James.... All well-informed persons at present laugh
+at the whole of this business."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TRADITIONAL STORY.
+
+
+THE history of the Gunpowder Plot prior to its discovery, as related
+with much circumstantiality by the government of the day, has, in all
+essential particulars, been accepted without demur by the great majority
+of modern writers. We have already seen that those who lived nearer to
+the period in question were less easily convinced; it remains to show
+that the internal evidence of the story itself is incompatible with its
+truthfulness.
+
+The point upon which everything turns is the secret, and therefore
+dangerous, character of the conspiracy, which, as we are told,
+completely eluded the vigilance of the authorities, and was on the very
+verge of success before even a breath of suspicion was aroused, being
+balked only by a lucky accident occurring at the eleventh hour, in a
+manner fitly described as miraculous.
+
+On the other hand, however, many plain and obvious considerations
+combine to show that such an account cannot be true. It is not easy to
+believe that much which is said to have been done by the conspirators
+ever occurred at all. It is clear that, if such things did occur, they
+can by no possibility have escaped observation. There is evidence that
+the government knew of the Plot long before they suddenly "discovered"
+it. Finally, the story of the said "discovery," and the manner in which
+it took place, is plainly not only untrue, but devised to conceal the
+truth; while the elaborate care expended upon it sufficiently indicates
+how important it was held that the truth should be concealed.
+
+There are, moreover, arguments, which appear to deserve consideration,
+suggesting the conclusion that the Plot was actually set on foot by the
+secret instigation of those who designed to make it serve their ends, as
+in fact it did. For our purpose, however, it is not necessary to insist
+greatly upon these. It will be enough to show that, whatever its origin,
+the conspiracy was, and must have been, known to those in power, who,
+playing with their infatuated dupes, allowed them to go on with their
+mad scheme, till the moment came to strike with full effect; thus
+impressing the nation with a profound sense of its marvellous
+deliverance, and winning its confidence for those to whose vigilance and
+sagacity alone that deliverance appeared due.
+
+That we may rightly follow the details of the story told to us, we must
+in the first place understand the topography of the scene of operations,
+which, with the aid of the illustrations given, will not be difficult.
+
+[Illustration: HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT IN THE TIME OF JAMES I.]
+
+[Illustration: INDEX. PARLIAMENT HOUSES IN THE TIME OF JAMES I.
+
+A. The House of Lords.
+
+B. Chamber under the House of Lords, called "Guy Faukes' Cellar."
+
+C. The Prince's Chamber.
+
+D. The Painted Chamber.
+
+E. The "White Hall" or Court of Requests.
+
+F. The House of Commons (formerly St. Stephen's Chapel).
+
+G. Westminster Hall.
+
+H. St. Stephen's Cloisters, converted into houses for the Tellers of the
+Exchequer.
+
+I. Garden of the Old Palace (afterwards called "Cotton Garden").
+
+J. House built on the site of the Chapel of "Our Lady of the Pew"
+(called later "Cotton House").
+
+K K K. Houses built upon ruins of the walls of the Old Palace.
+
+L. Vault under the Painted Chamber.
+
+M. Yard or Court into which a doorway opened from Guy Faukes' Cellar.
+
+N. Passage leading from the same Yard or Court into Parliament Place.
+
+O. Parliament Place.
+
+P. Parliament Stairs (formerly called "The Queen's Bridge").
+
+Q Q. The River Thames.
+
+R. Old Palace Yard.
+
+S. Westminster Abbey.
+
+T. St. Margaret's Church.
+
+U V W. Buildings of the Old Palace, called "Heaven" (or "Paradise"),
+"Hell," and "Purgatory."
+
+X. New Palace Yard.
+
+Y. Bell Tower of St. Stephen's.
+
+Z. The Speaker's Garden.]
+
+The old House of Lords[129] was a chamber occupying the first floor of
+a building which stood about fifty yards from the left bank of the
+Thames, to which it was parallel, the stream at this point running
+almost due north. Beneath the Peers' Chamber, on the ground floor, was a
+large room, which plays an important part in our history. This had
+originally served as the palace kitchen,[130] and though commonly
+described as a "cellar" or a "vault" was in reality neither, for it
+stood on the level of the ground outside, and had a flat ceiling, formed
+by the beams which supported the flooring of the Lords' apartment
+above.[131] It ran beneath the said Peers' Chamber from end to end, and
+measured 77 feet in length, by 24 feet 4 inches in width.
+
+At either end, the building abutted upon another running transversely to
+it; that on the north being the "Painted Chamber," probably erected by
+Edward the Confessor, and that on the south the "Prince's Chamber,"
+assigned by its architectural features to the reign of Henry III. The
+former served as a place of conference for Lords and Commons,[132] the
+latter as the robing-room of the Lords. The royal throne stood at the
+south end of the House, near the Prince's Chamber.
+
+[Illustration: GROUND PLAN OF THE SCENE OF ACTION.]
+
+Originally the Parliament Chamber and the "cellar" beneath it were
+lighted by large windows on both sides; subsequently, houses raised
+against it blocked these up, and the Lords were supplied with light by
+dormers constructed in the roof. The walls of their apartment were then
+hung with tapestry, representing the defeat of the Spanish Armada.
+Although precise information on the point is not easy to obtain, it
+would appear that this did not occur till a period later than that with
+which we are concerned.[133]
+
+Such was the position to be attacked. As a first step, the conspirators
+resolved to hire a house in the immediate neighbourhood, to serve them
+as a base of operations. Thomas Percy was selected to appear as the
+principal in this part of the business, for, being one of the king's
+pensioners, he had frequently to be in attendance at Court, and might
+naturally wish to have a lodging close at hand. The house chosen was
+one, or rather a part of one,[134] standing near the Prince's Chamber,
+and on the side towards the river.[135]
+
+In treating for the lease of this tenement Percy seems to have conducted
+himself in a manner altogether different from what we might have
+expected of one whose object required him, above all, to avoid
+attracting notice. He appears, in fact, to have made the greatest
+possible ado about the business. The apartments were already let to one
+Ferrers, who was unwilling to give them up, and Percy eventually
+succeeded in his purpose, after not only "long suit by himself," but
+also "great intreaty of Mr. Carleton, Mr. Epsley, and other gentlemen
+belonging to the Earl of Northumberland."[136] These gentlemen were
+never said to have been privy to the Conspiracy, and one of them, the
+well-known Dudley Carleton, afterwards Viscount Dorchester, was not only
+at this time secretary to Sir Thomas Parry, the Ambassador in France,
+but was "patronised" by Cecil himself.[137]
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD HOUSE OF LORDS, FROM THE EAST OR RIVER SIDE,
+SHOWING THE GARDEN.]
+
+Neither does the house appear to have been well suited to serve the
+purposes for which it was taken. Speed tells us,[138] and he is
+confirmed by Bishop Barlow of Lincoln,[139] that it was let out to
+tenants only when Parliament was not assembled, and during a session
+formed part of the premises at the disposal of the Lords, whom it served
+as a withdrawing room. As the Plot was, of necessity, to take effect
+during a session,[140] when the place would thus be in other hands, it
+is very hard to understand how it was intended that the final and all
+important operation should be conducted.
+
+The bargain for the house was concluded May 24th, 1604,[141] but the
+proposed operations were delayed till a much later date, by a
+circumstance which clearly shows the public nature of the premises, and
+that the lease obtained conferred no exclusive right of occupation. The
+question of a union with Scotland, for which King James was very
+anxious, was at the time being agitated, and commissioners having been
+appointed to discuss it, this very house was placed at their disposal
+for their meetings. Consequently the summer and autumn passed without
+any farther steps being taken by the conspirators.
+
+At last, in December, they were free to take in hand the extraordinary
+scheme they had matured. This was, starting from a cellar of Percy's
+house,[142] to dig thence an underground mine to the foundations of the
+Parliament House, and through them; and then to construct within,
+beneath the Peers' Chamber itself, a "concavity" large enough to contain
+the amount of powder requisite for their purpose. On December 11th,
+1604, they commenced operations,[143] and in a fortnight, that is by
+Christmas, they had tunnelled from their starting-point to the wall they
+had to breach; and that this first operation was of no small magnitude,
+especially for men who had never before handled pick or shovel,[144] is
+shown by the fact that what they contrived to do in so short a time was
+quoted as evidence of the extraordinary zeal they displayed in their
+nefarious enterprise.[145] Having rested a little, for the Christmas
+holidays, they began upon the wall, which presented an unexpected
+obstacle. They found that it was not only "very hard to beat through,"
+but, moreover, nine feet thick, though since, as we shall see, they
+never penetrated to the other side, it is not clear how they were able
+to measure it.[146] Up to this point but five persons had engaged in the
+work, Catesby, Percy, Thomas Winter, John Wright, and Faukes. In
+consequence however of the difficulties now experienced, Keyes was
+called in to their aid. He had already been initiated in the Plot, and
+appointed to take charge of the powder, which was being accumulated and
+stored in a house hired for the purpose across the Thames, at Lambeth.
+It was therefore necessary to bring over the powder with him, which
+amounted at this time to twenty barrels, and was placed either in
+Percy's lodging itself, or in an outhouse belonging to it. About the
+same time Christopher Wright was also initiated and took his share of
+the labour.[147]
+
+The gang thus composed laboured upon the wall from the beginning of
+January, 1604-5, to the middle of March,[148] by which time they had
+succeeded in getting only half way through. While the others worked,
+Faukes stood on sentry to warn them of any danger.
+
+Meanwhile, it must be asked how proceedings so remarkable could have
+escaped the notice, not only of the government, but of the entire
+neighbourhood. This, it must be remembered, was most populous. There
+were people living in the very building, a part of which sheltered the
+conspirators. Around, were thickly clustered the dwellings of the keeper
+of the Wardrobe, auditors and tellers of the Exchequer, and other such
+officials.[149] There were tradespeople and workmen constantly employed
+close to the spot where the work was going on; while the public
+character of the place makes it impossible to suppose that tenants such
+as Percy and his friends, who were little better than lodgers, could
+claim the exclusive use of anything beyond the rooms they rented--even
+when allowed the use of these--or could shut against the neighbours and
+visitors in general the precincts of so much frequented a spot.
+
+How, then, did they dispose of the mass of soil dug out in making a
+tunnel through which barrels and hogsheads were to be conveyed? No man
+who has had practical experience of the unexpected quantity of earth
+which comes out of the most insignificant excavation, will be likely to
+rest satisfied with the explanation officially given, that it was
+sufficiently concealed by being hidden beneath the turf in the little
+garden adjoining.[150] What, moreover, was done with the great stones
+that came out of the foundations? Of these there must have been on hand
+at least some sixty cubic feet, probably much more, and they, at any
+rate, can scarcely have been stowed away beneath the turf.
+
+What, above all, of the noise made during the space of a couple of
+months, in assaulting a wall "very hard to beat through"? It is a matter
+of common observation how sound travels in the ground, and every stroke
+of the pick upon the stone must have been distinctly heard for more than
+a hundred yards all around, constituting a public nuisance. Meanwhile,
+not only were there people living close by on every side, but men were
+constantly at work right over the heads of the diggers, and only a few
+feet from them: yet we are required to believe that neither these nor
+any others had any notion that anything unusual was going on.
+
+Neither is it easy to understand how these amateurs contrived to do so
+much without a catastrophe. To make a tunnel through soft earth is a
+very delicate operation, replete with unlooked-for difficulties. To
+shore up the roof and sides there must, moreover, have been required a
+large quantity of the "framed timber" of which Speed tells us, and the
+provision and importation of this must have been almost as hard to keep
+dark as the exportation of the earth and stones. A still more critical
+operation is that of meddling with the foundations of a
+house--especially of an old and heavy structure--which a professional
+craftsman would not venture upon except with extreme care, and the
+employment of many precautions of which these light-hearted adventurers
+knew nothing. Yet, recklessly breaking their way out of one building,
+and to a large extent into another, they appear to have occasioned
+neither crack nor settlement in either.
+
+We are by no means at the end of our difficulties. According to the tale
+told by Faukes,[151] all the seven miners "lay in Percy's house," never
+showing themselves while the work was in progress. This circumstance, to
+say nothing of the storage of powder barrels and timber, seems to imply
+that the premises were spacious and commodious. We learn, however, on
+the unimpeachable evidence of Mrs. Whynniard's servant,[152] that the
+house afforded accommodation only for one person at a time, so that when
+Percy came there to spend the night, Faukes, who passed for his man, had
+to lodge out. This suggests another question. Percy's pretext for laying
+in so much fuel was that he meant to bring up his wife to live there.
+But how could this be under such conditions?
+
+Still more serious is another problem. When the mining operations were
+commenced, in December, 1604, Parliament was appointed to meet on the
+7th of February following, by which time, as is evident, the
+preparations of the conspirators could not have been completed. While
+they were working, however, news came that the session was to be
+postponed till October. This information the conspirators appear to
+have received quite casually before Christmas, for it is said that on
+the strength of it, they thought they could afford to take a
+holiday.[153] Early in January they were again at work,[154] and they
+continued their operations thenceforth, without any circumstance
+intervening to interrupt or alarm them, of which we hear anything either
+from themselves or from subsequent writers. Nevertheless, it is quite
+certain that the Lords actually met on February 7th--that is while the
+mining operations were going on--and not only went through the ceremony
+of prorogation, but transacted some little business besides, Lord Denny
+being introduced and his writ of summons read.[155] It is equally
+incomprehensible that the miners should have known nothing of so
+startling an occurrence, or that knowing of it they should never have
+made the slightest mention thereof. It is even more difficult to explain
+how the Peers thus assembled, and their attendants, could have failed to
+remark the mine, then actually open, in premises belonging to
+themselves, or any suspicious features of earth, stones, timber, or
+barrels.
+
+The difficulties presented by the stubborn nature of the foundation-wall
+proved well-nigh insuperable, but, as is observed by Father
+Greenway,[156] one still more grave awaited the diggers had they
+succeeded in making their way through. The "concavity" to be excavated
+within, to contain the large number of powder barrels required for their
+purpose, would have involved engineering work of the most hazardous
+kind, and heavily laden as the floor above proved to be, it must,
+according to all rules of calculation, have collapsed, when thus
+undermined. But at this juncture, when the wall had been half pierced, a
+circumstance occurred, not less extraordinary than others we have
+considered, to change the whole plan of operations.
+
+All this time, ridiculous as is the supposition, the conspirators appear
+to have been ignorant of the existence of the "cellar," and to have
+fancied that they were working their way immediately beneath the Chamber
+of the Peers.[157] If such a circumstance be incredible, the
+consequences must be borne by the narrative of which it forms an
+essential feature. That it is incredible can hardly be questioned. The
+so-called "cellar," as we have seen, was a large and conspicuous room
+above ground. There are reasons for believing that it served habitually
+as a passage between the different parts of the palace. It appears
+certain that some of the conspirators, Percy in particular, as being one
+of his Majesty's pensioners, must have frequently been in the House of
+Lords itself, and therefore have known where it was; and clearly men of
+their position were able to attend there when they chose.[158]
+
+The manner in which they came at last to discover the "cellar" is thus
+related by Mr. Jardine:[159] "One morning, while working upon the wall,
+they suddenly heard a rushing noise in a cellar, nearly above their
+heads. At first they imagined that they had been discovered; but Fawkes
+being despatched to reconnoitre, found that one Bright, to whom the
+cellar belonged, was selling off his coals[160] in order to remove, and
+that the noise proceeded from this cause. Fawkes carefully surveyed the
+place, which proved to be a large vault, situated immediately below the
+House of Lords, and extremely convenient for the purpose they had in
+view.... Finding that the cellar would shortly become vacant, the
+conspirators agreed that it should be hired in Percy's name, under the
+pretext that he wanted it for his own coals and wood. This was
+accordingly done, and immediate possession was obtained."[161]
+
+[Illustration: CELLAR UNDER HOUSE OF LORDS.]
+
+It is obvious that Mr. Bright's men must on this, as presumably upon
+many previous occasions, have been at work among the coals, while the
+miners were hammering at the foundations beneath them, and yet have been
+as little aware of what was going on as were the others of the existence
+of the "cellar." It must, farther, be noted that the hiring of this
+receptacle was, in fact, by no means so easy a matter as the accounts
+ordinarily given would lead us to suppose. Faukes, in the narrative on
+which the whole history of this episode has been based, is made to say
+that he found that the coals were a-selling, and the cellar was to be
+let, whereupon Percy went and hired it. Mrs. Whynniard, however, tells
+us that the cellar was not to let, and that Bright had not the disposal
+of the lease, but one Skinner, and that Percy "laboured very earnestly"
+before he succeeded in obtaining it.
+
+[Illustration: VAULT, EAST END OF PAINTED CHAMBER, ERRONEOUSLY STYLED
+"GUY FAUKES' CELLAR."]
+
+But, whatever the circumstances and manner of the transaction, it
+appears that at Lady-day, 1605, this chamber came into the hands of
+those who were to make it so famous; whereupon, we are told, they
+resolved to abandon the mine, and use this ready-made cavity for their
+purposes. To it, accordingly, they transferred their powder, the
+barrels, by subsequent additions, being increased to thirty-six, and the
+amount to nine or ten thousand pounds.[162] The casks were covered with
+firewood, 500 faggots and 3,000 billets being brought in by hired
+porters and piled up by Faukes, to whose charge, in his assumed
+character of Percy's servant, the cellar was committed. It is stated in
+Winter's long declaration on this subject,[163] that the barrels were
+thus completely hidden, "because we might have the house free, to suffer
+anyone to enter that would," and we find it mentioned by various writers
+subsequently, that free ingress was actually allowed to the public. Thus
+we read[164] of "the deep cunning [of the conspirators] in throwing
+open the vault, as if there had been nothing to conceal;" while another
+writer[165] tells us, "The place was hired by Percy; 36 barrels of
+gunpowder were lodged in it; the whole covered up with billets and
+faggots; the doors of the cellar boldly flung open, and everybody
+admitted, as though it contained nothing dangerous." On the top of the
+barrels were likewise placed "great bars of iron and massy stones," in
+order "to make the breach the greater."
+
+[Illustration: ARCHES FROM THE "CELLAR" UNDER THE HOUSE OF LORDS.]
+
+We may here pause to review the extraordinary story to which we have
+been listening. A group of men, known for as dangerous characters as any
+in England, men, in Cecil's own words,[166] "spent in their fortunes,"
+"hunger-starved for innovations," "turbulent spirits," and "fit for all
+alterations," take a house within the precincts of a royal palace, and
+close to the Upper House of Parliament, dig a mine, hammer away for over
+two months at the wall, acquire and bring in four tons of gunpowder,
+storing it in a large and conspicuous chamber immediately beneath that
+of the Peers, and covering it with an amount of fuel sufficient for a
+royal establishment--and meanwhile those responsible for the government
+of the country have not even the faintest suspicion of any possible
+danger. "Never," it is said,[167] "was treason more secret, or ruin more
+apparently inevitable," while the Secretary of State himself
+declared[168] that such ruin was averted only by the direct
+interposition of Heaven, in a manner nothing short of miraculous.
+
+It must be remembered that the government thus credited with childlike
+and culpable simplicity, was probably the most suspicious and
+inquisitive that ever held power in this country, for its tenure whereof
+it trusted mainly to the elaborate efficiency of its intelligence
+department. Of a former secretary, Walsingham, Parsons wrote that he
+"spent infinite upon spyery,"[169] and there can be no doubt that his
+successor, now in office, had studied his methods to good purpose. "He,"
+according to a panegyrist,[170] "was his craft's master in foreign
+intelligence and for domestic affairs," who could tell at any moment
+what ships there were in every port of Spain, their burdens, their
+equipment, and their destination. We are told[171] that he could
+discover the most secret business transacted in the Papal Court before
+it was known to the Catholics in England. He could intercept letters
+written from Paris to Brussels, or from Rome to Naples.[172] What was
+his activity at home is sufficiently evidenced by the reports furnished
+by his numerous agents concerning everything done throughout the
+country, in particular by Recusants; whereof we shall see more, in
+connection with this particular affair. That those so remarkably
+wide-awake in regard of all else should have been blind and deaf to what
+was passing at their own doors appears altogether incredible.
+
+More especially do difficulties connect themselves with the gunpowder
+itself. Of this, according to the lowest figure given us, there were
+over four tons.[173] How, we may ask, could half a dozen men, "notorious
+Recusants," and bearing, moreover, such a character as we have heard,
+without attracting any notice, and no question being asked, possess
+themselves of such a quantity of so dangerous a material?[174] How large
+was the amount may be estimated from the fact that it was more than a
+quarter of what, in 1607, was delivered from the royal store, for all
+purposes, and was equal to what was thought sufficient for Dover Castle,
+while there was no more in the four fortresses of Arcliffe, Walmer,
+Deal, and Camber together.[175]
+
+The twenty barrels first procured were first, as we have seen, stored
+beyond the Thames, at Lambeth, whence they had to be ferried across the
+river, hauled up the much frequented Parliament Stairs, carried down
+Parliament Place, as busy a quarter as any in the city of Westminster,
+and into the building adjoining the Parliament House, or the "cellar"
+beneath the same. All this, we are to suppose, without attracting
+attention or remark.[176]
+
+The conspirators, while making these material preparations, were
+likewise busy in settling their plan of action when the intended blow
+should have been struck. It was by no means their intention to attempt a
+revolution. Their quarrel was purely personal with King James, his
+Council, and his Parliament, and, these being removed, they desired to
+continue the succession in its legitimate course, and to seat on the
+throne the nearest heir who might be available for the purpose; placing
+the new sovereign, however, under such tutelage as should insure the
+inauguration of a right course of policy. The details of the scheme were
+of as lunatic a character as the rest of the business. The confederates
+would have wished to possess themselves of Prince Henry, the king's
+eldest son; but as he would probably accompany his father to the
+opening of Parliament, and so perish, their desire was to get hold of
+his brother, the Duke of York, afterwards Charles I., then but five
+years old. It was, however, possible that he too might go to Parliament,
+and otherwise it might not improbably be impossible to get possession of
+him: in which case they were prepared to be satisfied with the Princess
+Elizabeth,[177] or even with her infant sister Mary, for whom, as being
+English born, a special claim might be urged.
+
+Such was the project in general. When we come to details, we are
+confronted, as might be anticipated, with statements impossible to
+reconcile. We are told,[178] that Percy undertook to seize and carry off
+Duke Charles; and again,[179] that, despairing of being able to lay
+hands upon him, they resolved "to serve themselves with the Lady
+Elizabeth," and that Percy was one of those who made arrangements for
+seizing her;[180] and again, that having learnt that Prince Henry was
+not to go to the House, they determined to surprise him, "and leave the
+young Duke alone;"[181] and once more, that they never entered into any
+consultation or formed any project whatever as to the succession.[182]
+
+Still more serious are the contradictions on another point. We are told,
+on the one hand, that a proclamation was drawn up for the inauguration
+of the new sovereign--whoever this was[183]--and, on the other, that the
+associates were resolved not to avow the explosion to be their work
+until they should see how the country took it, or till they had gathered
+a sufficient force,[184] and accordingly that they had no more than a
+project of a proclamation to be issued in due season. But, again, it is
+said[185] that Catesby on his way out of town, after the event, was to
+proclaim the new monarch at Charing Cross, though it is equally hard to
+understand, either how he was to know which of the plans had succeeded,
+and who that monarch was to be,--whether a king or a queen,--or what
+effect such proclamation by an obscure individual like himself was
+expected to produce; or how this, or indeed any item in the programme
+was compatible with the incognito of the actors in the great tragedy.
+
+Amid this hopeless tangle one point alone is perfectly clear. Whatever
+was the scheme, it was absolutely insane, and could by no possibility
+have succeeded. As Mr. Gardiner says:[186] "With the advantage of having
+an infant sovereign in their hands, with a little money and a few
+horses, these sanguine dreamers fancied that they would have the whole
+of England at their feet."
+
+Such is in outline the authorized version of the history concerning what
+Father John Gerard styles "this preposterous Plot of Powder;" and
+preposterous it undoubtedly appears to be in more senses than he
+intended. It is, in the first place, almost impossible to believe that
+the important and dramatic episode of the mine ever, in fact, occurred.
+We have seen something of the difficulties against accepting this part
+of the story, which the circumstantial evidence suggests. When, on the
+other hand, we ask upon what testimony it rests, it is a surprise to
+find that for so prominent and striking an incident we are wholly
+dependent upon two documents, published by the government, a confession
+of Thomas Winter and another of Faukes, both of which present features
+rendering them in the highest degree suspicious. Amongst the many
+confessions and declarations made by the conspirators in general, and
+these individuals in particular, these two alone describe the mining
+operations.[187]
+
+[Illustration: CELL IN STAIRCASE TURRET, S.E. CORNER, PAINTED CHAMBER,
+OFTEN CALLED "GUY FAUKES' CELL."]
+
+On the other hand, it is somewhat startling to find no less a person
+than the Earl of Salisbury himself ignorant or oblivious of so
+remarkable a circumstance. In Thomas Winter's lodging was found the
+agreement between Percy and Ferrers for the lease of the house, which
+was taken, as has been said, in May, 1604. This is still preserved, and
+has been endorsed by Cecil, "The bargaine between Percy and Ferrers for
+the bloody sellar...." But this contract had nothing to do with the
+"bloody sellar," which was not rented till ten months later. Again,
+writing November 9th, 1605, to Cornwallis and Edmondes, Cecil says:
+"This Percy had about a year and a half ago hired a part of Vyniard's
+house in the old Palace, from whence he had access into this vault to
+lay his wood and coal, and as it seemeth now [had] taken this place of
+purpose to work some mischief in a fit time." When this was written the
+premises had been for four days in the hands of the government. It is
+clearly impossible that the remains of the mine, had they existed,
+should not have been found, and equally so that Cecil should not have
+alluded to the overwhelming evidence they afforded as to the intention
+of Percy and his associates to "work some mischief," but should, again,
+have connected the tenancy of the house only with the "cellar."
+
+It will, moreover, be found by investigators that when exceptional
+stress is laid on any point by Sir E. Coke, the Attorney General, a
+_prima facie_ case against the genuine nature of the evidence in regard
+of that point is thereby established. In his speech on the trial of the
+conspirators we find him declaring that, "If the cellar had not been
+hired, the mine work could hardly, or not at all, have been discovered,
+for the mine was neither found nor suspected until the danger was past,
+and the capital offenders apprehended, and by themselves, upon
+examination, confessed." That is to say, the government could not,
+though provided with information that there was a powder-mine under the
+Parliament House, have discovered this extraordinary piece of
+engineering; and moreover, after its abandonment, the traces of the
+excavation were so artfully hidden as to elude observation till the
+prisoners drew attention to them. Such assertions cannot possibly be
+true; but they might serve to meet the objection that no one had seen
+the mine.
+
+We likewise find that in his examination of November 5th, Faukes is made
+to say: "He confesseth that about Christmas last [1604], he brought in
+the nighttime Gunpowder _to the cellar under the upper house of
+Parliament_," that is some three months before the cellar was hired.
+Moreover, the words italicised have been added as an interlineation,
+apparently by Cecil himself. Evidently when this was done the mine was
+still undiscovered.
+
+Yet more remarkable is the fact that it would appear to have remained
+undiscovered ever afterwards, and that no marks seem to have been left
+upon the wall which had been so roughly handled. It is certainly
+impossible to find any record that such traces were observed when the
+building was demolished, though they could scarcely have failed to
+attract attention and interest. On this subject we have the important
+evidence of Mr. William Capon, who carefully examined every detail
+connected with the old palace, and evidently had the opportunity of
+studying the foundations of the House of Lords when, in 1823, that
+building was removed.[188] He does, indeed, mention what he conceives
+to be the traces of the conspirators' work, of which he gives the
+following description:
+
+"Adjoining the south end of the Cellar, or more properly the ancient
+Kitchen, to the west, was a small room separated only by a stone
+doorway, with a pointed head, and with very substantial masonry joined
+to the older walls.... At the North side [of this] there had been an
+opening, a doorway of very solid thick stonemasonry, through which was a
+way seemingly forced through by great violence.... In 1799 it was
+asserted that this was always understood to have been the place where
+the conspirators broke into the vault which adjoined that called Guy
+Vaux's cellar."[189]
+
+But against such a supposition there are three fatal objections. (1)
+This places the conspirators on the wrong side of the house, for they
+most certainly worked from the east, or river side, not from the
+west.[190] (2) It makes the mine above ground instead of below. (3) The
+conspirators never broke into the cellar at all, but hired it in the
+ordinary way of business.
+
+Such considerations as the above may well make us sceptical in regard to
+the mine, and if this element of the story, upon which so much stress
+has always been laid, prove to be untrustworthy, it must needs follow
+that grave suspicion will be cast upon the rest.
+
+There are, likewise, various problems in connection with the "cellar,"
+especially as concerns the means of ingress to it, and its consequent
+privacy or publicity.
+
+(_a_) Faukes says (November 6th, 1605) that about the middle of Lent of
+that year Percy caused "a new dore" to be made into it, "that he might
+have a neerer way out of his own house into the cellar."
+
+This seems to imply that Percy took the cellar for his firewood when
+there was no convenient communication between it and his house. Moreover
+it is not very easy to understand how a tenant under such conditions as
+his was allowed at discretion to knock doors through the walls of a
+royal palace. Neither did the landlady say anything of this door-making,
+when detailing what she knew about Percy's proceedings.
+
+(_b_) In some notes by Sir E. Coke,[191] it is said: "The powder was
+first brought into Percy's house, and lay there in a low room new built,
+and could not have been conveyed into the cellar by the old door but
+that all the street must have seen it; and therefore he caused a new
+door out of his house into the cellar to be made, where before there had
+been a grate of iron."
+
+This, it must be confessed, looks very like an afterthought to explain
+away a difficulty, but failing to do so. When the door is said to have
+been made, the powder was already on the premises, having been brought
+there in sight of the whole street and the river. It could hardly, in so
+small a tenement, escape the observation of the workmen,[192] while the
+operations of these latter in breaking through the wall would have
+served yet farther to attract the attention of the neighbourhood.
+
+(_c_) We are told by Faukes and others, that either he or Percy always
+kept the key, and that marks were made to indicate whether anyone had
+entered the place in their absence.
+
+(_d_) On the other hand, to say nothing of Winter's declaration that the
+confederates so arranged as to leave the cellar free for all to enter
+who would, Lord Salisbury informed Sir Thomas Parry[193] that the
+captors of Faukes entered through "another door," which clearly did not
+require to be opened by him; while as to the ordinary door, whichever
+this was, the "King's Book" itself plainly intimates, in the account of
+the chamberlain's visit, that Whynniard, the landlord, was able to open
+it when he chose.
+
+The "other door" spoken of by Cecil, a most important feature of the
+chamber, is nowhere else mentioned.[194]
+
+It appears certain that the conspirators really had a plot in hand, that
+they fancied themselves to be about to strike a great blow, and that by
+means of gunpowder; but what was the precise nature of their plans and
+preparations it is not so easy to determine. Farther discussion of these
+particulars must be deferred to a later chapter. Meanwhile, according to
+the accepted history, when they had stored their powder there was
+nothing more to do but to await the assembling of the intended
+victims. Parliament stood prorogued till October 3rd, and was afterwards
+further adjourned till the fateful 5th of November. That they might not
+excite suspicion, the confederates separated, most of them retiring to
+their country seats, and Faukes going over to Flanders.[195] In his
+absence Percy kept the key of the cellar, and, according to Faukes,[196]
+laid in more powder and wood while he himself was absent.
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. II.]
+
+It is not easy to understand what became of the cellar during this long
+interval, and apparently it was left in great measure, with its
+compromising contents, to take care of itself, for Percy, amongst other
+places, went with Catesby to Bath to take the waters.[197] If the
+premises were of so public a nature as the testimony of Winter and
+others would imply, it appears impossible that they should have remained
+all this time sealed up, or that these astute and crafty plotters should
+with a light heart have ignored the probability that they would be
+visited and inspected. As Father Greenway observes,[198] it can hardly
+be supposed that the landlord[199] had not a duplicate key, while Cecil
+himself, in his letter to Sir Thomas Parry, plainly indicates that
+access to the cellar could freely be procured independently of the
+conspirators. We can only say that the conduct of the confederates in
+this particular appears to have been quite in keeping with their method
+of conspiring secretly as we have already seen it, and undoubtedly one
+more difficulty is thus opposed to the supposition that their enterprise
+was chiefly dangerous on account of the clandestine and dexterous manner
+in which it was conducted.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[129] The name "old House of Lords" is somewhat ambiguous, being
+variously applicable to three different buildings:
+
+(i.) That here described, which continued to be used till the Irish
+Union, A.D. 1800.
+
+(ii.) The "Court of Requests," or "White Hall," used from 1800 till the
+fire of 1834.
+
+(iii.) The "Painted Chamber," which, having been repaired after the said
+fire, became the place of assembly for the Lords, as did the Court of
+Requests for the Commons.
+
+The original House of Lords was demolished in 1823 by Sir John Soane,
+who on its site erected his Royal Gallery. (See Brayley and Britton,
+_History of the Palace of Westminster_.)
+
+[130] The authority for this is the Earl of Northampton, who at Father
+Garnet's trial mentioned that it was so stated in ancient records.
+Remains of a buttery hatch in the south wall confirmed his assertion.
+
+The foundations of the building were believed to date from the time of
+Edward the Confessor, and the style of architecture of the
+superstructure assigned it to the early part of the thirteenth century,
+as likewise the "Prince's Chamber."
+
+[131] Brayley and Britton, _History of the Palace of Westminster_, p.
+421; J. T. Smith, _Antiquities of Westminster_, p. 39 (where
+illustrations will be found); _Gentleman's Magazine_, July, 1800, p.
+626.
+
+[132] It was here that the death warrant of Charles I. was signed.
+
+[133] An old print (which states that it is taken from "a painted print
+in the Cottonian library,") representing the two Houses assembled in
+presence of Queen Elizabeth, has windows on both sides. The same plate,
+with the figure of the sovereign alone changed, was made to do duty
+likewise for a Parliament of James I. By Hollar's time (1640-77) the
+windows had been blocked up and the tapestry hung.
+
+[134] Cecil wrote to Cornwallis, Edmondes, and others, November 9th,
+1605, "This Piercey had a bout a year and a half a goe hyred a parte of
+Vyniards house in the old Palace," which appears to be Mr. Hepworth
+Dixon's sole authority for styling the tenement "Vinegar House."
+
+[135] See Appendix E, _Site of Percy's house_.
+
+[136] Evidence of Mrs. Whynniard, November 7th, 1605. Epsley is
+evidently the same person as Hoppisley, who was examined on the 23rd of
+the same month.
+
+[137] Birch, _Historical View_, p. 227.
+
+[138] _Historie_, p. 1231.
+
+[139] _Gunpowder Treason, Harleian Miscellany_, iii. 121.
+
+[140] At his first examination, November 5th 1605, Faukes declared that
+he had not been sure the king would come to the Parliament House on that
+day, and that his purpose was to have blown it up whenever his Majesty
+was there.
+
+[141] The agreement between Percy and Ferrers is in the Record Office
+(_Gunpowder Plot Book_, 1.) and is endorsed by Cecil, "The bargaine ...
+for the bloody sellar." Upon this there will be more to remark later.
+
+[142] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 42.
+
+[143] The 11th of December, O. S., was at that period the shortest day,
+which circumstance suggested to Sir E. Coke, on the trial of the
+conspirators, one of his characteristic facetiae; he bade his hearers
+note "That it was in the entring of the Sun into the Tropick of
+Capricorn, when they began their Mine; noting that by Mining they should
+descend, and by Hanging, ascend."
+
+[144] "Gentlemen not accustomed to labour or to be pioneers."--Goodman,
+_Court of King James_, p. 103.
+
+[145] "The Moles that first underwent these underminings were all
+grounded Schollers of the Romish Schoole, and such earnest Labourers in
+their Vault of Villany, that by Christmas Eve they had brought the worke
+under an entry, unto the Wall of the Parliament House, underpropping
+still as they went the Earth with their framed Timber."--Speed,
+_Historie_, p. 1232 (pub. 1611).
+
+[146] In Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_ these foundations are stated to
+have been three ells thick, _i.e._, eleven and a quarter feet. _Harleian
+Miscellany_, iii. 122.
+
+[147] See Appendix F, _The enrolment of the Conspirators_, for the
+discrepancies as to dates. T. Winter (November 23rd, 1605) says that the
+powder was laid "in Mr. Percy's house;" Faukes, "in a low Room new
+builded."
+
+[148] There is, as usual, hopeless contradiction between the two
+witnesses upon whom, as will be seen, we wholly depend for this portion
+of the story. Faukes (November 17th, 1605) makes the mining operations
+terminate at Candlemas. T. Winter (November 23rd) says that they went on
+to "near Easter" (March 31st). The date of hiring the "cellar," was
+about Lady Day (March 25th).
+
+[149] The buildings of the dissolved College of St. Stephen, comprising
+those around the House of Lords, were granted by Edward VI. to Sir Ralph
+Lane. They reverted to the crown under Elizabeth, and were appropriated
+as residences for the auditors and tellers of the Exchequer. The
+locality became so populous that in 1606 it was forbidden to erect more
+houses.
+
+[150] Jardine, _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 48.
+
+[151] November 17th, 1605.
+
+[152] November 7th, 1605.
+
+[153] Winter says: "... We heard that the Parliament should be anew
+adjourned until after Michaelmas; upon which tidings we broke off both
+discourse and working until after Christmas" (November 23rd, 1605).
+
+Lingard writes, "When a fortnight had thus been devoted to uninterrupted
+labour, Faukes informed his associates that the Parliament was prorogued
+from the 7th of February to the 3rd of October. They immediately
+separated to spend the Christmas holidays at their respective
+homes."--_History_, vii. 47 (ed. 1883).
+
+[154] Faukes, as has been said, makes the work upon the wall terminate
+at Candlemas. Winter (_ut sup._) says that they brought over the powder
+at Candlemas, that is, after they had been some time engaged upon the
+wall, and found the need of the assistance of Keyes.
+
+[155] _Lord's Journals_ "A^o 1604(5) 2 Jac.--Memorandum quod hodierno
+die, septimo die Februarii, A^o Regis nri Jacobi, _viz._ Angliae (etc.)
+2^{ndo}, & Scotiae 38^o, in quem diem prorogatum fuerat hoc praesens
+parliamentum, convenere Proceres tam Spirituales quam Temporales, quorum
+nomina subscribuntur."
+
+Then follow twenty-nine names, including the Archbishop of Canterbury,
+Lords Ellesmere (_Chancellor_), Dorset (_Treasurer_), Nottingham
+(_Admiral_), Suffolk (_Chamberlain_), Northumberland, Cranborne (Cecil),
+Northampton, etc. It is noted "Lords Montagu, Petre, and Gerard [all
+three Catholics] were present, though they were none of the
+Commissioners."
+
+[156] _Narrative_ (Stonyhurst MSS.), fol. 44 b.
+
+[157] This absurd supposition is obviously implied by Faukes (November
+17th, 1605), and T. Winter (November 23rd), in the only two accounts
+furnished by any of the conspirators wherein the episode of the mine is
+mentioned. In Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_ (_Harleian Miscellany_, iii.
+123) it is expressly stated that the confederates "came to the knowledge
+of the vault" only on the occasion now detailed. Tierney says (Dodd's
+_Church History_, iv. 45, note): "At this moment an accidental noise ...
+first acquainted them with the existence of the cellar."
+
+[158] On the 3rd of October following, Thomas Winter was sent to be
+present at the ceremony of prorogation, and to watch the demeanour of
+the assembled peers.
+
+[159] _Gunpowder Plot_, p. 55. This account is based almost entirely on
+that of Faukes, November 17th, 1605.
+
+[160] In his Italian version of Father Gerard's history, Father Greenway
+interpolates the following note: "Questi non erano carboni di legno, ma
+una sorte di pietra negra, la quale come carbone abrugia et fa un fuogo
+bellissimo et ottimo" (fol. 44 b).
+
+[161]
+ "These Pioneers through Piercies chamber brought
+ Th' exhausted earth, great baskets full of clay;
+ Thereby t' have made a mighty concave vau't,
+ And of the house the ground worke tooke away:
+ But then at last an obstacle they finde,
+ Which to remove proud Piercy casts in 's mind.
+ A thick stone wall their passage then did let;
+ Whereby they cou'd not finish their intent.
+ Then forthwith Piercy did a sellar get,
+ Under that sacred house for yearly rent:
+ Feigning to fill 't with Char coal, Wood, & Beere,
+ From all suspect themselves to cloake & cleere."
+
+ JOHN VICARS, _Mischeefes Mysterie_.
+
+This remarkable poem, published 1617, is a much expanded translation of
+_Pietas Pontificia_ (in Latin hexameter verse) by Francis Herring, which
+appeared in 1606.
+
+[162] On this point we are furnished with more than the usual amount of
+variety as to details. Cecil, writing to the ambassadors (Cornwallis,
+Edmondes, etc.), says there were "two hodgsheads and some 30 small
+barrels." The King's _Discourse_ mentions 36 barrels. Barclay
+(_Conspiratio Anglicana_) says there were over 9,000 lb. of powder, in
+32 barrels, and that one of extra size had been placed under the throne,
+for treason could not without dread assail Majesty even when unarmed.
+The indictment of the conspirators named 30 barrels and 4 hogsheads. Sir
+E. Coke always said 36 barrels. Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_ makes the
+extraordinary statement, frequently reproduced, that "to the 20 Barrels
+of Powder laid in at first, they added in July 20 more, and at last made
+up the number Thirty-six." Faukes (November 5th) said that of the powder
+"some was put in hoggesheads, some in Barrels, and some in firkins."
+Faukes also says that the powder was conveyed to the place in hampers.
+John Chamberlain, writing to Dudley Carleton, November 7th, 1605, says
+it was carried in satchels. Barlow (_ut sup._) quotes the amount as
+9,000 or 10,000 lb.
+
+[163] November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[164] _The Gunpowder Plot_, by L., 1805. It seems highly probable that
+the "cellar" was used as a public passage.
+
+[165] Hugh F. Martyndale, _A Familiar Analysis of the Calendar of the
+Church of England_ (November 5th). London, Effingham Wilson.
+
+[166] _Letter to Cornwallis and Edmondes_, November 9th, 1605.
+
+[167] H. F. Martyndale, _ut sup._
+
+[168] Letter to the Ambassadors, _ut sup._
+
+[169] _An Advertisement written to a Secretarie_, etc. (1592), p. 13.
+
+[170] Sir R. Naunton, _Fragmenta Regalia (Harleian Miscellany_, ii.
+106).
+
+[171] Blount to Parsons (Stonyhurst MSS.), _Anglia_, vi. 64.
+
+[172] Such letters are found amongst the State Papers.
+
+[173] The amount, it would seem, cannot have been less than this. A
+barrel of gunpowder, containing four firkins, weighed 400 lb., and had
+the casks in the cellar all been barrels, in the strict sense of the
+word, the amount would therefore have exceeded six tons. Some of these
+casks, we are told, were small, but some were hogsheads. The twenty
+barrels first laid in are described as "whole barrels." (Faukes, January
+20th, 1605-6.)
+
+[174] An interesting illustration of this point is furnished by a
+strange piece of evidence furnished by W. Andrew, servant to Sir E.
+Digby. Sir Everard's office was to organize the rising in the Midlands,
+after the catastrophe, but he apparently forgot to supply himself with
+powder till the very eve of the appointed day. Andrew averred that on
+the night of November 4th, his master secretly asked him to procure some
+powder in the neighbouring town, whereupon he asked, "How much? A pound,
+or half a pound?" Sir Everard said 200 or 300 lb. Deponent purchased one
+pound. (Tanner MSS. lxxv. f. 205 b.)
+
+One Matthew Batty mentioned Lord Monteagle as having bought gunpowder.
+(_Ibid._ v. 40.)
+
+In the same collection is a copy of some notes by Sir E. Coke (f. 185
+b), in which the price of the powder discovered is put down as L200,
+_i.e._ some L2,000 of our money.
+
+[175] Gunpowder was measured by the _last_ = 2,400 lb. (Tomline's _Law
+Dictionary_.) In 1607 there were delivered out of the store 14 lasts and
+some cwts. In 1608 the amount in various strong places is entered as:
+"_Dover Castle_, 4 lasts; _Arcliffe Bullwark_, 1 last; _Walmer_, 1 last,
+8 cwt.; _Deal Castle_, 1 last; _Sandown Castle_, 2 lasts, etc.;
+_Sandgate_, 1 last; _Camber_, 1 last."
+
+[176] The position and character of the "cellar" admit of no doubt, as
+appears from the testimony of Smith's _Antiquities of Westminster_,
+Brayley and Britton's _Ancient Palace of Westminster_, and Capon's notes
+on the same, _Vetusta Monumenta_, v. They are, however, inconsistent
+with some circumstances alleged by the government. Thus, Sir Everard
+Digby's complicity with "the worst part" of the treason, which on
+several occasions he denied, is held to be established by a confession
+of Faukes, which cannot now be found among the State Papers, but which
+is mentioned in Sir E. Coke's speech upon Digby's arraignment, and is
+printed in Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_, p. 68. In Sir E. Coke's version
+it runs thus: "Fawkes, then present at the bar, had confessed, that some
+time before that session, the said Fawkes being with Digby at his house
+in the country, about which time there had fallen much wet, Digby taking
+Fawkes aside after supper, told him he was much afraid that the powder
+in the cellar was grown damp, and that some new must be provided, lest
+that should not take fire."
+
+Seeing, however, that the powder stood above ground, within a most
+substantial building, and could be reached by the rain only if this
+should first flood the Chamber of the Peers, it does not seem as if the
+idea of such a danger should have suggested itself.
+
+Another interesting point in connection with the "cellar" is that the
+House of Lords having subsequently been removed to the Court of
+Requests, and afterwards to the Painted Chamber, "Guy Faukes' Cellar" on
+each occasion accompanied the migration. From Leigh's _New Picture of
+London_ we find that in 1824-5, when the Court of Requests was in use,
+and the old cellar had completely disappeared, Guy's Cellar was still
+shown; while a plate given in Knight's _Old England_, and elsewhere,
+represents a vault under the Painted Chamber, not used as the House of
+Lords till after 1832. Such a cellar seems to have been considered a
+necessary appurtenance of the House.
+
+[177] Afterwards the Electress Palatine.
+
+[178] Gardiner, _Hist._ i. 245; Lingard, vii. 59; T. Winter, November
+23rd, 1605.
+
+[179] Faukes, November 17th, 1605.
+
+[180] Harry Morgan, _Examination_ (R.O.), November 12th, 1605.
+
+[181] T. Winter, November 23rd and 25th, 1605. As the information about
+Prince Henry was alleged to have been communicated by Lord Monteagle,
+the passage has been mutilated in the published version to conceal this
+circumstance.
+
+[182] Faukes, November 5th, 1605.
+
+[183] Sir E. Digby, Barlow's _Gunpowder Treason_, App. 249.
+
+[184] Faukes, November 17th, 1605.
+
+[185] Digby, _ut sup._
+
+[186] _History_, i. 239.
+
+[187] There is also an allusion to the same in the confession of Keyes,
+November 30th, 1605; but this document also is of a highly suspicious
+character. Of the seven miners, none but these three were taken alive;
+Catesby, Percy, and the two Wrights being killed in the field. Strangely
+enough, though Keyes may be cited as a witness on this subject, on which
+his evidence is of such singular importance, the government, for some
+purpose of its own, tampered with the confession of Faukes wherein he is
+mentioned as one of the excavators, substituting Robert Winter's name
+for his, and placing Keyes amongst those "that wrought not in the myne."
+See Jardine's remarks on this point, _Criminal Trials_, ii. 6.
+
+[188] His detailed notes and plans are given in _Vetusta Monumenta_,
+vol. v.
+
+[189] Page 4.
+
+[190] See Appendix E, _Site of Percy's house_.
+
+[191] Tanner MSS. lxxv. Sec. 185, b.
+
+[192] Faukes, November 6th, uses the same expression, "a low room new
+builded," which seems to imply that this receptacle had been constructed
+since Percy came into possession of the house.
+
+[193] November 6th, 1605. More will be seen of the important document
+containing this information.
+
+[194] According to Smith's plan (_sup._ p. 59) there were four entrances
+to the cellar, none of which can have been Percy's "new dore."
+
+[195] We are told that Faukes was selected to take charge of the house,
+and perform other duties which would bring him into notice, because
+being unknown in London he was not likely to excite remark. In his
+declaration, November 8th, however, he gives as his reason for going
+abroad, "lest, being a dangerous man, he should be known and suspected."
+It is obvious that in the meantime the cellar must either have been left
+in charge of others better known, and therefore more likely to excite
+suspicion, or have been left unprotected.
+
+[196] November 17th, 1605.
+
+[197] Thomas Winter, November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[198] F. 66.
+
+[199] This, as we have heard, was Mr. Whynniard, who unfortunately died
+very suddenly on the morning of November 5th, on hearing of the
+"discovery," evidence of great importance as to the hiring of the house
+and "cellar" being thus lost. "As for the keeper of the parliament
+house," says Goodman, "who let out the lodgings to Percy, it is said
+that as soon as ever he heard of the news what Percy intended, he
+instantly fell into a fright and died; so that it could not be certainly
+known who procured him the house, or by whose means."--_Court of King
+James_, i. 107.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE GOVERNMENT INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT.
+
+
+HAVING followed the history of the plotters and their doings, to the
+point when everything was ready for action, we have now to inquire what,
+in the meantime, those were about for whose destruction such notable
+preparations were making, and whether in truth they were, as we are
+assured, wrapped in a sense of false security, and altogether
+unconscious of the signs and tokens that should have awakened their
+suspicion and alarm.
+
+When, by the aid of such evidence as remains to us, we turn to examine
+the facts of the case, we discover in them, it must be confessed, no
+symptoms whatever of supineness or lethargy. It appears, on the
+contrary, that throughout the period when the government are supposed to
+have been living in a fool's paradise, and tranquilly assuming that all
+was well, they were in reality busily at work through their emissaries
+and informers, prying into all the doings of the recusant Catholics,
+receiving frequent intimation of all that was undertaken, or even
+projected, and, apparently, regulating the main features of a
+treasonable conspiracy, which can have been no other than the Powder
+Plot itself, determining, in particular, what individuals should be
+implicated therein.
+
+In April, 1604, at the very time when we hear of the Plot as being
+hatched, a letter was addressed to Sir Thomas Challoner, an official
+frequently mixed up with business of this kind, by one Henry
+Wright,[200] reporting the proceedings of a subordinate agent, by name
+Davies, whom he styles a "discoverer,"[201] then engaged in working a
+Catholic treason, with the special object of incriminating priests.
+Davies has offered to "set," or mark down,[202] over threescore of
+these, but Wright has told him that so many are not required, and that
+he will satisfy his employers if he implicate twenty, provided they be
+"most principal Jesuits and seminary priests," and therewithal has given
+him thirteen or fourteen names that will serve the required purpose.
+Davies replies, "that by God's grace he will absolutely do it ere
+long."[203]
+
+That the treason in question was none other than the Gunpowder Plot
+there can be no question, unless indeed we are to say that the
+authorities were engaged in fabricating a bogus conspiracy for which
+there was no foundation whatever in fact. It was not the way of
+statesmen of the period, when on the track of sedition, to relinquish
+the pursuit till they had sifted it to the bottom, and at this juncture,
+especially, every shred of evidence regarding Catholics and their
+conduct was threshed out to the uttermost. In consequence, we are able
+to say with certainty, that besides the enterprise of Catesby and his
+associates, there was no other conspiracy of any kind on foot. We have,
+moreover, already seen that the very same point thus by anticipation
+represented as all important, is that which after the "discovery" every
+nerve was strained to establish, namely, the complicity of the Catholic
+clergy. If we had no more than this internal evidence, it would
+abundantly suffice to assure us that the conspiracy thus sedulously
+watched was the same as that miraculously "discovered" a year and a half
+later.
+
+But we are not left to such inferences alone. In March, 1606, we find
+Wright applying to the minister for a reward on account of his services
+"in discovering villainous practices," thus indicating that by this time
+those which he had been tracking had been brought to light. More
+explicit still is a memorial presented to the king, at a later date, on
+his behalf. This is entitled--"Touching Wright and his services
+performed _in the damnable plot of the Powder treason_." King James is
+reminded that Chief Justice Popham and Sir Thomas Challoner had a hand
+in the discovery of the Powder, and this by means of information
+supplied by Wright, "for two years space almost" before his Majesty
+interpreted the famous letter to Lord Monteagle, "like an angel of God."
+This information Popham and Challoner had from time to time communicated
+to his Majesty, "whose hand Wright hath in testimony of his services in
+the matter."[204]
+
+In the same month of April, 1604, was supplied another piece of
+information, singularly interesting and important,[205] in which were
+detailed the particulars of a design amongst the Catholics at home and
+abroad. Much, in fact the bulk, of the information given, is seen, in
+the light of our present knowledge, to be purely fictitious, affording a
+good example of the "sophistications" which, as Cecil himself
+complained, his agents were wont to mingle with their intelligence. The
+design in question was represented as being of the most serious and
+secret nature, the papists thinking that it "must now be so handled and
+carried as the great cause may lose no reputation, or if any suspicion
+should grow in the state, or any come in question therefore, the main
+point might never come to light;" the said "main point" being of course
+the complicity of the Catholic clergy.
+
+What invests this document with singular importance is the fact that we
+hear of it again. In April, 1606, it was quoted for the benefit of
+Parliament by the Attorney General, Sir E. Coke, and explicitly as
+having reference to the Gunpowder Plot, forming part of the evidence
+adduced by him to secure the attainder of persons accused of being
+partakers in that treason.[206] It thus affords a proof, on the
+authority of the government itself, that eighteen months before the
+conspiracy was "discovered," intelligence regarding it had been received
+and was being attended to.
+
+[Illustration: A VIEW OF THE HOUSE OF PEERS, 1755.]
+
+This is, however, by no means the only information of which we find
+traces. Amongst the Cecil papers at Hatfield is a letter dated December
+20th, 1605, addressed to the Earl of Salisbury by one Thomas Coe, who
+claims to have previously forwarded to his Majesty "the primary
+intelligence of these late dangerous treasons," upon which communication
+the historian Lodge observes,[207] "It should seem then that the famous
+letter transmitted to James by Lord Monteagle, for the right
+construction of which that Prince's penetration hath been so highly
+extolled by some historians, was not the only previous intelligence
+communicated to him of the Gunpowder Treason."
+
+Meanwhile the officers of the government, in all parts, appear to have
+been no less alert than was their wont. On the 9th of January, 1604-5,
+for instance, Sir Thomas Parry writes from Paris,[208] inclosing a note
+from an informer at Dieppe, concerning an English Catholic returning
+from Italy and Spain with letters for Fathers Garnet and Oldcorne, and a
+cipher of three lines for a lawyer at Douay, and although the messenger
+has contrived to give him the slip, he is able to send particulars
+concerning his personal appearance, and the locality in London where he
+is likely to be found. On the 25th of the same month, Cecil replies to
+Parry[209] concerning priests and their doings, and makes the valuable
+admission that their proceedings are always known to him by means of
+false brethren, though, he adds, these informers always add to their
+intelligence "sophistications" of their own, a fact which must not be
+lost sight of in studying the reports of such folk. We hear
+particularly of informations supplied by the priests Bagshawe and Cecil,
+by Captain Turner, Charles Paget, and sundry others.
+
+At the beginning of October, 1605, we make the acquaintance of another
+notable informer. On the first of the month, William Willaston, then
+engaged on a commission in France in connection with a proposed
+commercial treaty, writes to Cecil from Paris[210] concerning a Catholic
+design attributed chiefly to priests and Jesuits, who have assurance
+that their friends in England, who are many and of good sort, intend "to
+kindle a fire in many corners of our land, and a rebellion in Ireland,"
+and that these matters be almost grown to a head, "some of their fingers
+itching to be set to work." Willaston adds, "there is a particular
+irreconcilable desperate malice against your Honour's person, which is
+principally the cause I make bold to write unto your Lordship. You have
+yet the papists in your hands, and are masters; if you let them increase
+and grow so insolent, assuredly it will come to pass as to the King of
+Israel, who having overthrown Benhadab ..." and so on.
+
+On October 14th, Willaston again writes from Rouen[211] "about some
+matters pretended by our Romish Catholics." The party, he says, "who"
+has given light into this business "is one George Southwaick, well-known
+to many of your Lordship's followers." This Southwaick, he holds to be
+"very honest;" he is going to England with sundry priests and others,
+and upon landing will at once communicate with the authorities and have
+his comrades arrested. "Southwaick himself," adds Willaston, "must be
+taken as well as the others, for he desireth not to be known to have
+given any information against the rest. If it please your Lordship to
+take order for his imprisonment apart, that conference privately may be
+had with him, until such time as shall be thought fit to deliver him, he
+can give you good directions for many matters, and may stand your honour
+in stead for such purposes."
+
+There follows a notable suggestion: "If your Lordship would be pleased
+to set some man to win the Nuncio of the Pope his secretary in Paris,
+you should receive very direct and sound instructions from him." The
+writer goes on to speak of an intended rebellion in England, and the
+kindling of a fire there, and dutifully concludes, "God grant they touch
+not the person of the King nor of his children."
+
+On the 27th of October, nine days before the "discovery," Southwaick
+himself, now in England, writes to Cecil,[212] urging that the impending
+arrest of priests and others should be deferred, and that for better
+management of "the business, and for the better and more substantial
+manifestation thereof," he ventures to suggest that "more scope of time
+would make the service of more worth." Moreover, he gives warning of
+preparations for trouble in the shires, in connection with "their plot,"
+and finally promises, "your Honour shall not only have knowledge of all
+such as are any way intercepted in the same, but also knowledge of the
+end of their whole purpose, and withal be certain of their meeting here
+in London, where I do not doubt to apprehend forty priests, with many
+great of name, at mass, in good speed of their great intent."
+
+On the morning of the 5th of November itself, evidently before receiving
+news that the final blow had been struck, Southwaick writes to Levinus
+Munck, Cecil's private secretary.[213] He excuses himself for recent
+silence on the ground that he could not without prejudice to "the
+business" have communicated with his employers. "The parties," he
+declares, "have had, ever since I saw you, such obscure meetings, such
+mutable purposes, such uncertain resolutions, as hath made me ride both
+day and night, as well in foul weather as fair, omitting no
+opportunities, lest I should not effect what I have by the weight of my
+credit and the engagement of my duty and reputation propounded to my
+honourable Lord." He farther begs that nothing may be done that might
+disclose his true character to his intended victims, and concludes by
+declaring that, if he be not much mistaken, he is about "a singular
+service."
+
+If such letters proved nothing more, they would abundantly serve to
+discredit the idea that a government which conducted its operations in
+such a fashion could be hoodwinked by such clumsy contrivances as those
+of the cellar and the mine.
+
+Five days later,[214] Southwaick again writes to Munck, inclosing a note
+of the priests who have had meetings in Paris, or have been written to
+in England. The Ambassador (in Paris) will, he says, bear witness that,
+although unable to particularize, he had given notice two months since
+that there was a plot brewing. He adds a significant hint, the like of
+which we have already seen: "Should I chance to be apprehended, I will
+rest myself upon my honourable Lord."[215]
+
+Meanwhile the English ambassadors abroad were no less active and
+vigilant than the informers at home, and while clearly aware that there
+was some danger on foot, never doubted that the king's government would
+not be caught napping.
+
+On the 9th of October, Sir Thomas Edmondes wrote to Cecil from
+Brussels[216] to warn him of suspicious symptoms in the Low Countries;
+and on the following day Cecil wrote to Edmondes[217] expressing
+apprehensions of trouble from the Jesuits abroad. On the same day,
+October 10th, Sir Thomas Parry wrote from Paris to the secretary,[218]
+of a petition which the Catholics were preparing against the meeting of
+Parliament, "and some further designs upon refusal;" and in another
+letter informed Edmondes:[219] "somewhat is at present in hand amongst
+these desperate hypocrites, which I trust God shall divert, by the
+vigilant care of his Majesty's faithful servants and friends abroad, and
+prudence of his council at home."
+
+That such confidence was not misplaced is shown by Cecil's assurance to
+Sir Thomas Parry,[220] mentioned above, that the proceedings of the
+priests were never unknown to Government.
+
+Amongst the papers at Hatfield is a curious note, anonymous and
+undated, giving information of a plot involving murder and treason,
+which, like the letter to Monteagle, simulates rather too obviously the
+workmanship of an illiterate person, and artfully insinuates that the
+design in question is undertaken in the name of religion, and chiefly
+favoured by the priests.[221]
+
+Another remarkable document is preserved in the same collection. This is
+a letter written to Sir Everard Digby, June 11th, 1605, and treating of
+an otter hunt to be undertaken when the hay shall be cut. It has,
+however, been endorsed by Salisbury, "Letter written to Sir Everard
+Digby--Powder Treason."[222] Not only is it hard to see how the terms
+of the document lend themselves to such an interpretation, but the date
+at which it was written was fully three months prior to Digby's
+initiation in the conspiracy. The idea is certainly suggested that, far
+from being passive and indolent, the authorities were sedulously seeking
+pretexts to entangle as many as possible of those "great of name,"
+concerning whom we have already heard from one of their informers. This
+much, at any rate, seems clear. Those at the centre of this complex web
+of espionage, to whom were addressed all these informations and
+admonitions, cannot have been, as they protested somewhat overmuch, in a
+state of careless inactivity, depending for security only upon the
+protection of the Almighty, "who," as the secretary afterwards piously
+declared, "blessed us in our slumber [and] will not forsake us now that
+we are awake."[223]
+
+The slumber would at least appear not to have been dreamless. On the one
+hand, the secretary was evidently much exercised by a threatened
+_rapprochement_ between his royal master and Pope Clement VIII., who,
+through a Scotch Catholic gentleman, Sir James Lindsay, had sent a
+friendly message to King James, which had elicited a courteous and
+almost cordial reply.[224] The significance of this Cecil strenuously
+endeavoured, in a letter to the Duke of Lenox,[225] to explain away, and
+in February, 1604-5, we find him assuring the Archbishop of York with an
+earnestness somewhat suspicious,[226] "I love not to procure or yield
+any toleration; a matter which I well know no creature living durst
+propound to our religious Sovereign." For himself, he thus declares: "I
+will be much less than I am, or rather nothing at all, before I shall
+become an instrument of such a miserable change." Nevertheless, on the
+17th of April following, he was fain to acknowledge, in writing to
+Parry,[227] that the news of Pope Clement's death had much eased him in
+his mind.
+
+It would, however, appear that the spectre of possible toleration still
+haunted him, and that he felt it necessary to commit the king to a
+course of severity. In a minute of September 12th, 1605, addressed to
+the same ambassador, which has been corrected and amended with an amount
+of care sufficiently testifying to the importance of the subject,[228]
+after speaking of "the plots and business of the priests," and the
+tendency of Englishmen going abroad "in this time of peace" to become
+Catholics, he thus continues: "Only this is it wherein my own heart
+receiveth comfort, that we live under a most religious and understanding
+Prince, who sticketh not to publish, as well in his own particular, as
+in the form of his government, how contrary that religion is to his
+resolution, and how far he will be from ever gracing [it]." He goes on
+to declare that nothing will so avail to make his Majesty withdraw his
+countenance from any man as such "falling away."
+
+About the same time as this was written, we are told by a writer, almost
+a contemporary,[229] that a dependent of Cecil's warned a Catholic
+gentleman, by name Buck, of a "wicked design" which his master had in
+hand against the papists.
+
+On the 17th of October, more than a week before the first hint of danger
+is said to have been breathed, we find the minister writing to Sir
+Thomas Edmondes, at Brussels,[230] in terms which certainly appear to
+couple together the growing danger of conversions to Catholicism, of
+which we have heard above, and the remedy soon to be supplied by the new
+policy which the discovery of the Plot so effectively established. He
+speaks of the "insolencies" of the priests and Jesuits, who are doing
+much injury by infecting with their poison "every youth that cometh
+amongst them;" ominously adding, "which liberty must, for one cause or
+another, be retrenched."
+
+There can be no doubt that the issue of the Gunpowder Plot was eminently
+calculated to work such an effect; and even more would seem to have
+been anticipated from it than was actually realized, for the secretary,
+we are told, promised King James that in consequence of it not a single
+Jesuit should remain in England.
+
+In the accounts supplied to us as to the manner of the "discovery," we
+obtain much interesting information from the utterances of the
+government itself. In studying these we cannot fail to notice an evident
+effort to reconcile two conflicting interests. On the one hand, that the
+king and the nation should be properly impressed with a sense of their
+marvellous deliverance, it was essential to represent the catastrophe as
+having been imminent, which could not be unless the preparations for it
+had been altogether unsuspected; and it was likewise desirable to
+magnify the divine sagacity of the monarch, which had been the
+instrument of Providence to avert a disaster otherwise inevitable. On
+the other hand, however, it should not be made to appear that those to
+whose keeping the public safety was intrusted had shown themselves
+culpably negligent or incompetent; and it had therefore to be insinuated
+that, after all, they were not without "sufficient advertisement" of
+danger, and even of danger specifically connected with the actual
+conspirators, and directed against the Parliament. But, again, lest such
+information should appear suspiciously accurate, the actual plotters had
+to be merged in a larger body of their co-religionists, and their design
+to be represented in vague and general terms. At the time, no doubt,
+this was effective enough. Now however that we know, by the light of
+subsequent investigations, who exactly were engaged, and what was in
+hand, it is possible to estimate these declarations at their true
+value.[231]
+
+Except with the aid of such an explanation as this, it seems impossible
+to understand the endless inconsistencies and contradictions of the
+official narrative. This we have in four forms, all coming to us on the
+highest authority, but addressed to different audiences, and hopelessly
+at variance upon almost every point. One is that given to the world as
+the "King's Book,"[232] containing, as Mr. Jardine tells us, the version
+which it was desired that the general public should accept. A second was
+furnished by Cecil himself to the ambassadors at Madrid and Brussels,
+and the Lord Deputy in Ireland,[233] and a third to the ambassador at
+Paris.[234] We have likewise the minute of November 7th, already
+mentioned as perhaps intended for the information of the Privy Council,
+which, although it has seemingly served as the basis of the story told
+in the "King's Book," contradicts that story in various not unimportant
+particulars.
+
+We shall afterwards have to examine in some detail the divergencies of
+these several narratives: at present we are concerned only with the
+intimation which they afford of a previous knowledge of the Plot on the
+part of the government. In the "King's Book"--which was not only to be
+disseminated broadcast at home, but to be translated and spread abroad,
+and, moreover, to be suited to the taste of its supposed author--the
+preternatural acuteness of the monarch is extolled in terms of most
+preposterous flattery, and his secretary is represented as altogether
+incredulous of danger, and unwilling to be convinced even by his royal
+master's wonderful interpretation of the mysterious warning.
+Nevertheless, not only is mention parenthetically introduced of the
+minister's "customable and watchful care of the king and State, boiling
+within him," of his laying up these things in his heart, "like the
+Blessed Virgin Mary," and being unable to rest till he had followed the
+matter farther,--but it is dexterously intimated that, for all his
+hardness of belief, he was sufficiently well informed before the warning
+came to hand, and that "this accident did put him in mind of divers
+advertisements he had received from beyond the seas, wherewith he had
+acquainted as well the king himself, as divers of his Privy Councillors,
+concerning some business the Papists were in, both at home and abroad,
+making combination amongst them for some combination against this
+Parliament time," their object being to approach the king with a
+petition for toleration, "which should be delivered in some such order,
+and so well backed, as the king should be loth to refuse their
+requests; like the sturdy beggars craving alms with one open hand, but
+carrying a stone in the other, in case of refusal."
+
+As prepared for the Privy Council, the account, though substantially the
+same, was somewhat more explicit. The secretary was fully aware, so the
+Lords were told, "that some practices might be doubted," and he "had,
+any time these three months, acquainted the King, and some of his
+Majesty's inward Counsellors, that the priests and laymen abroad and at
+home were full of the papists of this kingdom, seeking still to lay some
+_plot_ for procuring at this Parliament exercise of their religion."
+
+In his letter to the ambassadors Cecil was able to speak more plainly,
+for this document was not to meet the eye of James. Accordingly, he not
+only acknowledges that on seeing the Monteagle letter he at once divined
+the truth, and understood all about the powder, and moreover reverses
+the parts played by his Majesty and himself--making the former
+incredulous in spite of what he himself could urge in support of his
+opinion--but he goes on to give his previous information a far more
+definite complexion: "Not but that I had sufficient advertisement that
+most of these that now are fled [_i.e._ the conspirators]--being all
+notorious Recusants--with many others of that kind, had a practice in
+hand for some stir this Parliament." He, moreover, describes the
+plotters, in terms already cited, as "gentlemen spent in their fortunes
+and fit for all alterations."
+
+In view of all this it is quite impossible to believe the account given
+of themselves by those who were responsible for the public safety, and
+to suppose that they were not only so neglectful of their duty, but so
+incredibly foolish, and so unlike themselves, as to permit a gross and
+palpable peril to approach unnoticed. If, on the other hand, as appears
+to be certain, the information with which they were supplied were
+copious and minute, erring by excess far more than by defect, if,
+instead of lethargy and carelessness, we find in their conduct, at every
+stage of the proceedings, evidence of the extremest vigilance and of
+constant activity, and if they held it of prime importance to disguise
+the facts, and were willing to incur the charge of having been asleep at
+their posts, rather than let it be thought that they knew what they did,
+it can scarcely be doubted that the history of the Gunpowder Plot given
+to the world was in its essential features what they wished it to
+be.[235]
+
+A practical illustration of the methods freely employed by statesmen of
+the period will serve to throw fuller light upon this portion of our
+inquiry. In the service of the government was one Thomas Phelippes,[236]
+by trade a "decipherer," who was employed to "make English" of
+intercepted letters written in cipher. His services had been largely
+used in connection with Mary, Queen of Scots, some of whose letters he
+thus interpreted, having it in his power, as Mr. Tytler remarks, to
+garble or falsify them at pleasure.[237] Moreover, to serve the purposes
+of his masters, as he himself acknowledges,[238] he had upon occasion
+forged one side of a correspondence, in order to induce the person
+addressed to commit himself in reply.[239] At the time of the Gunpowder
+Plot, however, Phelippes had himself fallen under suspicion, on account
+of a correspondence with Hugh Owen, of whom we shall hear elsewhere.
+Accordingly, an attempt was made to hoist him with his own petard, and
+another agent, named Barnes, was employed by Cecil to write a letter, as
+coming from Phelippes (who was then in England) and carry it to Owen in
+Flanders in order to draw him out. At Dover, however, Barnes was
+arrested, being mistaken for another man for whom a watch was being
+kept. Thereupon, his papers being seized and sent to the Earl of
+Northampton, who appears not to have been in the secret of this matter,
+Cecil was obliged to arrest Phelippes at once, as though the letter were
+genuine, instead of waiting, as he had intended, in order to worm out
+more.
+
+The story of this complex and crooked business is frankly told by Cecil
+himself in a letter to Edmondes, English ambassador at Brussels, which,
+after the above abstract, will be sufficiently intelligible.[240]
+
+"As for Barnes, he is now returning again into Flanders, with many vows
+and promises to continue to do good service. As he was at Dover with my
+pass, carrying a letter from Philipps to Owen (of Barnes own
+handwriting, wherewith I was before acquainted), he was suddenly stayed
+by order from the Lord Warden, upon suspicion that he was one Acton, a
+traitor of the late conspiracy.... Whereupon, his papers and letters
+being sent to my Lord of Northampton, I thought fit not to defer any
+longer the calling of Philipps into question; which till then I had
+forborne, hoping by Barnes his means to have discovered some further
+matter than before I could do."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[200] He appears to have been no relation of John and Christopher
+Wright, the conspirators.
+
+[201] Davies was employed in other affairs of a similar nature. See
+_Dom. James I._, xix. 83, I (P.R.O.).
+
+[202] Cf. a "setter dog."
+
+[203] See the full text of Wright's letter, Appendix G.
+
+[204] See the text of the memorial, Appendix G.
+
+[205] Copy in the P.R.O. _Dom. James I._ vii. 86, and xx. 52. The
+informer's name is given in the latter, viz., Ralph Ratcliffe.
+
+[206] It was likewise cited in the interrogatories prepared for the
+Jesuit Thomas Strange (Brit. Mus. _MSS. Add._ 6178, 74) in November,
+1605, and in this case also as treating of the Gunpowder Plot and no
+other.
+
+[207] _Illustrations_, iii. 301.
+
+[208] P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.
+
+[209] _Ibid._
+
+[210] P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132.
+
+[211] _Ibid._ f. 273 b.
+
+[212] Hatfield MSS. 112, n. 141.
+
+[213] P.R.O. _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 16.
+
+[214] November 10th, 1605, _Dom. James I._ xvi. 44.
+
+[215] At a later period (July 20th, 1606) we find that Southwaick ("or
+Southwell") had lost favour and was warned by Salisbury to leave the
+country. "I hold him," says the Earl, "to be a very impostor." (_To
+Edmondes_, Phillipps MS. f. 165.)
+
+[216] Stowe MSS., 168, 39.
+
+[217] _Ibid._ 40.
+
+[218] _Ibid._ 42.
+
+[219] Birch, _Historical View_, p. 234.
+
+[220] P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132, January 25th, 1604-5.
+
+[221] "Who so evar finds this box of letars let him carry hit to the
+Kings magesty: my mastar litel thinks I knows of this, but yn ridinge
+wth him that browt the letar to my mastar to a Katholyk gentlemans hows
+anward of his way ynto lin konsher [Lincolnshire], he told me al his
+purpos, and what he ment to do; and he beinge a prest absolved me and
+mad me swar nevar to revel hit to ane man. I confes myself a Katholyk,
+and do hate the protystans relygon with my hart, and yit I detest to
+consent ethar to murdar or treson. I have blotyd out sartyn nams in the
+letars becas I wold not have ethar my mastar or ane of his frends trobyl
+aboute this; for by his menes I was mad a goud Katholyk, and I wod to
+God the King war a good Katholyk: that is all the harm I wish him; and
+let him tak hed what petysons or suplycasons he take of ane man; and I
+hop this box will be found by som that will giv hit to the King, hit may
+do him good one day. I men not to com to my mastar any moe, but wil
+return unto my contry from whens I cam. As for my nam and contry I
+consel that; and God make the King a goud Katholyk; and let Ser Robart
+Sesil and my lord Cohef Gustyse lok to them selvse." (Printed in
+Appendix to _Third Report of Historical MSS. Commission_, p. 148.)
+
+[222] It is signed "G.D.," and was possibly written by a relation of Sir
+Everard's.
+
+[223] To Sir H. Bruncard, March 3rd, 1605-6. P.R.O. _Ireland_, vol.
+218.
+
+[224] "Instructions to my trusty servant Sir James Lindsay, for answer
+to the lettre and Commission brought by him from the Pope unto me."
+A^o 1604. (P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.)
+
+In these notes the king explains that the things of greatest import
+cannot be written, but have been imparted "by tongue" to the envoy, to
+be delivered to his holiness. Moreover he thus charges Lindsay: "You
+shall assure him that I shall never be forgetful of the continual proof
+I have had of his courtesy and long inclination towards me, and
+especially by this his so courteous and unexpected message, which I
+shall be careful to requite thankfully by all civil courtesies that
+shall be in my power, the particulars whereof I remit likewise to your
+declaration." Besides this, he protests that he will ever inviolably
+observe two points: first, never to dissemble what he thinks, especially
+in matters of conscience; secondly, never to reject reason when he hears
+it urged on the other side.
+
+[225] P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.
+
+[226] Lodge, _Illustrations_, iii. 262.
+
+[227] P.R.O. _France_, b. 132.
+
+[228] _Ibid._
+
+[229] _The Politician's Catechism_, 1658.
+
+[230] Birch, _Historical View_, p. 234.
+
+[231] "If the Priestes and Catholickes, so many thousands in England
+would have entertayned it, no man can be so malicious and simple to
+thinke but there would have been a greater assembly than fourscore [in
+the Midlands] to take such an action in hand, and the Council could not
+be so winking eyed, but they would have found forth some one or other
+culpable, which they could never do, though some of them, most powerable
+in it, tendered and racked forth their hatred against us to the
+uttermost limites they could extend." _English Protestants' plea_, p.
+60.
+
+[232] _Discourse of the manner of the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot._
+Printed in the Collected Works of King James, by Bishop Mountague, by
+Bishop Barlow, in _Gunpowder Treason_, and in Cobbett's _State Trials_,
+as an appendix to that of the conspirators.
+
+[233] _I.e._, Cornwallis, Edmondes, and Chichester. The despatch to
+Cornwallis is printed in Winwood's _Memorials_, ii. 170.
+
+[234] Sir Thoms Parry, P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132.
+
+[235] Mr. Hepworth Dixon observes (_Her Majesty's Tower_, i. 352,
+seventh edition) that a man must have been in no common measure ignorant
+of Cecil and Northampton who could dream that such a design could escape
+the greatest masters of intrigue alive, and that abundant evidence makes
+it clear that the Council were informed of the Plot in almost every
+stage, and that their agents dogged the footsteps of those whom they
+suspected, taking note of all their proceedings. "It was no part of
+Cecil's policy," adds Mr. Dixon, "to step in before the dramatic time."
+
+[236] Often called Phelipps, or Philipps.
+
+[237] _History of Scotland_, iii. 376, note (ed. Eadie). It was on one
+of these letters which had been in the hands of Phelippes that Mary was
+convicted.
+
+[238] _Dom. James I._ xx. 51. April, 1606.
+
+[239] In the fragment cited above, Phelippes says that Queen Elizabeth
+and the Earl of Essex largely availed themselves of this device of his,
+and that "My Lord of Salisbury had himself made some use of it in the
+Queen's time."
+
+[240] February 12th, 1605-6. (Stowe MSS. 168.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE "DISCOVERY."
+
+
+WHEN the conspirators first undertook their enterprise, Parliament was
+appointed to meet on February 7th, 1604-5, but, as has been seen, it was
+subsequently prorogued till October 3rd, and then again till Tuesday,
+November 5th. On occasion of the October prorogation, the confederates
+employed Thomas Winter to attend the ceremony in order to learn from the
+demeanour of the assembled Peers whether any suspicion of their design
+had suggested this unexpected adjournment. He returned to report that no
+symptom could be discerned of alarm or uneasiness, and that the presence
+of the volcano underfoot was evidently unsuspected. Thus reassured, his
+associates awaited with confidence the advent of the fatal Fifth.
+
+In the interval occurred the event which forms the official link
+connecting the secret and the public history of the Plot, namely, the
+receipt of the letter of warning by Lord Monteagle. That the document is
+of supreme importance in our history cannot be denied, for the
+government account clearly stands or falls with the assertion that this
+was in reality the means whereby the impending catastrophe was averted.
+That it was so, the official story proclaimed from the first with a
+vehemence in itself suspicious, and the famous letter was exhibited to
+the world with a persistence and solicitude not easy to explain; being
+printed in the "King's Book," and in every other account of the affair;
+while transcribed copies were sent to the ambassadors at foreign courts
+and other public personages.[241] Had a warning really been given, in
+such a case, to save the life of a kinsman or friend, the circumstance,
+however fortunate, would scarcely have been wonderful, nor can we think
+that the document would thus have been multiplied for inspection. If, on
+the other hand, it had been carefully contrived for its purpose, it
+would not be unnatural for those who knew where the weak point lay, to
+wish the world to be convinced that there really had been a letter. It
+is, moreover, not easy to understand the importance attributed to
+Monteagle's service in connection with it. To have handed to the
+authorities such a message, evidently of an alarming nature, though he
+himself did not professedly understand it, does not appear to have
+entitled him to the extraordinary consideration which he in fact
+received. The Attorney General was specially instructed, at the trial,
+to extol his lordship's conduct.[242] Wherever, in the confession of the
+conspirators, his name was mentioned, it was erased, or pasted over with
+paper, or the whole passage was omitted before publication of the
+document. All this is easy to understand if he were the instrument
+employed for a critical and delicate transaction, depending for success
+upon his discretion and reticence. On any other supposition it seems
+inexplicable.
+
+[Illustration: MONTEAGLE AND LETTER.
+
+ The gallant _Eagle_, soaring vp on high:
+ Beares in his beake, _Treasons_ discouery.
+ MOVNT, noble EAGLE, with thy happy prey,
+ And thy rich _Prize_ to th' _King_ with speed conuay.]
+
+Moreover, Monteagle's services received most substantial acknowledgment
+in the form of a grant of L700 a year,[243] equivalent, at least, to
+ten times that amount in money of the present day.[244] There still
+exists[245] the draft preamble of the grant making this award, which has
+been altered and emended with an amount of care which sufficiently
+testifies to the importance of the matter. In this it is said of the
+letter that by the knowledge thereof "we had the first _and only_ means
+to discover that most wicked and barbarous plot"--the words italicised
+being added as an interlineation by Cecil himself. Nevertheless, it
+appears certain that this is not, and cannot be, the truth; indeed,
+historians of all shades equally discountenance the idea. Mr.
+Jardine[246] considers it "hardly credible that the letter was really
+the means by which the plot was discovered," and inclines to the
+belief[247] that the whole story concerning it "was merely a device of
+the government ... to conceal the means by which their information had
+been derived." Similarly Mr. J.S. Brewer[248] holds it as certain that
+this part, at least, of the story is a fiction designed to conceal the
+truth. Mr. Gardiner, who is less inclined than others to give up the
+received story, thinks that, to say the least of it, it is highly
+probable that Monteagle expected the letter before it came.[249]
+
+For a right understanding of the point it is necessary to consider the
+character of the man who plays so important a part in this episode. Lord
+Monteagle, the eldest son of Lord Morley, ennobled under a title derived
+through his mother, was, in Mr. Jardine's opinion,[250] "a person
+precisely adapted for an instrument on such an occasion;" and the
+description appears even more applicable than was intended. He had been
+implicated in all the doings of the turbulent section of the English
+Catholics[251] for several years, having taken part in the rising of
+Essex, and in the Spanish negotiations, whatever they were, conducted
+through the instrumentality of Thomas Winter. With Catesby, and others
+of the conspirators, he was on terms of the closest and most intimate
+friendship, and Tresham was his brother-in-law. A letter of his to
+Catesby is still preserved, which, in the opinion of some, affords
+evidence of his having been actually engaged in the Powder Plot
+itself;[252] and Mr. Jardine, though dissenting from the view that the
+letter proves so much, judges it not at all impossible or improbable
+that he was in fact privy to the conspiracy. It is likewise certain that
+up to the last moment Monteagle was on familiar terms with the plotters,
+to whom, a few days before the final catastrophe, he imparted an
+important piece of information.[253]
+
+At the same time it is evident that Monteagle was in high favour at
+Court, as is sufficiently evidenced by the fact that he was appointed to
+be one of the commissioners for the prorogation of October 3rd, a most
+unusual distinction for one in his position, as also by the pains taken
+by the government on behalf of his brother, who had shortly before got
+himself into trouble in France.[254] A still more remarkable
+circumstance has been strangely overlooked by historians.[255] Monteagle
+always passed for a Catholic, turbulent indeed and prone to violence,
+but attached, even fanatically, to his creed, like his friend Catesby
+and the rest. There remains, however, an undated letter of his to the
+king,[256] in which he expresses his determination to become a
+Protestant; and while in fulsome language extolling his Majesty's zeal
+for his spiritual welfare, speaks with bitterness and contempt of the
+faith which, nevertheless, he continued to profess to the end of his
+life, and that without exciting suspicion of his deceit among the
+Catholics. Not only must this shake our confidence in the genuine
+nature of any transaction in which such a man played a prominent part,
+it must likewise suggest a doubt whether others may not in like manner
+have passed themselves off for what they were not, without arousing
+suspicion.
+
+The precise facts as to the actual receipt of the famous letter are
+involved, like every other particular of this history, in the obscurity
+begotten of contradictory evidence. In the published account,[257] it is
+stated with great precision that it was received by Monteagle on
+Saturday, October 26th, being but ten days before the Parliament. In his
+letter to the ambassadors abroad,[258] Cecil dates its receipt "about
+eight days before the Parliament should have begun." In the account
+furnished for the benefit of the King of France,[259] the same authority
+declares that it came to hand "some four or five days before." A doubt
+is thus unquestionably suggested as to whether the circumstances of its
+coming to Monteagle's hands are those traditionally described: for our
+present purpose, however, it will perhaps be sufficient to follow the
+story as formally told by authority in the king's own book.
+
+On Saturday, October 26th, ten days before the assembly of Parliament,
+Monteagle suddenly, and without previous notice, ordered a supper to be
+prepared at his house at Hoxton "where he had not supped or lain of a
+twelvemonth and more before that time."[260] While he was at table one
+of his pages brought him a letter which had been given to him by a man
+in the street, whose features he could not distinguish, with injunctions
+to place it in his master's own hands. It is undoubtedly a singular
+circumstance, which did not escape notice at the time, that the bearer
+of this missive should have thus been able to find Monteagle at a spot
+which he was not accustomed to frequent, and the obvious inference was
+drawn, that the arrival of the letter was expected. On this point,
+indeed, there is somewhat more than inference to go upon, for in
+Fulman's MS. collection at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, among some
+interesting notes concerning the Plot, of which we shall see more,
+occurs the statement that "the Lord Monteagle knew there was a letter to
+be sent to him before it came."[261]
+
+Monteagle opened the letter, and, glancing at it, perceived that it bore
+neither date nor signature, whereupon he handed it to a gentleman of his
+household, named Ward, to read aloud, an apparently unnatural and
+imprudent proceeding not easy to explain, but, at least, inconsistent
+with the conduct of one receiving an obviously important communication
+in such mysterious circumstances. The famous epistle must be given in
+its native form.
+
+ _My lord out of the love i beare to some of youere frends i have a
+ caer of youer preseruacion therfor i would advyse yowe as yowe
+ tender youer lyf to devys some excuse to shift of youer attendance
+ at this parleament for god and man hath concurred to punishe the
+ wickednes of this tyme and think not slightlye of this advertisment
+ but retyre youre self into youre contri wheare yowe may expect the
+ event in safti for thowghe theare be no apparence of anni stir yet i
+ saye they shall receyve a terrible blowe this parleament and yet
+ they shall not seie who hurts them this cowncel is not to be
+ contemned because it maye do yowe good and can do yowe no harme for
+ the dangere is passed as soon as yowe have burnt the letter and i
+ hope god will give yowe the grace to mak good use of it to whose
+ holy proteccion i comend yowe_
+
+ (Addressed) _to the ryht honorable the lord mo[=u]teagle_
+
+Monteagle, though he saw little or nothing in this strange effusion,
+resolved at once to communicate with the king's ministers, his Majesty
+being at the time engaged at Royston in his favourite pastime of the
+chase, and accordingly proceeding at once to town, he placed the
+mysterious document in the hands of the Earl of Salisbury.[262]
+
+As to what thereafter followed and the manner in which from this clue
+the discovery was actually accomplished, it is impossible to say more
+than this, that the accounts handed down cannot by any possibility be
+true, inasmuch as on every single point they are utterly and hopelessly
+at variance. We can do no more than set down the particulars as supplied
+to us on the very highest authority.
+
+
+A.--_The account published in the "King's Book."_
+
+1. The letter was received ten days before the meeting of Parliament,
+_i.e._, on October 26th.
+
+2. The Earl of Salisbury judged it to be the effusion of a lunatic, but
+thought it well, nevertheless, to communicate it to the king.
+
+3. This was done five days afterwards, November 1st, when, in spite of
+his minister's incredulity, James insisted that the letter could intend
+nothing but the blowing up of the Parliament with gunpowder, and that a
+search must be made, which, however, should be postponed till the last
+moment.
+
+4. Accordingly, on the afternoon of Monday, November 4th, the Lord
+Chamberlain going on a tour of inspection, visited the "cellar" and
+found there "great store of billets, faggots, and coals," and moreover,
+"casting his eye aside, perceived a fellow standing in a corner ...
+Guido Fawkes the owner of that hand which should have acted that
+monstrous tragedy." Coming back, the chamberlain reported that the
+provision of fuel appeared extraordinary, and that as to the man, "he
+looked like a very tall and desperate fellow."
+
+5. Thereupon the king insisted that a thorough scrutiny must be made,
+and that "those billets and coals should be searched to the bottom, it
+being most suspicious that they were laid there only for covering of the
+powder." For this purpose Sir Thomas Knyvet, a magistrate, was
+despatched with a suitable retinue.
+
+6. Before his entrance to the house, Knyvet found Faukes "standing
+without the doors, his boots and clothes on," and straightway
+apprehended him. Then, going into the cellar, he removed the firewood
+and at once discovered the barrels.
+
+
+B.--_The Account sent by Salisbury to the Ambassadors abroad, and the
+Deputy in Ireland, November 9th, 1605._
+
+1. The letter was received about _eight_ days before the Parliament.
+
+2. Upon perusal thereof, Salisbury and Suffolk, the chamberlain, "both
+conceived that it could not be more proper than the time of Parliament,
+nor by any other way to be attempted than with powder, while the King
+was sitting in that Assembly." With this interpretation other Lords of
+the Council agreed; but they thought it well not to impart the matter to
+the king till three or four days before the session.
+
+3. His Majesty was "hard of belief" that any such thing was intended,
+but his advisers overruled him and insisted on a search, not however
+till the last moment.
+
+[Illustration: ARREST OF GUY FAUKES.]
+
+4. About 3 o'clock on the afternoon of Monday, November 4th, the Lord
+Chamberlain, Suffolk, visited the cellar, and found in it only firewood
+and not Faukes.
+
+5. The lords however insisting, in spite of the king, that the matter
+should be probed to the bottom, Knyvet was despatched with orders to
+"_remove all the wood, and so to see the plain ground underneath_."
+
+6. Knyvet, about midnight, "going unlooked for into the vault, found
+that fellow Johnson [_i.e._, Faukes] _newly come out of the vault_," and
+seized him. Then, having removed the wood, he perceived the barrels.
+
+
+C.--_The Account furnished by Salisbury for the information of the King
+of France, November 6th, 1605. (Original draft, in the P.R.O.)_
+
+1. The letter was received _some four or five days_ before the
+Parliament.
+
+2. This being shown to the king and the lords, "their lordships found
+not good ... to give much credit to it, nor yet so to contemn it as to
+do nothing at all."
+
+3. It was accordingly determined, the night before, "to make search
+about that place and to appoint a watch in the old Palace, to observe
+what persons might resort thereabouts."
+
+4. Sir T. Knyvet, being appointed to the charge thereof, _going by
+chance, about midnight, into the vault, by another door, found Faukes
+within_. Thereupon he caused some few faggots to be removed, and so
+discovered some of the barrels, "_merely, as it were, by God's
+direction, having no other cause but a general jealousy_."[263]
+
+Never, assuredly, was a true story so hard to tell. Contradictions like
+these, upon every single point of the narrative, are just such as are
+wont to betray the author of a fiction when compelled to be
+circumstantial.
+
+To say nothing of the curious discrepancies as to the date of the
+warning, it is clearly impossible to determine the locality of Guy's
+arrest. The account officially published in the "King's Book" says that
+this took place in the street. The letter to the ambassadors assigns it
+to the cellar and afterwards to the street; that to Parry, to the cellar
+only. Faukes himself, in his confession of November 5th, says that he
+was apprehended neither in the street nor in the cellar, but in his own
+room in the adjoining house. Chamberlain writes to Carleton, November
+7th, that it was in the cellar. Howes, in his continuation of Stowe's
+_Annals_, describes two arrests of Faukes, one in the street, the other
+upstairs in his own chamber. This point, though seemingly somewhat
+trivial, has been invested with much importance. According to the
+time-honoured story, the baffled desperado roundly declared that had he
+been within reach of the powder when his captors appeared, he would
+have applied a match and involved them in his own destruction. This
+circumstance is strongly insisted on not only in the "King's Book," but
+also in his Majesty's speech to Parliament on November 9th, which
+declared, "and in that also was there a wonderful providence of God,
+that when the party himself was taken he was but new come out of his
+house from working, having his fire-work for kindling ready in his
+pocket, wherewith, as he confesseth, if he been taken immediately
+before, he was resolved to have blown up himself with his takers." We
+learn, however, from Cecil's earliest version of the history, that
+Faukes was apprehended in the very situation most suitable for such a
+purpose, "in the place itself, as he was busy to prepare his things for
+execution," while Chamberlain adds that he was actually engaged in
+"making his trains."
+
+Far more serious, to say nothing of the episode of the chamberlain's
+visit, are the divergencies of the several versions as to the very
+substance of the story. We are told that King James was the first to
+understand and interpret the letter which had baffled the sagacity of
+his Privy Council; that the Lords of the Council had fully interpreted
+it several days before the king saw it; that the said lords would not
+credit the king's interpretation; that the king would not believe their
+interpretation; and that neither the one nor the other ever interpreted
+it at all; that his Majesty insisted on a search being made in spite of
+the reluctance of his ministers; that they insisted on the search in
+spite of the reluctance of their royal master; and that no such search
+was ever proposed by either; that Knyvet was despatched expressly to
+look for gunpowder, with instructions to rummage the firewood to the
+bottom, leaving no cover in which a barrel might lie hid; and that
+having no instructions to do anything of the kind, nor any reason to
+suspect the existence of any barrels, he discovered them only by a piece
+of luck, so purely fortuitous as to be clearly providential. On this
+last point especially the contradictions are absolutely irreconcilable.
+
+It is abundantly evident that those who with elaborate care produced
+these various versions were not supremely solicitous about the truth of
+the matter, and varied the tale according to the requirements of
+circumstances. As Mr. Jardine acknowledges,[264] the great object of the
+official accounts was to obtain credence for what the government wished
+to be believed, or, as Father Gerard puts it,[265] these accounts were
+composed "with desire that men should all conceive this to be the manner
+how the treason came to light." If from time to time the details were
+altogether transformed, it was clearly not through any abstract love of
+historical accuracy, but rather that there were difficulties to meet and
+doubts to satisfy, which had to be dealt with in order to produce the
+desired effect.
+
+That, from the beginning, there was whispered disbelief, which it was
+held all-important to silence, is sufficiently attested by Cecil
+himself, when, on the very morrow of the discovery, he sent to Parry his
+first draft of the history. "Thus much," he wrote, "I have thought
+necessary to impart unto you in haste, to the end that you may deliver
+as much to the French king, for prevention of false bruits, which I
+know, as the nature of fame is, will be _increased_,[266] perverted, and
+disguised according to the disposition of men."
+
+It does not appear why the appearance of erroneous versions of so
+striking an event should have been thus confidently anticipated if the
+facts were undeniably established; while, on the other hand, it is not a
+little remarkable that the narrative thus expressly designed to
+establish the truth, should have been forthwith abandoned and
+contradicted by its author in every single particular.
+
+Important information upon the same point is furnished by Cecil in
+another letter, written in the following January.[267] He undertakes to
+explain to his correspondent how it came to pass that a circumstance of
+supreme importance, of which the government were fully cognizant,[268]
+was not mentioned in the official account. This he does as follows: "And
+although in his Majesty's book there is not any mention made of them
+[the Jesuits], and of many things else which came to the knowledge of
+the State, yet is it but a frivolous inference that thereby [they] seek
+to serve their turn, considering the purpose of his Majesty was not to
+deliver unto the world all that was confessed concerning this action,
+_but so much only of the manner and form of it, and the means of the
+discovery_, as might make it apparent, both how wickedly it was
+conceived by those devilish instruments, and _how graciously it pleased
+God to deal with us in such an extraordinary discovery thereof_."
+
+Turning to the details of the story which survive the struggle for
+existence in the conflict of testimony, if any can be said to do so,
+there is abundant matter deserving attention, albeit we may at once
+dismiss the time-honoured legend concerning the sagacity of the British
+Solomon, and his marvellous interpretation of the riddling phrases which
+baffled the perspicacity of all besides himself.[269]
+
+More important is Cecil's admission that the presence of the powder
+under the Parliament House was at least suspected for several days
+before anything was done to interfere with the proceedings of those who
+had put it there. The reasons alleged for so extraordinary a course are
+manifestly absurd. It was resolved, he told the ambassadors, "that, till
+the night before, nothing should be done to interrupt any purpose of
+theirs that had any such devilish practice, but rather to suffer them to
+go on to the end of their day." In like manner he informed the Privy
+Council[270] that it was determined to make no earlier search, that
+"such as had such practice in hand might not be scared before they had
+let the matter run on to a full ripeness for discovery." It certainly
+appears that, at least, it would have been well before the eleventh hour
+to institute observations as to who might be coming and going about the
+cellar. On the other hand, can it be imagined that any minister in his
+right senses would have allowed the existence of a danger so appalling
+to continue so long, and have suffered a desperado like Faukes to have
+gone on knocking about with his flint and steel and lantern in a powder
+magazine beneath the House of Parliament? Accidents are proverbially
+always possible, and in the circumstances described to us there would
+have been much more than a mere possibility, for the action said to have
+been taken by the authorities, in sending the chamberlain to "peruse"
+the vault, seems to have been expressly intended to give the alarm; and
+had the conspirators been scared it would evidently have been their
+safest plan to have precipitated the catastrophe, that in the confusion
+it would cause they might escape. How terrible such a catastrophe would
+have been is indicated by Father Greenway:[271] "Over and above the
+grievous loss involved in the destruction of these ancient and noble
+buildings, of the archives and national records, the king himself might
+have been in peril, and other royal edifices, though situate at a
+distance, and undoubtedly many would have perished who had come up to
+attend the Parliament." Moreover, the loss of life in so thickly
+populated a spot must have been frightful, and especially amongst the
+official classes.
+
+Father Greenway expresses his utter disbelief in the incident of the
+chamberlain's visit:[272] "To speak my own mind," he writes, "I do not
+see in this portion of the story any sort of probability." He adds
+another remark of great importance. If the Lord Chamberlain,--and, we
+may add, Sir T. Knyvet,--could get into the cellar without the
+assistance of Faukes, to say nothing of the "other door" which makes its
+appearance in Cecil's first version, there is an end of the secret and
+hidden nature of the place, and some one else must have had a key. How,
+then, about the months during which the powder had been lying in it;
+during much of which time it had been, apparently, left to take care of
+itself? Did no man ever enter and inspect it before?
+
+But questions far more fundamental inevitably suggest themselves. If,
+during ten, or even during five days, a minister so astute and vigilant
+was willing to risk the danger of an explosion, it certainly does not
+appear that he was much afraid of the powder, or thought there was any
+harm in it. We have already remarked on the strangeness of the
+circumstance that the plotters were able so easily to procure it. It may
+be observed that they appear themselves to have been disappointed with
+its quality, for we are told[273] that late in the summer they added to
+their store "as suspecting the former to be dank." Still more
+remarkable, however, was the conduct of the government. Immediately upon
+the "discovery" they instituted the most minute and searching inquiries
+as to every other particular connected with the conspirators. We find
+copious evidence taken about their haunts, their lodgings, and their
+associates: of the boatmen who conveyed them hither and thither, the
+porters who carried billets, and the carpenters who worked for them:
+inquiries were diligently instituted as to where were purchased the iron
+bars laid on top of the barrels, which appear to have been considered
+especially dangerous; we hear of sword-hilts engraved for some of the
+company, of three beaver hats bought by another, and of the sixpence
+given to the boy who brought them home. But concerning the gunpowder no
+question appears ever to have been asked, whence it came, or who
+furnished it. Yet this would appear to be a point at least as important
+as the rest, and if it was left in absolute obscurity, the inference is
+undoubtedly suggested that it was not wished to have questions raised.
+It may be added that no mention is discoverable of the augmentation of
+the royal stores by so notable a contribution as this would have
+furnished.
+
+Neither can it escape observation that whereas the powder was discovered
+only on the morning[274] of November 5th, the peers met as usual in
+their chamber that very day.[275] It cannot be supposed either that four
+tons of powder could have been so soon removed, or that the most
+valuable persons in the State would have been suffered to expose
+themselves to the risk of assembling in so perilous a situation.[276]
+
+However this may be, from the moment of the "discovery" the discovered
+gunpowder disappears from history.[277]
+
+[Illustration: DISCOVERY OF GUNPOWDER PLOT, AND COINS OF JAMES I.
+
+_Coins_ in King James I. Reign; _with the Discovery of the_ Gun Powder
+Plot.]
+
+There is another point which must be noticed. It might naturally be
+supposed that after so narrow an escape, and in accordance with their
+loud protestations of alarm at the proximity of a shocking calamity from
+which they had been so providentially delivered, the official
+authorities would have carefully guarded against the possibility of the
+like happening again. Their acts, however, were quite inconsistent with
+their words, for they did nothing of the kind. For more than seventy
+years afterwards the famous "cellar" continued to be leased in the same
+easy-going fashion to any who chose to hire it, and continued to be the
+receptacle of all manner of rubbish and lumber, eminently suited to
+mask another battery. Not till the days of the mendacious Titus Oates,
+and under the influence of the panic he had engendered, did the Peers
+bethink themselves that a project such as that of Guy Faukes might
+really be a danger, and command that the "cellar" should be
+searched.[278] This was done, in November, 1678, by no less personages
+than Sir Christopher Wren and Sir Jonas Moore, who reported that the
+vaults and cellars under and near the House of Lords were in such a
+condition that there could be no assurance of safety. It was accordingly
+ordered that they should be cleared of all timber, firewood, coals, and
+other materials, and that passages should be made through them all, to
+the end that they might easily be examined. At this time, and not
+before, was instituted the traditional searching of the cellars on the
+eve of Parliament.[279]
+
+What then, it will be asked, really did occur? What was done by the
+conspirators? and what by those who discovered them?
+
+Truth to tell, it is difficult, or rather impossible, to answer such
+questions. That there was a plot of some kind cannot, of course, be
+doubted; that it was of such a nature as we have been accustomed to
+believe, can be affirmed only if we are willing to ignore difficulties
+which are by no means slight. There is, doubtless, a mass of evidence in
+support of the traditional story upon these points, but while its value
+has yet to be discussed, there are other considerations, hitherto
+overlooked, which are in conflict with it.
+
+Something has been said of the amazing contradictions which a very
+slight examination of the official story reveals at every turn, and much
+more might be added under the same head.[280]
+
+[Illustration: "GUY FAUKES' LANTERN."]
+
+On the other hand it is clear that even as to the material facts there
+was not at the time that unanimity which might have been expected. We
+have seen how anxious was the Secretary of State that the French court
+should at once be rightly informed as to all particulars. We learn,
+however, from Mr. Dudley Carleton, then attached to the embassy at
+Paris,[281] that in spite of Cecil's promptitude he was anticipated by a
+version of the affair sent over from the French embassy in London,
+giving an utterly different complexion to it. According to this, the
+design had been, "That the council being set, and some lords besides in
+the chamber, a barrel of gunpowder should be fired underneath them, and
+the greater part, if not all, blown up." According to this informant,
+therefore, it was not the Parliament House but the Council Chamber which
+was to have been assailed, there is no mention of the king, and we have
+one barrel of powder instead of thirty-six. It is not easy to understand
+how in such a matter a mistake like this could have been made, for it is
+the inevitable tendency of men to begin by exaggerating, and not by
+minimizing, a sudden and startling peril.[282]
+
+Moreover, even this modest version of the affair was not suffered to
+pass unchallenged. Three days later Carleton again wrote:[283] "The fire
+which was said to have burnt our king and council, and hath been so hot
+these two days past in every man's mouth, proves but _ignis fatuus_, or
+a flash of some foolish fellow's brain to abuse the world; for it is now
+as confidently reported there was no such matter, nor anything near it
+more than a barrel of powder found near the court."
+
+It must here be observed that the scepticism thus early manifested
+appears never to have been exorcised from the minds of French writers,
+many of whom, of all shades of thought, continue, down to our day, to
+assume that the real plotters were the king's government.[284]
+
+Neither can we overlook sundry difficulties, again suggested by the
+facts of the case, which make it hard to understand how the plans of the
+plotters can in reality have been as they are represented.
+
+We have already observed on the nature of the house occupied in Percy's
+name. If this were, as Speed tells us, and as there is no reason to
+doubt, at the service of the Peers during a session, for a
+withdrawing-room, and if the session was to begin on November 5th, how
+could Faukes hope not only to remain in possession, but to carry on his
+strange proceedings unobserved, amid the crowd of lacqueys and officials
+with whom the opening of Parliament by the Sovereign must needs have
+flooded the premises? How was he, unobserved, to get into the fatal
+"cellar"?
+
+This difficulty is emphasized by another. We learn, on the unimpeachable
+testimony of Mrs. Whynniard, the landlady, that Faukes not only paid the
+last instalment of rent on Sunday, November 3rd, but on the following
+day, the day immediately preceding the intended explosion, had
+carpenters and other workfolk in the house "for mending and repairing
+thereof."[285] To say nothing of the wonderful honesty of paying rent
+under the circumstances, what was the sense of putting a house in repair
+upon Monday, which on Tuesday was to be blown to atoms? And how could
+the practised eyes of such workmen fail to detect some trace of the
+extraordinary and unskilled operations of which the house is said to
+have been the theatre? If, indeed, the truth is that on the Tuesday the
+premises were to be handed over for official use, it is easy to
+understand why it was thought necessary to set them in order, but on no
+other supposition does this appear comprehensible.
+
+Problems, not easy to solve, connect themselves, likewise, with the
+actual execution of the conspirators' plan. If it would have been hard
+for Guy Faukes to get into the "cellar," how was he ever to get out of
+it again? We are so accustomed to the idea of darkness and obscurity in
+connection with him and his business, as perhaps to forget that his
+project was to have been executed in the very middle of the day, about
+noon or shortly afterwards. The king was to come in state with retinue
+and guards, and attended by a large concourse of spectators, who, as is
+usual on such occasions, would throng every nook and corner whence could
+be obtained a glimpse of the building in which the royal speech was
+being delivered.[286] It cannot be doubted, in particular, that the open
+spaces adjacent to the House itself would be strictly guarded, and the
+populace not suffered to approach too near the sacred precincts, more
+especially when, as we have seen, so many suspicions were abroad of
+danger to his sacred Majesty, and to the Parliament.
+
+On a sudden a door immediately beneath the spot where the flower of the
+nation were assembled, would be unlocked and opened, and there would
+issue there-from a man, "looking like a very tall and desperate fellow,"
+booted and spurred and equipped for travel. He was to have but a quarter
+of an hour to save himself from the ruin he had prepared.[287] What
+possible chance was there that he would have been allowed to pass?
+
+As to his further plans, we have the most extravagant and contradictory
+accounts, some obviously fabulous.[288] According to the least
+incredible, a vessel was lying below London Bridge ready at once to
+proceed to sea and carry him to Flanders; while a boat, awaiting him at
+the Parliament stairs, was to convey him to the ship.[289] If this were
+so, it is not clear why he equipped himself with his spurs, which,
+however, are authenticated by as good evidence as any other feature of
+the story. It would also appear that, here again, the plan proposed was
+altogether impracticable, for at the time of his projected flight the
+tide would have been flowing,[290] and it is well known that to attempt
+to pass Old London Bridge against it would have been like trying to row
+up a waterfall. Neither does it seem probable that the vessel would have
+been able to get out of the Thames for several hours, before which time
+all egress would doubtless have been stopped.
+
+Such considerations must at least avail to make us pause before we can
+unhesitatingly accept the traditional history, even in those broad
+outlines which appear to be best established. The main point is,
+however, independent of their truth. Though all be as has been affirmed
+concerning the "cellar" and its contents, and the plan of operations
+agreed upon by the traitors, the question remains as to the real nature
+of the "discovery." We have seen, on the one hand, that the official
+narrative bristles with contradictions, and, whatever be the truth, with
+falsehoods. On the other hand, the said narrative was avowedly prepared
+with the object of obtaining credence for the picturesque but
+unveracious assertion that the plotters' design was detected "very
+miraculously, even some twelve hours before the matter should have been
+put in execution." On the Earl of Salisbury's own admission, it had been
+divined almost as many days previously, and it was laid open at the last
+moment only because he deliberately chose to wait till the last moment
+before doing anything. No doubt a dramatic feature was thus added to the
+business, and one eminently calculated to impress the public mind: but
+they who insist so loudly on the miraculousness of an event which they
+alone have invested with the character of a miracle, must be content to
+have it believed that they knew still more than in an unguarded moment
+they acknowledged, and arranged other things concerning the Plot than
+its ultimate disclosure.[291]
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[241] Copies were sent by Cecil to Cornwallis at Madrid, Parry at Paris,
+Edmondes at Brussels, and Chichester at Dublin. Also by Chamberlain to
+Dudley Carleton.
+
+[242] "Lastly, and this you must not omit, you must deliver, in
+commendation of my Lord Mounteagle, words to show how sincerely he
+dealt, and how fortunately it proved that he was the instrument of so
+great a blessing, ... because it is so lewdly given out that he was once
+of this plot of powder, and afterwards betrayed it all to me."--Cecil to
+Coke. (Draft in the R.O., printed by Jardine, _Criminal Trials_, ii.
+120.)
+
+[243] L500 as an annuity for life, and L200 per annum to him and his
+heirs for ever in fee farm rents.
+
+[244] See Thorold Rogers, _Agriculture and Prices_, v. 631, and Jessopp,
+_One Generation of a Norfolk House_, p. 285.
+
+[245] R.O. _Dom. James I._ xx. 56.
+
+[246] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 65.
+
+[247] _Ibid._ 68.
+
+[248] Note on Fuller's _Church History_, x. Sec. 39, and _on The Student's
+Hume_.
+
+[249] _History_, i. 251.
+
+[250] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 69.
+
+[251] On March 13th, 1600-1, Monteagle wrote to Cecil from the Tower,
+"My conscience tells me that I am no way gilty of these Imputations, and
+that mearely the blindness of Ignorance lead me into these infamous
+errors." (Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6177).
+
+[252] The letter is printed in _Archaeologia_, xxviii. 422, by Mr. Bruce,
+who argues from it Monteagle's complicity with the Plot. Mr. Jardine's
+reply is found _ibid._ xxix. 80.
+
+[253] According to T. Winter's famous declaration, Monteagle, within ten
+days before the meeting of Parliament, told Catesby and the others that
+the Prince of Wales was not going to attend the opening ceremony,
+wherefore they resolved to "leave the Duke alone," and make arrangements
+to secure the elder brother.
+
+The original of Winter's declaration, dated November 25th, which is at
+Hatfield, contains these and other particulars, which are altogether
+omitted in a "copy" of the same in the Record Office, dated, remarkably
+enough, on November the 23rd. It is from the latter that the version in
+the "King's Book" was printed.
+
+[254] De Beaumont to Villeroy, September 17th, 1605.
+
+[255] Mr. Gardiner alludes to it, _History_, i. 254 (note), but
+apparently attaches no importance to it.
+
+[256] Brit. Museum, Add. MSS. 19402 fol. 143. See the letter in full,
+Appendix H.
+
+[257] _Discourse of the Manner of the Discovery_ (the "King's Book").
+
+[258] Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 170, etc. (November 9th). In the entry
+book of the Earl of Salisbury's letters (Phillipps' MSS. 6297, f. 39)
+this is described as "being the same that was sent to all his Majestie's
+Embassadors and Ministers abroade." To Parry, however, quite a different
+account was furnished.
+
+[259] Cecil to Sir T. Parry, P.R.O. _France_, bundle 132 (November
+6th).
+
+[260] Gerard, _Narrative_, p. 101.
+
+[261] Vol. ii. 15. The partisans of the government at the time appear to
+have solved the difficulty by invoking the direct guidance of Heaven:
+
+ "For thus the Lord in's all-protecting grace,
+ Ten days before the Parliament began,
+ Ordained that one of that most trayterous race
+ Did meet the Lord Mounteagles Serving-man,
+ Who about Seven a clocke at night was sent
+ Upon some errand, and as thus he went,
+ Crossing the street a fellow to him came,
+ A man to him unknowen, of personage tall,
+ In's hand a Letter, and he gave the same
+ Unto this Serving-man, and therewithall
+ Did strictly charge him to take speciall heede
+ To give it into's Masters hand with speede."
+
+ _Mischeefes Mystery_ (1617).
+
+[262] Here again evidence was found of the direct guidance of Heaven:
+
+ "And thus with loyall heart away he goes,
+ Thereto resolved whatever should betide,
+ To th' Court he went this matter to disclose,
+ To th' Earle of Salsb'ryes chamber soone he hide,
+ Whither heavens finger doubtless him directed,
+ As the best meanes to have this fact detected."
+
+ _Mischeefes Mystery._
+
+[263] In the account forwarded to the ambassadors, there is a curious
+contradiction. In the general sketch of the discovery with which it
+opens, it is said that Faukes was captured "in the place itself," with
+his lantern, "making his preparations." Afterwards, in the detailed
+narrative of the proceedings, that he was taken outside. The fact is,
+that the first portion of this letter is taken bodily from that of
+November 6th to Parry, wherein the arrest of Faukes in the vault was a
+principal point. Between the 6th and the 9th this part of the story had
+been altered, but it does not seem to have been noticed that a remnant
+of the earlier version still existed in the introductory portion.
+
+It will be remarked that the account of November 6th makes no mention of
+the visit of the chamberlain to the vault, nor that of November 9th to
+the presence of Faukes at the time of this visit. The minute of November
+7th says that Faukes admitted the chamberlain to the vault.
+
+[264] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 3-5.
+
+[265] _Narrative_, p. 100.
+
+[266] This word is cancelled in the original draft.
+
+[267] To Sir T. Edmondes, January 22nd, 1605-6.--Stowe MSS., 168, 73, f.
+301.
+
+[268] _Viz._, the complicity of the Jesuits, "not only as being casually
+acquainted with the Plot," but as having been "principall comforters, to
+instruct the consciences of some of these wicked Traytors, in the
+lawfulnesse of the Act and meritoriousnesse of the same."
+
+On this it is enough to remark that when Father Garnet, the chief of the
+said Jesuits, came afterwards to be tried, no attempt whatever was made
+to prove any such thing. Cecil therefore wrote thus, and made so grave
+an assertion, without having any evidence in his hands to justify it.
+
+[269] That King James alone solved the enigma was put forth as an
+article of faith. In the preamble to the Act for the solemnization of
+the 5th of November, Parliament declared that the treason "would have
+turned to utter ruin of this whole kingdom, had it not pleased Almighty
+God, by inspiring the king's most excellent Majesty with a divine
+Spirit, to discover some dark phrases of a letter...." In like manner,
+the monarch himself, in his speech to the Houses, of November 9th,
+informed them: "I did upon the instant interpret and apprehend some dark
+phrases therein, contrary to the ordinary grammar construction of them,
+and in another sort, than I am sure any divine or lawyer in any
+university would have taken them."
+
+This "dark phrase" was the sentence--"For the danger is past as soon as
+you have burnt the letter," which the royal sage interpreted to mean "as
+quickly," and that by these words "should be closely understood the
+suddenty and quickness of the danger, which should be as quickly
+performed and at an end as that paper should be of blazing up in the
+fire."
+
+Of this famous interpretation Mr. Gardiner says that it is "certainly
+absurd;" while Mr. Jardine is of opinion that the words in question
+"must appear to every common understanding mere nonsense."
+
+When it was proposed in the House of Commons (January 31st, 1605-6,) to
+pass a vote of thanks to Lord Monteagle for his share in the
+"discovery," one Mr. Fuller objected that this would be to detract from
+the honour of his Majesty, for "the true discoverer was the king."
+
+The reader will perhaps be reminded of Sir Walter Scott's inimitable
+picture of the king's satisfaction in this notable achievement.
+
+"Do I not ken the smell of pouther, think ye? Who else nosed out the
+Fifth of November, save our royal selves? Cecil, and Suffolk, and all of
+them, were at fault, like sae mony mongrel tikes, when I puzzled it out;
+and trow ye that I cannot smell pouther? Why, 'sblood, man, Joannes
+Barclaius thought my ingine was in some manner inspiration, and terms
+his history of the plot, _Series patefacti divinitus parricidii_; and
+Spondanus, in like manner, saith of us, _Divinitus evasit_."--_Fortunes of
+Nigel_, c. xxvii.
+
+[270] _Relation_ ..., November 7th, 1605 (P.R.O.).
+
+[271] _Narrative_, f. 68 b.--Stonyhurst MSS.
+
+[272] F. 66. It will be remembered that this episode is not mentioned by
+Cecil in his version of November 6th. Bishop Goodman's opinion is that
+this and other points of the story were contrived for stage effect: "The
+King must have the honour to interpret that it was by gunpowder; and the
+very night before the parliament began it was to be discovered, to make
+the matter the more odious, and the deliverance the more miraculous. No
+less than the lord chamberlain must search for it and discover it, and
+Faux with his dark lantern must be apprehended." (_Court of King James_,
+p. 105.)
+
+[273] T. Winter, November 23rd, 1605.
+
+[274] There is, of course, abundant contradiction upon this point, as
+all others, but the balance of evidence appears to point to 2 a.m. or
+thereabouts.
+
+[275] The customary hour for the meeting of the Houses was 9 a.m., or
+even earlier. (_Journals of Parliament._)
+
+[276] The list of those present is given in the _Lords' Journals_; it is
+headed by the Lord Chancellor (Ellesmere), and includes the Archbishop
+of Canterbury, fourteen bishops, and thirty-one peers, of whom Lord
+Monteagle was one. In 1598, as Mr. Atkinson tells us in his preface to
+the lately published volume of the _Calendar of Irish State Papers_, the
+cellars of the Dublin Law Courts were used as a powder magazine. The
+English Privy Council, startled to hear of this remarkable arrangement,
+pointed out that it might probably further diminish the number of loyal
+subjects in that kingdom, but were quaintly reassured by the Irish Lords
+Justices, who explained that, in view of the troublous state of the
+times, the sittings of the courts had been discontinued, and were not
+likely to be resumed for the present.
+
+[277] The only allusion to it I have been able to find occurs in the
+_Politician's Catechism_ (1658), p. 95: "Yet the barells, wherein the
+powder was, are kept as reliques, and were often shown to the king and
+his posterity, that they might not entertain the least thought of
+clemency towards the Catholique Religion. There is not an ignorant
+Minister or Tub-preacher, who doth not (when all other matter fails)
+remit his auditors to the Gunpowder Treason, and describe those tubs
+very pathetically, the only reliques thought fit by them to be kept in
+memory."
+
+[278] _Journals of the House of Lords_, November 1st and 2nd, 1678.
+
+[279] _Ibid._, November 2nd, 1678.
+
+[280] I have already remarked upon Faukes' statement that he was
+arrested in quite a different place from any mentioned in the government
+accounts. It should be added, that as to the person who arrested him,
+there is a somewhat similar discrepancy of evidence. The honour is
+universally assigned by the official accounts to Sir T. Knyvet, who in
+the following year was created a peer, which shows that he undoubtedly
+rendered some valuable service on the occasion. An epitaph, however, in
+St. Anne's Church, Aldersgate (printed in Maitland's _History of
+London_, p. 1065, 3rd ed.), declares that it was Peter Heiwood, of
+Heywood, Lancashire, "who apprehended Guy Faux, with his dark Lanthorn;
+and for his zealous Prosecution of Papists, as Justice of Peace, was
+stabbed, in Westminster Hall, by John James, a Dominican Friar, A.D.
+1640." No trace of this assassination can be found, nor does the name of
+John James occur in the Dominican records. It is, however, a curious
+coincidence that the "Guy Faukes' Lantern," exhibited in the Ashmolean
+Museum at Oxford, bears the inscription: "_Laterna ilia ipsa qua usus
+est, et cum qua deprehensus Guido Faux in crypta subterranea, ubi domo_
+[sic] _Parliamenti difflandae operam dabat. Ex dono Robti. Heywood nuper
+Academiae Procuratoris, Ap. 4^o, 1641._" See the epitaph in full,
+Appendix I.
+
+[281] To J. Chamberlain, 10th-20th November, 1605. P.R.O. _France_, b.
+132, f. 335 b.
+
+[282] The Council appears at this time to have met in the Painted
+Chamber, and, without at all wishing to lay too much stress upon this
+point, I cannot but remark that the supposition that this was the
+original scene assigned to the operations of Faukes would solve various
+difficulties:
+
+1. Beneath the Painted Chamber was a vaulted cellar, answering to the
+description we have so frequently heard, whereas under the House of
+Lords was neither a cellar nor a vault.
+
+2. This crypt beneath the Painted Chamber has been constantly shown as
+"Guy Faukes' Cellar."
+
+3. In prints of the period, Faukes is usually represented as going to
+blow up this chamber, never the House of Lords.
+
+[283] To Chamberlain, November 13th (O.S.), 1605. P.R.O.
+
+[284] Thus M. Bouillet, in the latest edition of his _Dictionnaire
+d'histoire et geographie_, speaks as follows: "Le ministre cupide et
+orgueilleux, Cecil, semble avoir ete l'ame du complot, et l'avoir
+decouvert lui meme au moment propice, apres avoir presente a l'esprit
+faible de Jacques I. les dangers auxquels il etait en but de la part des
+Catholiques."
+
+Gazeau and Prampain (_Hist. Mod._, tome i.) speak of the conspiracy as
+"cette plaisanterie;" and say of the conspirators, "Dans une cave, ils
+avaient depose 36 barils contenant (ou soi-disant tels) de la poudre."
+
+[285] P.R.O. _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 39 (November 7).
+
+[286] In Herring's _Pietas Pontificia_ (1606) the king is described as
+coming to the House:
+
+ "Magna cum Pompa, stipatorumque Caterva,
+ Palmatisque, Togis, Gemmis, auroque refulgent:
+ Ingens fit Populi concursus, compita complens,
+ Turbis se adglomerant densis, spectantque Triumphum."
+
+[287] Faukes himself says--examination of November 16th--that the
+touchwood would have burnt a quarter of an hour.
+
+[288] See Appendix K, _Myths of the Powder Plot_.
+
+[289] In connection with this appears an interesting example of the
+natural philosophy of the time, it being said that Faukes selected this
+mode of escape, hoping that water, being a non-conductor, would save him
+from the effects of the explosion.
+
+[290] I am informed on high authority that on the day in question it was
+high water at London Bridge between five and six p.m. In his _Memorials
+of the Tower of London_ (p. 136) Lord de Ros says that the vessel
+destined to convey him to Flanders was to be in waiting for Faukes at
+the river side close by, and that in it he was to drop down the river
+with the ebb tide. It would, of course, have been impossible for any
+sea-going craft to make its way up to Westminster; nor would the ebb
+tide run to order.
+
+[291] It is frequently said that the testimony of Bishop Goodman, who
+has been so often cited, is discredited by the fact that he probably
+died a Catholic, for he was attended on his death-bed by the Dominican
+Father, Francis a S. Clara (Christopher Davenport), chaplain to Queen
+Henrietta Maria, a learned man who indulged in the dream of corporate
+reunion between England and Rome, maintaining that the Anglican articles
+were in accordance with Catholic doctrine.
+
+In his will Goodman professed that as he lived, so he died, most
+constant in all the articles of the Christian Faith, and in all the
+doctrine of God's holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, "whereof," he
+says, "I do acknowledge the Church of Rome to be the Mother Church. And
+I do verily believe that no other church hath any salvation in it, but
+only so far as it concurs with the faith of the Church of Rome." On
+this, Mr. Brewer, his editor, observes that a sound Protestant might
+profess as much, the question being what meaning is to be given to the
+terms employed. Moreover, the same writer continues, Goodman cannot have
+imagined that his life had been a constant profession of Roman doctrine,
+inasmuch as he advanced steadily from one preferment to another in the
+Church of England, and strongly maintaining her doctrines formally
+denounced those of Rome. What is certain, however, is this, that in the
+very work from which his evidence is quoted he speaks in such a manner
+as to show that whatever were his religious opinions, he was a firm
+believer in the Royal Supremacy and a lover of King James, whom he thus
+describes: "Truly I did never know any man of so great an apprehension,
+of so great love and affection,--a man so truly just, so free from all
+cruelty and pride, such a lover of the church, and one that had done so
+much good for the church." (_Court of King James_, i. 91.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+PERCY, CATESBY, AND TRESHAM.
+
+
+ON occasion of a notorious trial in the Star Chamber, in the year
+1604,[292] Bancroft, the Archbishop of Canterbury, made the significant
+observation[293] that nothing was to be discovered concerning the
+Catholics "but by putting some Judas amongst them." That amongst the
+Powder Plot conspirators there was some one who played such a part, who
+perhaps even acted as a decoy-duck to lure the others to destruction,
+has always been suspected, but with sundry differences of opinion as to
+which of the band it was. Francis Tresham has most commonly been
+supposed at least to have sent the warning letter to Monteagle, which
+proved fatal to himself and his comrades: some writers have conjectured
+that he did a good deal more.[294] Monteagle himself, as we have seen,
+has been supposed by others to have been in the Plot and to have
+betrayed it. It would appear, however, that neither of these has so
+strong a claim to this equivocal distinction as one whose name has been
+scarcely mentioned hitherto in such a connection.
+
+The part played in the conspiracy by Thomas Percy is undoubtedly very
+singular, and the more so when we learn something of the history and
+character of the man. Till within some three years previously[295] he
+had been a Protestant, and, moreover, unusually wild and dissolute.
+After his conversion, he acquired the character of a zealous, if
+turbulent, Catholic, and is so described, not only by Father Gerard and
+Father Greenway, but by himself. In a letter written so late as November
+2nd, 1605,[296] he represents that he has to leave Yorkshire, being
+threatened by the Archbishop with arrest, "as the chief pillar of
+papistry in that county."
+
+It unfortunately appears that all the time this zealous convert was a
+bigamist, having one wife living in the capital and another in the
+provinces. When his name was published in connection with the Plot, the
+magistrates of London arrested the one, and those of Warwickshire the
+other, alike reporting to the secretary what they had done, as may be
+seen in the State Paper Office.[297]
+
+Gravely suspicious as such a fact must appear in connection with one
+professing exceptional religious fervour, it by no means stands alone.
+Father Greenway, in describing the character of Percy,[298] dwells much
+on his sensitiveness to the suspicion of having played false to his
+fellow Catholics in his dealings with King James in Scotland, coupled
+with protestations of his determination to do something to show that he
+as well as they had been deceived by that monarch. We find evidence that
+as a fact some Catholics distrusted him, as in the examination of one
+Cary, who, being interrogated concerning the Powder Plot, protested that
+"Percy was no Papist but a Puritan."[299] There is likewise in the
+king's own book a strange and obscure reference to Percy as the possible
+author of the letter to Monteagle, one of the chief grounds for
+suspecting him being "his backwardness in religion." It would moreover
+appear that he was not a man who always impressed those favourably who
+had to do with him, for Chamberlain reminds his friend Carleton that the
+latter had ever considered him "a subtle, flattering, dangerous
+knave."[300]
+
+[Illustration: THOMAS PERCY.]
+
+We have seen something of the extraordinary manner in which Percy
+transacted the business of hiring the house and "cellar," wholly unlike
+what we should expect from one whose main object was to escape
+observation, and that he brought to bear the influence of sundry
+Protestant gentlemen, amongst them Dudley Carleton himself,[301] in
+order to obtain the desired lease. We know, moreover, that various
+unfortunate accidents prevented the history of these negotiations from
+ever being fully told.
+
+Yet more remarkable is a piece of information supplied by Bishop
+Goodman, his authority being the eminent lawyer Sir Francis Moore, who,
+says he, "is beyond all exception."[302] Moore, having occasion during
+the period when the Plot was in progress to be out on business late at
+night, and going homeward to the Middle Temple at two in the morning,
+"several times he met Mr. Percy coming out of the great statesman's
+house, and wondered what his business should be there." Such wonder was
+certainly not unnatural, and must be shared by us. That a man who was
+ostensibly the life and soul of a conspiracy directed against the king's
+chief minister, even more than against the sovereign himself, should
+resort for conference with his intended victim at an hour when he was
+most likely to escape observation, is assuredly not the least
+extraordinary feature in this strange and tangled tale.
+
+Not less suspicious is another circumstance. Immediately before the
+fatal Fifth of November, Percy had been away in the north, and he
+returned to London only on the evening of Saturday, the 2nd. Of this
+return, Cecil, writing a week later,[303] made a great mystery, as
+though the traitor's movements had been of a most stealthy and secret
+character, and declared that the fact had been discovered from Faukes
+only with infinite difficulty, and after many denials. It happens,
+however, that amongst the State Papers is preserved a pass dated October
+25th, issued by the Commissioners of the North, for Thomas Percy,
+posting to Court upon the king's especial service, and charging all
+mayors, sheriffs, and postmasters to provide him with three good horses
+all along the road.[304] It is manifestly absurd to speak of secrecy or
+stealth in connection with such a journey, or to pretend that the Chief
+Secretary of State could have any difficulty in tracing the movements of
+a man who travelled in this fashion; and protestations of ignorance
+serve only to show that to seem ignorant was thought desirable.
+
+Considerations like these, it will hardly be denied, countenance the
+notion that Percy was, in King James's own phrase, a tame duck employed
+to catch wild ones. Against such a supposition, however, a grave
+objection at once presents itself. Percy was amongst the very first
+victims of the enterprise, being one of the four who were killed at
+Holbeche when the conspirators were brought to bay.
+
+This, unquestionably, must at first sight appear to be fatal to the
+theory of his complicity, and the importance of such a fact should not
+be extenuated. At the same time, on further scrutiny, the argument which
+it supplies loses much of its force.
+
+It must, in the first place, be remembered, that according to the belief
+then current, it was no uncommon thing, as Lord Castlemaine expresses
+it[305] the game being secured, to hang the spaniel which caught it,
+that its master's art might not appear, and, to cite no other instance,
+we have the example of Dr. Parry, who, as Mr. Brewer acknowledges,[306]
+was involved in the ruin of those whom he had been engaged to lure to
+destruction.
+
+There are, moreover, various remarkable circumstances in regard to the
+case of Percy in particular. It was observed at the time as strange and
+suspicious that any of the rebels should have been slain at all, for
+they were almost defenceless, having no fire-arms; they did not succeed
+in killing a single one of their assailants, and might all have been
+captured without difficulty. Nevertheless, the attacking party were not
+only allowed to shoot, but selected just the wrong men as their mark,
+precisely those who, being chiefly implicated in the beginnings of the
+Plot, could have afforded the most valuable information,[307] for
+besides Percy, were shot down Catesby and the two Wrights,[308] all
+deeply implicated from the first. So unaccountable did such a course
+appear as at once to suggest sinister interpretations--especially as
+regarded the case of Percy and Catesby, who were always held to be the
+ringleaders of the band. As Goodman tells us,[309] "Some will not stick
+to report that the great statesman sending to apprehend these traitors
+gave special charge and direction for Percy and Catesby, 'Let me never
+see them alive;' who it may be would have revealed some evil counsel
+given." A similar suspicion seems to be insinuated by Sir Edward Hoby,
+writing to Edmondes, the Ambassador at Brussels[310]: "Percy is dead:
+who it is thought by some particular men could have said more than any
+other."
+
+More suspicious still appears the fact that the king's government
+thought it necessary to explain how it had come to pass that Percy was
+not secured alive, and to protest that they had been anxious above all
+for his capture, but had been frustrated by the inconsiderate zeal of
+their subordinates. In the "King's Book" we read as follows: "Although
+divers of the King's Proclamations were posted down after those Traitors
+with all speed possible, declaring the odiousness of that bloody
+attempt, and the necessity to have Percy preserved alive, if it had been
+possible, ... yet the far distance of the way (which was above an
+hundred miles), together with the extreme deepness thereof, joined also
+with the shortness of the day, was the cause that the hearty and loving
+affection of the King's good subjects in those parts prevented the speed
+of his Proclamations."
+
+Such an explanation cannot be deemed satisfactory. The distance to be
+covered was about 112 miles, and there were three days to do it, for not
+till November 8th were the fugitives surrounded. They in their flight
+had the same difficulties to contend with, as are here enumerated, yet
+they accomplished their journey in a single day, and they had not, like
+the king's couriers, fresh horses ready for them at every post.
+
+But we have positive evidence upon this point. Father Greenway, who was
+at the time in the Midlands, close to the scene of action, incidentally
+mentions, without any reference to our present question,[311] that while
+the rebels were in the field, messengers came post haste continually,
+one after the other, from the capital, all bearing proclamations
+mentioning Percy by name.
+
+It must also be observed that though the couriers, we are told, could
+not in three days get from London to Holbeche to hinder Percy's death,
+they contrived to ride in one from Holbeche to London with news that he
+was dead.[312]
+
+Another circumstance not easy to explain is, that the man who killed
+Percy and Catesby,[313] John Streete by name, received for his service
+the handsome pension of two shillings a day for life, equal at least to
+a pound of our present money.[314] This is certainly a large reward for
+having done the very thing that the government most desired to avoid,
+and for an action, moreover, involving no sort of personal risk, killing
+two practically unarmed men from behind a tree.[315] If, however, he had
+silenced a dangerous witness, it is easy to understand the munificence
+of his recompense.
+
+Against Catesby, likewise, there are serious indictments, and it seems
+impossible to believe him to have been, as commonly represented, a man,
+however blinded by fanaticism, yet honest in his bad enterprise, who
+would not stoop to fraud or untruth. It is abundantly evident that on
+many occasions he deliberately deceived his associates, and those whom
+he called his spiritual guides, making promises which he did not mean to
+keep, and giving assurances which he knew to be false.[316] It will be
+sufficient to quote one or two examples quite sufficient to stamp him as
+a man utterly unscrupulous about the means employed to gain his ends.
+
+On the 5th of November, when, after the failure of the enterprise, he
+arrived at Dunchurch, in Warwickshire, Catesby, in order to induce Sir
+Everard Digby to commit himself to the hopeless campaign now to be
+undertaken, assured him,[317] that though the powder was discovered, yet
+the king and Salisbury were killed; all were in "a pother;" the
+Catholics were sure to rise in a body, one family alone, the Littletons,
+would bring in one thousand men the next day; and so on,--all this
+being absolutely untrue. That he had previously employed similar means
+on a large scale to inveigle his friends into his atrocious and
+senseless scheme, there is much evidence, strongest of all that of
+Father Garnet;[318] "I doubt not that Mr. Catesby hath feigned many such
+things for to induce others."
+
+Worst of all, we learn from another intercepted letter of Garnet's,
+Catesby had for his own purposes circulated an atrocious slander against
+Garnet himself, although passing as his devoted disciple and friend:
+"Master Catesby," he wrote,[319] "did me much wrong, and hath confessed
+that he told them he asked me a question in Q. Elizabeth's time of the
+powder action,[320] and that I said it was lawful. All which is most
+untrue. He did it to draw in others."
+
+In view of this, and much else of a similar kind, it is difficult to
+read Father Gerard's _Narrative_, and more particularly Father
+Greenway's additions thereto, without a growing feeling that if Catesby
+sought counsel it was with no intention of being guided by it, and that
+his sole desire was to get hold of something which might serve his own
+purposes.
+
+We have already seen that a great deal of mystery attaches to Francis
+Tresham, who is generally supposed to have written the letter to
+Monteagle, and was clearly suspected by some of having done a great deal
+more; for the author of the _Politician's Catechism_ speaks of him as
+having access to Cecil's house even at midnight, along with another
+whose name is not given, these two being therefore supposed to have been
+the secretary's instruments in all this business. What is certain is,
+that Tresham did not fly like the rest when the "discovery" had taken
+place, not only remaining in London, and showing himself openly in the
+streets, but actually presenting himself to the council, and offering
+them his services. Moreover, though his name was known to the
+government, at least on November 7th, as one of the accomplices, it was
+for several days omitted from their published proclamations, and not
+till the 12th was he taken into custody. Being confined in the Tower, he
+was shortly attacked by a painful malady, and on December 23rd he died,
+as was officially announced, of a "strangury," as Salisbury assures
+Cornwallis "by a natural sickness, such as he hath been a long time
+subject to."[321] Throughout his sickness he himself and his friends
+loudly declared that should he survive it "they feared not the course of
+justice."[322] Such confidence, as Mr. Jardine remarks, could be
+grounded only on his possession of knowledge which the authorities would
+not venture to reveal, and it is not surprising that his death should
+have been attributed, by the enemies of the government, to poison. It is
+no doubt an argument against such a supposition that during his illness
+Tresham was allowed to be attended by his wife and a confidential
+servant. On the other hand, not only does Bishop Goodman inform us[323]
+that "Butler, the great physician of Cambridge," declared him to have
+been poisoned; but the author of _Mischeefes Mystery_, a violent
+government partisan, contradicts the notion of a natural death, by
+asserting that "Tresham murthered himself in the Tower."
+
+It thus appears, once again, that the more its details are scrutinized,
+the less does the traditional history of the Plot commend itself to our
+acceptance. It is hard to believe that within the ranks of the
+conspirators themselves, there was no treachery, no one who, lending
+himself to work the ruin of his associates, unwittingly wrought his own.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The evidence hitherto considered may fitly conclude with the testimony
+of a witness living near the time in question, who had evidently been at
+pains to make inquiries amongst those most likely to give information.
+This is an anonymous correspondent of Anthony a Wood, whose notes are
+preserved in Fulman's collection in the library of Corpus Christi
+College, Oxford. These remarkable notes have been seen by Fulman, who
+inserted in the margin various questions and objections, to which the
+writer always supplied precise and definite replies. In the following
+version this supplementary information is incorporated in the body of
+his statement, being distinguished by italics. The writer, who explains
+that his full materials are in the country, speaks thus:[324]
+
+"I should be glad to understand what your friend driveth at about the
+Fifth of November. It was, without all peradventure, a State Plot. I
+have collected many pregnant circumstances concerning it.
+
+"'Tis certain that the last Earl of Salisbury[325] confessed to William
+Lenthal[326] it was his father's contrivance, which Lenthal soon after
+told one Mr. Webb (_John Webb, Esq._), a person of quality, and his
+kinsman, yet alive.
+
+"Sir Henry Wotton says 'twas usual with Cecil to create plots, that he
+might have the honour of the discovery, or to such effect.
+
+"The Lord Mounteagle knew there was a letter to be sent to him before it
+came. (_Known by Edmund Church, Esq., his confidant._)
+
+"Sir Everard Digby's sons were both knighted soon after, and Sir Kenelm
+would often say it was a State design, to disengage the king of his
+promise to the Pope and the King of Spain, to indulge the Catholics if
+ever he came to be king here; and somewhat to his purpose was found in
+the Lord Wimbledon's papers after his death.[327]
+
+"Mr. Vowell, who was executed in the Rump time, did also affirm it
+so.[328]
+
+"Catesby's man (_George Bartlet_),[329] on his death-bed, confessed his
+master went to Salisbury House several nights before the discovery, and
+was always brought privately in at a back door."
+
+Then, in answer to an objection of Fulman's, is added: "Catesby, 'tis
+like, did not mean to betray his friends or his own life--he was drawn
+in and made believe strange things. All good men condemn him and the
+rest as most desperate wretches; yet most believed the original
+contrivance of the Plot was not theirs."
+
+Whatever else may be thought of the above statements, they at least
+serve to contradict Mr. Jardine's assertion,[330] that the notion of
+Cecil's complicity,--which he terms a strange suggestion, scarce worthy
+of notice,--was first heard of long after the transaction, and was
+adopted exclusively by Catholics. Clearly it was not unknown to
+Protestants who were contemporaries, or personally acquainted with
+contemporaries, of the event. Yet the document here cited was known to
+Mr. Jardine, who mentions one of its statements, that relating to Lord
+Monteagle, but says nothing of its more serious allegations.
+
+It must also be remarked that we find some traces in the evidence which
+remains of certain mysterious conspirators of great importance,
+concerning whom no investigation whatever appears to have been made,
+they being at once permitted to drop into the profoundest obscurity, in
+a manner quite contrary to the habitual practice of the authorities.
+
+One such instance is afforded by the testimony of a mariner, Henry
+Paris, of Barking,[331] that Guy Faukes, _alias_ Johnson, hired a boat
+of him, "wherein was carried over to Gravelines a man supposed of great
+import: he went disguised, and would not suffer any one man to go with
+him but this Vaux, nor to return with him. This Paris did attend for him
+back at Gravelines six weeks. If cause require there are several proofs
+of this matter." None of these, however, seem to have been sought.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[292] That of Mr. Pound.
+
+[293] Jardine, _Criminal Trials_, ii. 38, n.
+
+[294] _E.g._, the author of the _Politician's Catechism_.
+
+[295] "About the time of my Lord Essex his enterprise he became
+Catholic" (_i.e._ 1601). Father Gerard, _Narrative_, p. 58.
+
+[296] P.R.O. _Gunpowder Plot Book_, n. 4.
+
+[297] Justice Grange, of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, to Salisbury, November
+5th, 1605. Justices of Warwickshire, to the same, November 12th.
+
+[298] MS., f. 31-32.
+
+[299] Tanner MSS., _ut sup._, f. 167.
+
+[300] P.R.O. _Dom. James I._, November 7th, 1605.
+
+[301] The case of Carleton is not without mystery. At the time of the
+discovery he was at Paris, as secretary to the English ambassador, but
+about the middle of the month was ordered home in hot haste and placed
+"in restraint." On February 28th, 1605-6, he wrote to his friend
+Chamberlain that he was airing himself on the Chilterns to get rid of
+the scent of powder, asking his correspondent to consult a patron as to
+his best means of promotion (_Dom. James I._ xviii. 125). Far from being
+injured by any suspicion that he might seem to have incurred, he
+subsequently rose rapidly in favour, was intrusted with most important
+diplomatic missions, and was finally created Viscount Dorchester.
+
+[302] _Court of King James_, i. 105.
+
+[303] To the ambassadors, November 9th.
+
+[304] _Dom. James I._ xv. 106.
+
+[305] _Catholique Apology_, p. 415.
+
+[306] Goodman's _Court of King James_, i. 121, note.
+
+[307] See Goodman's remarks on this subject (_Court of King James_, i.
+106). The author of the _Politician's Catechism_ writes: "It is very
+certaine that Percy and Catesby might have been taken alive, when they
+were killed, but Cecil knew full well that these two unfortunate
+Gentlemen would have related the story lesse to his owne advantage, than
+himself caused it to be published: therefore they were dispatched when
+they might have been made prisoners, having no other weapons, offensive
+or defensive, but their swords."
+
+[308] About the death of the Wrights there are extraordinary
+contradictions. In the "original" of his famous confession T. Winter
+says: "The next shot was the elder Wright, stone dead; after him the
+younger Mr. Wright." In _Mischeefes Mystery_ we read that Percy and
+Catesby were killed "with a gunne," the two Wrights "with Halberts." The
+day after the attack, November 9th, Sir Edward Leigh wrote to the
+Council, that the Wrights were not slain, as reputed, but wounded. Not
+till the 13th was their death certified by Sir Richard Walsh.
+
+[309] _Court of King James_, i. 106.
+
+[310] Nichols, _Progresses of King James I._, i. 588.
+
+[311] MS., f. 70, b.
+
+[312] Cecil writing to the ambassadors, November 9th, mentions in a
+postscript the fate of the rebels.
+
+[313] They were slain by two balls from the same musket.
+
+[314] Warrant, P.R.O.
+
+[315] Father Gerard mentions this circumstance (_Narrative_, p. 110).
+
+[316] This point is well developed in the recent _Life of a
+Conspirator_, pp. 120-126.
+
+[317] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 97.
+
+[318] _Dom. James I._, March 4th, 1605-6.
+
+[319] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 242.
+
+[320] The strange story of a powder-plot under Elizabeth is variously
+told. According to one of the mysterious confessions attributed to
+Faukes, which have disappeared from the State Papers, Owen told him in
+Flanders that one Thomas Morgan had proposed to blow up her majesty
+(Abbot, _Antilogia_, 137). The _Memorial to Protestants_ by Bishop
+Kennet (1713) says that the man's name was Moody, who wanted the French
+ambassador to subsidise him. The idea was to place a 20 lb. bag of
+powder under the queen's bed, and explode it in the middle of the night,
+but how this was to be managed is not explained.
+
+[321] Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 189.
+
+[322] Wood to Salisbury, December 23rd, 1605.
+
+[323] _Court of King James_, i. 107.
+
+[324] _Collection_, vol. ii. 15.
+
+[325] William, second earl (born 1591, died 1668), son of the minister
+of James I.
+
+[326] Speaker of the Long Parliament.
+
+[327] Edward Cecil, Viscount Wimbledon, third son of Thomas, first Earl
+of Exeter (the elder brother of Robert Cecil, first Earl of Salisbury),
+died 1638.
+
+[328] Peter Vowell, a Protestant, executed with Colonel John Gerard for
+an alleged plot against Cromwell, July 10th, 1654.
+
+[329] "George Bartlett, Mr. Catesby's servant," appears amongst the
+suspected persons whose names were sent up to Cecil by the justices of
+Warwickshire, November 12th, 1605. (_Gunpowder Plot Book_, 134.)
+
+[330] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 188.
+
+[331] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 130.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE GOVERNMENT'S CASE.
+
+
+WE have hitherto confined our attention to sources of information other
+than those with which the authors of the official narrative have
+supplied us, and upon which they based the same. It remains to inquire
+how far the evidence presented by them can avail to substantiate the
+traditional history, and to rebut the various arguments against its
+authenticity which have been adduced.
+
+For brevity and clearness' sake it will be advisable to divide this
+investigation under several heads.
+
+
+i. _The Trial of the Conspirators._
+
+On the threshold of our inquiry we are met by a most singular and
+startling fact. As to what passed on the trial of the conspirators, what
+evidence was produced against them, how it was supported,--nay, even how
+the tale of their enterprise was told--we have no information upon which
+any reliance can be placed. One version alone has come down to us of the
+proceedings upon this occasion--that published "by authority"--and of
+this we can be sure only that it is utterly untrustworthy. It was issued
+under the title of the _True and Perfect Relation_, but, as Mr. Jardine
+has already told us, is certainly not deserving of the character which
+its title imports. "It is not true, because many occurrences on the
+trial are wilfully misrepresented; and it is not _perfect_, because the
+whole evidence, and many facts and circumstances which must have
+happened, are omitted, and incidents are inserted which could not by
+possibility have taken place on the occasion. It is obviously a false
+and imperfect relation of the proceedings; a tale artfully garbled and
+misrepresented ... to serve a State purpose, and intended and calculated
+to mislead the judgment of the world upon the facts of the case."[332]
+Again the same author remarks,[333] "that every line of the published
+trial was rigidly weighed and considered, not with reference to its
+accuracy, but its effect on the minds of those who might read it, is
+manifest."
+
+Moreover, the narrative thus obviously dishonest, was admittedly issued
+in contradiction of divers others already passing "from hand to hand,"
+which were at variance with itself in points of importance, and which it
+stigmatized as "uncertain, untrue, and incoherent;" it justified its
+appearance on the ground that it was supremely important for the public
+to be rightly informed in such a case:[334] and so successful were the
+efforts made to secure for it a monopoly, that no single document has
+come down to us by which its statements might be checked. In
+consequence, to quote Mr. Jardine once more,[335] there is no trial
+since the time of Henry VIII. in regard of which we are so ignorant as
+to what actually occurred.[336]
+
+The employment of methods such as these would in any circumstances
+forfeit all credit on behalf of the story thus presented. In the present
+instance the presumption raised against it is even stronger than it
+would commonly be. If the Gunpowder Plot were in reality what was
+represented, why was it deemed necessary, in Cecil's own phrase, to
+pervert and disguise its history in order to produce the desired effect?
+A project so singular and diabolical in its atrocity, prepared for on so
+large a scale, and so nearly successful, should, it would appear, have
+needed no fictitious adjuncts to enhance its enormity; and for the
+conviction of miscreants caught red-handed in such an enterprise no
+evidence should have been so effectual as that furnished by the facts of
+the case, which of their nature should have been patent and
+unquestionable. When we find, on the contrary, a web of falsehood and
+mystery woven with elaborate care over the whole history of the
+transaction, it is not unnatural to infer that to have told the simple
+truth would not have suited the purpose of those who had the telling of
+the tale; and it is obviously necessary that the evidence whereby their
+story was supported should be rigorously sifted.
+
+What has been said, though in great measure true of the trial of Father
+Garnet, at the end of March, is especially applicable to that of the
+conspirators, two months earlier, for in regard of this we have
+absolutely no information beyond that officially supplied. The execution
+of Faukes and his companions following close upon their
+arraignment,[337] all that had been elicited, or was said to have been
+elicited, at their trial, became henceforth evidence which could not be
+contradicted, the prosecution thus having a free hand in dealing with
+their subsequent victim.[338] In view of this circumstance it has been
+noted as remarkable that whereas the conspirators had been kept alive
+and untried for nearly three months, they were thus summarily dealt with
+at the moment when it was known that the capture of Father Garnet was
+imminent, and, as a matter of fact, he was taken on the very day on
+which the first company were executed.[339] It would appear that
+nothing should have seemed more desirable than to confront the Jesuit
+superior with those whom he was declared to have instigated to their
+crime, instead of putting them out of the way at the very moment when
+there was a prospect of doing so.
+
+
+ii. _The Fundamental Evidence._
+
+Amongst all the confessions and "voluntary declarations" extracted from
+the conspirators, there are two of exceptional importance, as having
+furnished the basis of the story told by the government, and ever since
+generally accepted. These are a long declaration made by Thomas Winter,
+and another by Guy Faukes, which alone were made public, being printed
+in the "King's Book," and from which are gathered the essential
+particulars of the story as we are accustomed to hear it.
+
+Of Winter's declaration, which is in the form of a letter to the Lords
+Commissioners, there is found in the State Paper Office only a copy,
+bearing date November 23rd, 1605, in the handwriting of Levinus Munck,
+Cecil's private secretary. This copy has been shown to the King, who in
+a marginal note objects to a certain "uncleare phrase," which has
+accordingly been altered in accordance with the royal criticism: and
+from it has evidently been taken the printed version, which agrees with
+it in every respect, including the above-mentioned emendation of the
+phraseology.
+
+[Illustration: FROM WINTER'S CONFESSION, NOVEMBER 23.]
+
+It must strike the reader as remarkable that, whereas, as has been said,
+the body of the letter is in the handwriting of the secretary, Munck,
+the names of the witnesses who attest it[340] are added in that of his
+master, Cecil himself.
+
+The "original" document, in Winter's own hand, is at Hatfield, and
+agrees in general so exactly with the copy, as to demonstrate the
+identity of their origin.[341] But while, as we have seen, the "copy" is
+dated November 23rd, the "original" is dated on the 25th.[342] On a
+circumstance so singular, light is possibly thrown by a letter from
+Waad, the Lieutenant of the Tower, to Cecil, on the 21st of the same
+month.[343] "Thomas Winter," he wrote, "doth find his hand so strong, as
+after dinner he will settle himself to write that he hath verbally
+declared to your Lordship, adding what he shall remember." The inference
+is certainly suggested that torture had been used until the prisoner's
+spirit was sufficiently broken to be ready to tell the story required of
+him, and that the details were furnished by those who demanded it. It
+must, moreover, be remarked that although Winter's "original"
+declaration is witnessed only by Sir E. Coke, the Attorney General, it
+appears in print attested by all those whom Cecil had selected for the
+purpose two days before the declaration was made.[344] It may be said
+that the inference drawn above is violent and unfair, and, perhaps, were
+there no other case to go upon but that of Winter, so grave a charge as
+it implies should not be made. There remains, however, the companion
+case of Faukes, which is yet more extraordinary.
+
+His declaration first makes its appearance as "The examination of Guy
+Fawkes, taken the 8th of November."[345] The document thus described is
+manifestly a draft, and not a copy of a deposition actually taken. It is
+unsigned: the list of witnesses is in the same handwriting as the rest,
+and in no instance is a witness indicated by such a title as he would
+employ for his signature.[346] Throughout this paper Faukes is made to
+speak in the third person, and the names of accomplices to whom he
+refers are not given.
+
+What, however, is most remarkable is the frank manner in which this
+document is treated as a draft. Several passages are cancelled and
+others substituted, sometimes in quite a contrary sense, so that the
+same deponent cannot possibly have made the statements contained in both
+versions. Other paragraphs are "ticked off," as the event proves, for
+omission.
+
+Nine days later, November 17th,[347] Faukes was induced to put his name
+to the substance of the matter contained in the draft.[348] The document
+is headed "The declaration[349] of Guy Fawkes, prisoner in the Tower of
+London." Faukes speaks throughout in the first person, and supplies the
+names previously omitted.[350] Most noteworthy is the manner in which
+this version is adapted to the emendations of the draft. The passages
+ticked off have disappeared entirely, amongst them the remarkable
+statements that "they [the confederates] meant also to have sent for the
+prisoners in the Tower, of whom particularly they had some
+consultation,"--that "they had consultation for the taking of the Lady
+Mary [the infant daughter of King James] into their possession"--and
+that "provision was made by some of the conspiracy of armour of proof
+this last summer, for this action." Where an alteration has been made in
+the draft, great skill is shown in combining what is important in both
+versions.[351]
+
+As to the means which were employed to compel Faukes to sign the
+declaration there can be no doubt; his signature bearing evidence that
+he had been tortured with extreme severity. The witnesses are but two,
+Coke, the Attorney General, and Waad, the Lieutenant of the Tower. When,
+however, the document came to be printed, as in the other case, a fuller
+list was appended, but not exactly that previously indicated, for to
+Faukes were assigned the same witnesses as to Winter, including the
+Earls of Worcester and Dunbar over and above his own list.[352]
+
+[Illustration: SIGNATURES OF FAUKES AND OLDCORNE.[353]]
+
+The printed version exhibits other points of interest. There was in the
+Archduke's service, in Flanders, an English soldier, Hugh Owen,[354]
+whom the government were for some reason, excessively desirous to
+incriminate, and get into their hands. For this purpose, a passage was
+artfully interpolated in the statement of Faukes, whereof no trace is
+found in the original. In the "King's Book," the passage in question
+stands thus, the words italicised being those fraudulently introduced:
+
+"About Easter, the parliament being prorogued till October next, we
+dispersed ourselves, and I retired into the Low-countries, _by advice
+and direction of the rest; as well to acquaint Owen with the particulars
+of the plot, as also_, lest, by my longer stay, I might have grown
+suspicious." But of Owen we shall see more in particular. It must not be
+forgotten that on several other days besides those named above, Faukes
+made declarations, still extant, viz., November 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, and
+16th, and January 9th and 20th. The most important items of information
+furnished by that selected for publication were not even hinted at in
+any of these.
+
+Farther light appears to be thrown on the manner in which this important
+declaration was prepared by another document found amongst the State
+Papers. This is an "interrogatory" drawn up by Sir E. Coke on November
+8th, the very day of the "draft," expressly for the benefit of
+Faukes.[355] That the "draft" was composed from this appears to be shown
+by a curious piece of evidence. We have already noticed the strange
+phraseology of one of the passages attributed to Faukes: "He confesseth
+that the same day that this detestable act should have been performed
+the same day should other of their confederacy have surprised the person
+of the Lady Elizabeth," etc. Precisely the same repetition occurs in
+the sixth of Mr. Attorney's suggested questions. "_Item_, was it not
+agreed that the same day that the act should have been done, the same
+day or soon after the person of the Lady Elizabeth should have been
+surprised," etc.?
+
+Moreover, it is apparent that this interrogatory is not founded on
+information already obtained, but is, in fact, what is known as a
+"fishing" document, intended to elicit evidence of some kind. In the
+first place, some of its suggestions are mutually incompatible. Thus in
+another place it implies that not Elizabeth but her infant sister Mary
+was the choice of the queen-makers:--"Who should have been protector of
+the Lady Mary, who, being born in England, they meant to prefer to the
+crown. With whom should she have married?" (She was then seven months
+old.) Again it asks: "What should have become of the Prince?" as though
+he might after all be the sovereign intended.
+
+Besides this, many points are raised which are evidently purely
+imaginary, inasmuch as no more was ever heard of them though if
+substantiated, they would have been supremely important.[356]
+
+The above details will not appear superfluous if the importance of these
+documents be fully understood. It is upon these narratives, stamped with
+features so incompatible with their trustworthiness, that we entirely
+depend for much of prime importance in the history of the conspiracy, in
+particular for the notable episode of the mine, which they alone relate,
+and which is not even mentioned, either in the other numerous
+confessions of Faukes and Winter themselves, or by any of the other
+confederates. Save for an incidental remark of Keyes, that he helped to
+work in the mine, we hear nothing else of it; while not only is this
+confession quite as strange a document as the two others, but, to
+complicate the matter still more, Keyes is expressly described by
+Cecil[357] himself as one of those that "wrought not in the mine."
+
+It is hard to understand how so remarkable an operation should have been
+totally ignored in all the other confessions and declarations, numerous
+and various as they are; while, on the other hand, should this striking
+feature of the Plot prove to be a fabrication, what is there of which to
+be certain?
+
+
+iii. _The Confession of Thomas Bates (December 4th, 1605)._
+
+There is another piece of evidence to which exceptional prominence has
+been given, the confession of Thomas Bates, Catesby's servant, dated
+December 4th, 1605. This is the only one of the conspirators'
+confessions specifically mentioned in the government account of their
+trial, and it is mentioned twice over--a circumstance not unsuspicious
+in view of the nature of that account as already described.[358]
+
+It is not necessary at present to enter upon the large question of the
+attitude of the Jesuits towards the Plot, nor to discuss their guilt or
+innocence. This is, however, beyond dispute, that the government were
+above all things anxious to prove them guilty,[359] and no document ever
+produced was so effective for this purpose as the said confession, for,
+if it were true, there could be no question as to the guilt of one
+Jesuit, at least, Father Greenway _alias_ Tesimond. The substance of
+Bates' declaration was as follows:
+
+That being introduced and sworn into the conspiracy by his master,
+Catesby, he was then told that, as a pledge of fidelity, he must receive
+the sacrament upon his oath, and accordingly he went to confession to
+Greenway, the Jesuit.
+
+_That in his confession he fully informed Greenway of the design, and
+that Greenway bade him obey his master, because it was for a good cause,
+and be secret, and mention the matter to no other priest._
+
+That he was absolved by Greenway, and afterwards received Holy
+Communion.
+
+It will be observed that the second paragraph, here italicized, is of
+supreme importance. We have evidence that although the conspirators,
+during the course of their operations, frequented the sacraments, they
+expressly avoided all mention of their design to their confessors,
+Catesby having required this of them, assuring them that he had fully
+satisfied himself that the project, far from being sinful, was
+meritorious, but that the priests were likely to give trouble.[360] We
+are even told by some authors that Catesby exacted of his confederates
+an oath of secrecy in this regard. It is clear that his authority must
+have had special weight with his own servant, who was, moreover,
+devotedly attached to his master, as he proved in the crisis of his
+fate. We might, therefore, naturally be prepared to learn that Bates,
+though confessing to Greenway, never acquainted him with the Plot; and,
+that in fact he never did so, there is some interesting evidence.
+
+It cannot escape observation as a suspicious circumstance that this
+most important confession, upon which so much stress was laid, exists
+amongst the State Papers only in a copy.[361] Moreover, this copy has
+been treated as though it were an original, being officially endorsed,
+and it has on some occasion been used in Court.[362] If, however, this
+version were not genuine, but prepared for a purpose, it is clear that
+it could not have been produced while Bates was alive to contradict it,
+and there appears to be no doubt that it was not heard of till after his
+death.
+
+This appears, in the first place, from a manuscript account of the
+Plot,[363] written between the trial of the conspirators and that of
+Father Garnet, that is, within two months of the former. The author sets
+himself expressly to prove that the priests must have been cognizant of
+the design, for, he argues, Catholics, when they have anything of the
+kind in hand, always consult their confessors about it, and it cannot be
+supposed that on this occasion only did they omit to do so. In support
+of his assertion, he quotes the instances of Parry, Babington, and
+Squires, but says nothing of Bates. He mentions Greenway as undoubtedly
+one of the guilty priests, but only because "his Majesty's proclamation
+so speaks it." Had the confession of Bates, as we have it, been so
+prominently adduced at the trial, as the official narrative represents,
+it is quite impossible that such a writer should have been content with
+these feeble inferences.
+
+Still more explicit is the evidence furnished by another MS. containing
+a report of Father Garnet's trial.[364] In this the confession of Bates
+is cited, but precisely without the significant passage of which we have
+spoken, as follows: "Catesby afterwards discovered the project unto him;
+shortly after which discovery, Bates went to Mass to Tesimond
+[Greenway], and there was confessed and had absolution."
+
+Here, again, it is impossible to suppose that the all-important point
+was the one omitted. It is clear, however, that the mention of a
+confession made to Greenway would _prima facie_ afford a presumption
+that this particular matter had been confessed, thus furnishing a
+foundation whereon to build; and, knowing as we do how evidence was
+manipulated, it is quite conceivable that the copy now extant
+incorporates the improved version thus suggested.
+
+Such an explanation was unmistakably insinuated by Father Garnet, when,
+on his trial, this evidence was urged against him; for he significantly
+replied that "Bates was a dead man."[365] Greenway himself afterwards,
+when beyond danger, denied on his salvation that Bates had ever on any
+occasion mentioned to him any word concerning the Plot. It is still more
+singular that Bates himself appears to have known nothing of his own
+declaration. He had apparently said, in some examination of which no
+record remains, that he thought Greenway "knew of the business." This
+statement he afterwards retracted as having been elicited by a vain
+hope of pardon, in a letter which is given in full by Father
+Gerard,[366] and of which Cecil himself made mention at Garnet's
+trial.[367] But of the far more serious accusation we are considering he
+said never a word.
+
+There is, however, evidence still more notable. On the same day,
+December 4th, on which Bates made his declaration, Cecil wrote a most
+important letter to one Favat,[368] who had been commissioned by King
+James to urge the necessity of obtaining evidence without delay against
+the priests. This document is valuable as furnishing explicit testimony
+that torture was employed with this object. "Most of the prisoners,"
+says the secretary, "have wilfully forsworn that the priests knew
+anything in particular, and obstinately refuse to be accusers of them,
+yea, what torture soever they be put to."
+
+He goes on, however, to assure his Majesty that the desired object is
+now in sight, particularly referring to a confession which can be none
+other than that of Bates, but likewise cannot be that afterwards given
+to the world; for it is spoken of as affording promise, but not yet
+satisfactory in its performance.
+
+"You may tell his Majesty that if he please to read privately what this
+day we have drawn from a voluntary and penitent examination, the point I
+am persuaded (but I am no undertaker) shall be so well cleared, if he
+forbear to speak much of this but few days, as we shall see all fall out
+to the end whereat his Majesty shooteth."
+
+It seems clear, therefore, that the famous declaration of Bates, like
+those of Faukes and Winter, tends to discredit the story which in
+particulars so important rests upon such evidence.
+
+It may be farther observed that if the confession of Bates, as
+officially preserved, were of any worth, it would have helped to raise
+other issues of supreme importance. Thus its concluding paragraph runs
+as follows:
+
+"He confesseth that he heard his master, Thomas Winter, and Guy Fawkes
+say (presently upon the coming over of Fawkes) that they should have the
+sum of five-and-twenty thousand pounds out of Spain."
+
+This clearly means that the King of Spain was privy to the design, for a
+sum equivalent to a quarter of a million of our money could not have
+been furnished by private persons. The government, however, constantly
+assured the English ambassadors abroad of the great satisfaction with
+which they found that no suspicion whatever rested upon any foreign
+prince.
+
+
+iv. _Robert Winter._
+
+There are various traces of foul play in regard of this conspirator in
+particular, which serve to shake our confidence as to the treatment of
+all. Robert Winter was the eldest brother of Thomas, and held the family
+property, which was considerable. Whether this motive, as Mr. Jardine
+suggests, or some other, prompted the step, certain it is that the
+government in their published history falsified the documents in order
+to incriminate him more deeply. Faukes, in the confession of Nov. 17th,
+mentioned Robert Keyes as amongst the first seven of the conspirators
+who worked in the mine, and Robert Winter as one of the five introduced
+at a later period. The names of these two were deliberately interchanged
+in the published version, Robert Winter appearing as a worker in the
+mine, and Keyes, who was an obscure man of no substance, among the
+gentlemen of property whose resources were to have supported the
+subsequent rebellion. Moreover, in the account of the same confession
+sent to Edmondes by Cecil three days before Faukes signed it (_i.e._,
+Nov. 14th), the same transposition occurs, Keyes being explicitly
+described as one of those "who wrought not in the mine," although, as we
+have seen, he is one of the three who alone make any mention of it.
+
+Still more singular is another circumstance. About November 28th, Sir
+Edward Coke, the attorney-general, drew up certain farther notes of
+questions to be put to various prisoners.[369] Amongst these we read:
+"Winter to be examined of his brother. For no man else can accuse him."
+But a fortnight or so before this time the Secretary of State had
+officially informed the ambassador in the Low Countries that Robert
+Winter was one of those deepest in the treason, and, to say nothing of
+other evidence, a proclamation for his apprehension had been issued on
+November 18th. Yet Coke's interrogatory seems to imply that nothing had
+yet been established against him, and that he was not known to the
+general body of the traitors as a fellow-conspirator.
+
+
+v. _Captain Hugh Owen, Father William Baldwin, and others._
+
+We have seen something of the extreme anxiety evinced by the English
+government to incriminate a certain Hugh Owen, a Welsh soldier of
+fortune serving in Flanders under the archduke.[370] With him were
+joined Father Baldwin, the Jesuit, and Sir William Stanley, who, like
+Owen, was in the archduke's service. The measures taken in regard of
+them are exceedingly instructive if we would understand upon what sort
+of evidence the guilt of obnoxious individuals was proclaimed as
+incontrovertible.
+
+No time was lost in commencing operations. On November 14th, three days
+before Faukes signed the celebrated declaration which we have examined,
+and in which Owen was not mentioned, the Earl of Salisbury wrote to
+Edmondes, ambassador at Brussels,[371] that Faukes had now directly
+accused Owen, whose extradition must therefore be demanded. In proof of
+this assertion he inclosed a copy of the declaration, in which, however,
+curiously enough, no mention of Owen's name occurs.[372]
+
+Edmondes on his side was equally prompt. He at once laid the matter
+before the archduke and his ministers, and on November 19th was able to
+write to Salisbury that Owen and his secretary were apprehended and
+their papers and ciphers seized, and that, "If there shall fall out
+matter to charge Owen with partaking in the treason, the archduke will
+not refuse the king to yield him to be answerable to justice,"[373]
+though venturing to hope that he would be able to clear himself of so
+terrible an accusation.
+
+On "the last of November" the subject was pursued in an epistle from the
+King himself to the "Archdukes,"[374] in which the undoubted guilt of
+both Owen and Baldwin was roundly affirmed.[375]
+
+On December 2nd, 1605, Salisbury wrote to Edmondes:[376] "I do warrant
+you to deliver upon the forfeiture of my judgment in your opinion that
+it shall appear as evident as the sun in the clearest day, that Baldwin
+by means of Owen, and Owen directly by himself, have been particular
+conspirators."
+
+In spite of this, the authorities in Flanders asked for proofs of the
+guilt of those whom they were asked to give up. Wherefore Edmondes wrote
+(December 27th) to secure the co-operation of Cornwallis, his
+fellow-ambassador, at Madrid. After declaring that Owen and Baldwin were
+now found to have been "principal dealers in the late execrable
+treason," with remarkable _naivete_ he thus continues:[377]
+
+"I will not conceal from your lordship that they have been here so
+unrespective as to desire for their better satisfaction to have a copy
+of the information against the said persons to be sent over hither;
+which I fear will be very displeasing to his Majesty to understand."
+
+In January (1605-6), Salisbury sending, in the King's name, instructions
+to Sir E. Coke as to the trial of the conspirators, concluded with this
+admonition:[378] "You must remember to lay Owen as foul in this as you
+can," which certainly does not suggest that the case against him was
+overwhelmingly strong.
+
+After the execution of the traitors, an Act of Attainder passed by
+Parliament included Owen amongst them.[379]
+
+The archdukes remaining unconvinced, another and very notable argument
+was brought into play. On February 12th, 1605-6, Salisbury wrote to
+Edmondes:[380]
+
+"As for the particular depositions against Owen and Baldwin, which the
+archdukes desire to have a sight of, you may let them know that it is a
+matter which can make but little to the purpose, considering that his
+Majesty already upon his royal word hath certified the archdukes of
+their guilt."
+
+As to Owen's own papers which had been seized, the archduke assured the
+English ambassador,[381] "that if there had been anything to have been
+discovered out of the said papers touching the late treason (as he was
+well assured of the contrary), he would not have failed to have imparted
+the same to his Majesty."
+
+At a later date the Spanish minister De Grenada wrote from
+Valladolid[382] that men could not be delivered up on mere suspicion,
+which might prove groundless, but that the archduke had received orders
+to sift the matter to the bottom, in order that justice might be done
+"very fully."
+
+About the same time President Richardot informed Edmondes[383] that Owen
+strenuously denied the charges against him, "and that there is the more
+probability of his innocency for that his papers having been carefully
+visited, there doth not appear anything in them to charge him concerning
+the said matter."
+
+On April 21st Salisbury informed Edmondes of a conference on the subject
+between the king and the archduke's ambassador.[384] The latter declared
+that his master was ready to prosecute the accused in his own courts if
+evidence was furnished him, but in reply King James explained that this
+was impossible, and that he "was loth to send any papers or accusations
+over, not knowing how they might be framed or construed there by the
+formalities of their laws." He added that it was useless now to talk of
+evidence, "seeing the wretch is already condemned by the public sentence
+of the whole Parliament, which sentence the archdukes might see if they
+would." The ambassador thereupon asked to have a copy, but was curtly
+told that it would presently be printed, when he could buy one for
+twelve pence and send it to his masters, but that the king was not
+disposed to make a present of it.
+
+In these circumstances the archdukes determined to detain Owen no
+longer, and he was presently discharged. The news of this proceeding
+produced a remarkable change in the tone of his accusers. On June 18th,
+the secretary wrote to Edmondes[385] that Owen's enlargement "seemed to
+give too much credit to his innocency;" moreover, that "though his
+Majesty showed no great disposition (for many considerations specified
+unto you) to send over the papers and accusations against him, ... yet
+this proceeded not out of any conscience of the invalidity of the
+proofs, but rather in respect that his process being made here, and the
+caitiff condemned by the public sentence of the Parliament, it would
+have come all to one issue, seeing they have proceeded when his Majesty
+left it to themselves to do as they thought fit."
+
+To reinforce this lucid explanation Salisbury sent six days later what
+had before been refused, an abstract of "confessions against Owen," and
+a corrected copy of the Act of Attainder. These documents deserve some
+consideration.
+
+We have seen how much stress was laid upon the action of Parliament in
+regard of Owen, although the Act of Attainder which it passed affords no
+information whatever to assist our judgment of his case. In moving for
+this attainder, Sir E. Coke appeared at the bar of the House of Commons
+(April 29th, 1606) to exhibit the evidence on which the charge rested.
+His notes of this evidence, which are extant,[386] clearly show that the
+government possessed no proofs at all beyond surmise and inference.[387]
+Three testimonies were cited which were quite inconsistent and mutually
+destructive: (1) An extract from a confession of Guy Faukes, January
+20th, 1605-6, declaring that he had himself initiated Owen in the Plot
+in May, 1605. (2) An information of one Ralph Ratcliffe, to the effect
+that Owen and Baldwin were busy with the Plot in April, 1604. (3) T.
+Winter's testimony--from his famous confession of November 23rd, or
+25th, 1605--that in the spring of 1604 Owen had assisted him to secure
+the services of Faukes.
+
+In Salisbury's letter to Edmondes, the first and the last of these alone
+were cited,[388] probably because it had by this time been perceived
+that Ratcliffe's evidence flatly contradicted that of Faukes.
+
+Winter's confession has already been discussed, and moreover affords no
+proof that Owen was acquainted with the purpose for which the services
+of Faukes were required. There remains the very circumstantial story of
+Faukes himself, which belongs to a curious and interesting class of
+documents, containing matter of the highest importance, whereof no
+trace, not even a copy, is to be found amongst the State Papers. These
+comprise various confessions of Faukes, dated November 19th, 25th, and
+30th, 1605, and January 20th, 1605-6, all dealing with information of a
+sensational nature, concerning which we learn nothing from the eleven
+depositions of the same conspirator preserved in the Record Office.[389]
+For our knowledge of these mysterious documents we have to depend on
+transcripts of portions of them among the Tanner MSS. in the Bodleian
+Library, on fragmentary Latin versions in the _Antilogia_ of Bishop
+Abbot, and on the extract cited from the last amongst them by Sir Edward
+Coke, which exactly agrees with that sent by Salisbury to Edmondes, as
+above mentioned.
+
+It cannot escape notice that although these versions all profess to be
+taken from the originals under Faukes' hand, they are so utterly
+different as to preclude the belief that they have been copied from the
+same documents.[390]
+
+It must farther be observed that we hear nothing of important matters
+contained in these confessions till the supposed author and his
+confederates were all dead, whereas these are such as would certainly
+have been produced on their trial had this been possible.[391] Some of
+the evidence thus afforded is, in fact, too good, for the Government's
+purpose, to be true, for if authentic, it would have secured results
+which, though much desired, were never obtained. In particular it would
+have established beyond question the guilt of the Jesuits abroad, and
+especially of Father Baldwin.[392] It is this Father, however, whose
+case conclusively proves the utter worthlessness of the evidence. Having
+been proclaimed and branded by the English government as a convicted
+traitor, he, five years later, fell into their hands, being delivered
+up, in 1610, by their ally the Elector Palatine. He was at once thrown
+into the Tower, where he was frequently and rigorously examined, it is
+said even on the rack.[393] After a confinement of eight years he was
+discharged "with honour," his innocence being attested by the respect
+with which he was treated by men of all parties.[394] In view of this
+unquestionable acquittal the famous proofs of his criminality, though
+certified on the royal word of King James himself, forfeit all claim to
+consideration.
+
+A word may be added concerning Father Cresswell, an English Jesuit
+residing in Spain. He, too, was assumed to have been deeply implicated
+in this and other treasons. In November, 1605, Cecil included his name
+in a list of traitors against whom proofs were to be procured.[395] It
+was even asserted that at the time of the intended explosion he came
+over to England "to bear his part with the rest of his Society in a
+victorial song of thanksgiving."[396] He was, moreover, loudly denounced
+as the principal agent in the notorious Spanish Treason.
+
+After all this it is somewhat surprising to find Sir Charles Cornwallis,
+the English Ambassador, while the excitement of the Powder Plot was at
+its height, testifying in the most cordial terms to his esteem for the
+said Cresswell. The latter having been called to Rome by his superiors,
+Cornwallis (December 23rd, N.S. 1605,) addressed to him the following
+letter.[397]
+
+ "Sir, although in matter of religion well you know that there are
+ many discords between us, yet sure in your duty and loyalty to my
+ King and Country I find in you so good a concordance I cannot but
+ much reverence and love you, and wish you all the happiness that a
+ man of your sort upon the earth can desire.
+
+ "Much am I (I assure you) grieved at your departure, and the more
+ that I was put in so good hope that your journey should have been
+ stayed. The time of the year unpleasant to travel in, your body, as
+ I think, not much accustomed to journeys of so great length, and the
+ great good you did here to your poor countrymen (which now they
+ want) are great motives to make your friends to wish your will in
+ that voyage had been broken.
+
+ "If it be not, I shall not believe in words, for many here do
+ greatly desire you for causes spiritual, and some for temporal. In
+ the latter number am I, who, not affecting your spiritualities (for
+ that these in you abound to superfluity), do much reverence and
+ respect your temporal abilities, as wherein I acknowledge much
+ wisdom, temper, and sincerity. So no friends you have shall ever
+ more desire good unto you than myself. And therefore I wish I were
+ able to make so good demonstration as willingly I would that I ever
+ will here and in all places in this world rest
+
+ "Your very assured loving friend,
+
+ "CH. CO."
+
+About the same time, in an undated letter to Lord Salisbury,[398]
+Cornwallis again expresses his regret on account of the removal of
+Cresswell from Spain.
+
+
+vi. _Other Documents._
+
+It is impossible to analyze in detail the evidence supplied by the
+several conspirators after their capture, or to examine the endless
+inconsistencies and contradictions with which it abounds. One or two
+points must, however, be indicated.
+
+1. As we have seen, it is clear that at the beginning an effort was made
+to invest the Plot with a far wider political significance than was
+afterwards attempted, and to introduce elements which were soon quietly
+laid aside. In the interrogatories prepared by Sir E. Coke and Chief
+Justice Popham, we find it suggested that the death of the Earl of
+Salisbury was a main feature of the scheme, "absolutely agreed upon"
+among the conspirators. Also that the titular Earl of Westmoreland, the
+titular Lord Dacre, the Earl of Northumberland, Sir Walter Raleigh, and
+others were mixed up in the business.
+
+Nor were such endeavours altogether fruitless, for, supposing the
+testimony extorted from the prisoners to be worthy of credit,
+information was obtained altogether changing the character and
+complexion of the design. This was, however, presently buried in
+oblivion and treated as of no moment whatever.
+
+Thus in Sir Everard Digby's declaration of Nov. 23rd,[399] we find him
+testifying that the Earls of Westmoreland and Derby,[400] were to have
+been sent to raise forces in the north. Faukes, in the famous confession
+which we have so fully discussed, was made to say "They meant also to
+have sent for the prisoners in the Tower to have come to them, of whom
+particularly they had some consultation," and although this important
+clause was omitted from the finished version finally adopted, it appears
+in that of Nov. 14th, sent by Cecil to the ambassador at Brussels.
+Again, in his examination of November 9th, famous for the ghastly
+evidence of torture afforded by his signature, we find Faukes declaring,
+"He confesseth also that there was speech amongst them to draw Sir
+Walter Rawley to take part with them, being one that might stand them in
+good stead, _as others in like sort were named_."[401]
+
+With regard to Raleigh it must be remembered that he was in a very
+special manner obnoxious to Salisbury, who, however, was at great pains
+to disguise his hostility. On occasion of Sir Walter's trial, in 1603,
+he vehemently protested that it was a great grief to him to have to
+pronounce against one whom he had hitherto loved.[402] But two years
+earlier, in his secret correspondence with James, he had not only
+described Raleigh to the future king as one of the diabolical
+triplicity hatching cockatrice eggs, but had solemnly protested that if
+he feigned friendship for such a wretch, it was only with the purpose of
+drawing him on to discover his real nature.[403]
+
+2. Even more worthy of notice is the shameless manner in which evidence
+was falsified. That produced in court consisted entirely of the written
+depositions of the prisoners themselves, and of those who had been
+similarly examined. It was, however, carefully manipulated before it was
+read; all that told in favour of those whose conviction was desired
+being omitted, and only so much retained as would tell against them. On
+this subject Mr. Jardine well remarks:[404] "This mode of dealing with
+the admissions of an accused person is pure and unmixed injustice; it is
+in truth a forgery of evidence; for when a qualified statement is made,
+the suppression of the qualification is no less a forgery than if the
+whole statement had been fabricated."
+
+It will be sufficient to cite one notorious and compendious example.
+In regard of the oath of secrecy taken by the conspirators, Faukes (Nov.
+9th, 1605) and Thomas Winter (Jan. 9th, 1605-6) related how they
+administered it to one another, "in a chamber," to quote Winter, "where
+no other body was," and afterwards proceeded to another chamber where
+they heard Mass and received Communion at the hands of Father
+Gerard.[405] Both witnesses, however, emphatically declared that the
+Father knew nothing of the oath that had been taken, or of the purpose
+of the associates.
+
+[Illustration: FROM FAUKES' CONFESSION OF NOVEMBER 9, 1605.]
+
+Such testimony in favour of one whom they were anxious above all things
+to incriminate, the government would not allow to appear. Accordingly,
+Sir E. Coke, preparing the documents to be used in court as evidence,
+marked off the exculpatory passages, with directions that they were not
+to be read.[406] Having thus suppressed the passage which declared that
+the Jesuit was unaware of the conspirators' purpose, and of their oath,
+Coke went on to inform the jury, in his speech, "This oath was by Gerard
+the Jesuit given to Catesby, Percy, Christopher Wright, and Thomas
+Winter, and by Greenwell [Greenway] the Jesuit to Bates at another time,
+and so to the rest."[407]
+
+3. Neither must it be forgotten that even apart from these manifest
+instances of tampering, the confessions themselves, obtained in such
+circumstances, are open to much suspicion. In an intercepted letter to
+Father Baldwin, of whom we have heard, Father Schondonck, another
+Jesuit, then rector of St. Omers, speaks thus:[408] "I much rejoice
+that, as I hear, there is no confession produced, by which, either in
+court or at the place of execution, any of our society is accused of so
+abominable a crime. This I consider a point of prime importance. _Of
+secret confessions, or those extorted by violence or torture, less
+account must be made; for we have many examples whereby the dishonesty
+of our enemies in such matters has been fully displayed._"
+
+Father John Gerard in his Autobiography[409] relates an experience of
+his own which illustrates the methods employed to procure evidence such
+as was required. When, in Queen Elizabeth's time, he had himself been
+taken and thrown into prison, the notorious Topcliffe, the
+priest-hunter, endeavoured to force him into an acknowledgment of
+various matters of a treasonable character. Father Gerard undertook to
+write what he had to say on the subject, and proceeded to set down an
+explicit denial of what his questioner suggested. What followed he thus
+relates.[410]
+
+"While I was writing this, the old man waxed wroth. He shook with
+passion, and would fain have snatched the paper from me."
+
+"'If you don't want me to write the truth,' said I, 'I'll not write at
+all.'"
+
+"'Nay,' quoth he, 'write so and so, and I'll copy out what you have
+written.'"
+
+"'I shall write what I please,' I answered, 'and not what _you_ please.
+Show what I have written to the Council, for I shall add nothing but my
+name.'"
+
+"_Then I signed so near the writing, that nothing could be put in
+between._ The hot-tempered man, seeing himself disappointed, broke out
+into threats and blasphemies: 'I'll get you into my power, and hang you
+in the air, and show you no mercy: and then I shall see what God will
+rescue you out of my hands.'"
+
+It was not by Catholics alone that allegations of this sort were
+advanced. Sir Anthony Weldon tells us[411] that on the trial of Raleigh
+and Cobham, the latter protested that he had never made the declaration
+attributed to him incriminating Raleigh. "That villain Wade,"[412] said
+he, "did often solicit me, and, not prevailing, got me, by a trick, to
+write my name on a piece of white paper, which I, thinking nothing, did;
+so that if any charge came under my hand, it was forged by that villain
+Wade, by writing something above my hand, without my consent or
+knowledge."
+
+Moreover, there exists undoubted evidence that the king's chief minister
+availed himself upon occasion of the services of such as could
+counterfeit handwriting and forge evidence against suspected persons.
+One Arthur Gregory[413] appears to have been thus employed, and he
+subsequently wrote to Salisbury reminding him of what he had done.[414]
+After acknowledging that he owes his life to the secretary who knows how
+to appreciate "an honest desire in respect of his Majesty's public
+service," Gregory thus continues:
+
+"Your Lordship hath had a present trial of that which none but myself
+hath done before, _to write in another man's hand_, and, discovering the
+secret writing being in blank, to abuse a most cunning villain in his
+own subtlety, leaving the same at last in blank again, wherein although
+there be difficulty their answers show they have no suspicion."
+
+This the calendarer of State Papers believes to refer to the case of
+Father Garnet, and it is certain from Gregory's own letter that at one
+time he held a post in the Tower. Is it not possible that an explanation
+may here be found of the strange circumstance, that perhaps the most
+important of Father Garnet's examinations[415] bears an endorsement,
+"This was forbydden by the King to be given in evidence"?
+
+Gregory's letter, of which we have been speaking, has appended to it an
+instructive postscript:
+
+"Mr. Lieutenant expecteth something to be written in the blank leaf of a
+Latin Bible, which is pasted in already for the purpose. I will attend
+it, and whatsoever else cometh."[416]
+
+
+vii. _Catholic Testimony._
+
+It will not improbably be urged that the government history is confirmed
+in all essential particulars by authorities to whom no exception can be
+taken, namely, contemporary Catholic writers, and especially the Jesuits
+Gerard and Greenway, whose narratives of the conspiracy corroborate
+every detail concerning which doubts have been insinuated.
+
+This argument is undoubtedly deserving of all consideration, but upon
+examination appears to lose much of its force. If the narratives in
+question agree with that furnished by the government, it is because they
+are based almost entirely upon it, and upon those published confessions
+of Winter and Faukes with which we are familiar.
+
+On this point Father Gerard is very explicit:[417] "Out of [Mr. Thomas
+Winter's] examination, with the others that were made in the time of
+their imprisonment, I must gather and set down all that is to be said or
+collected of their purposes and proceedings in this heady enterprize.
+For that, as I have said, they kept it so wholly secret from all men,
+that until their flight and apprehension it was not known to any that
+such a matter was in hand, and then there could none have access to them
+to learn the particulars. But we must be contented with that which some
+of those that lived to be examined, did therein deliver. Only for that
+some of their servants that were up in arms with them in the country did
+afterwards escape, somewhat might be learned by them of their carriage
+in their last extremities, and some such words as they then uttered,
+whereby their mind in the whole matter is something the more opened."
+
+Elsewhere he writes, exhibiting more confidence in government documents
+than we can feel:[418]
+
+"[The prisoners'] examinations did all agree in all material points, and
+therefore two only were published in print, containing the substance of
+the rest. And indeed [this is] the sum of that which I have been able to
+say in this narration touching either their first intentions or the
+names or number of the conspirators, or concerning the course they took
+to keep the matter so absolutely secret, or, finally, touching the
+manner of their beginning and proceeding in the whole matter; for
+that--as I noted before--it being kept a vowed secret in the heads and
+hearts of so few, and those also afterwards apprehended before they
+could have means to declare the particulars in any private manner,
+therefore no more can be known of the matter or manner of this tragedy
+than is found or gathered out of their examinations."
+
+As for Greenway, it should not be forgotten that for the most part he
+confined himself to translating Gerard's narrative from English into
+Italian, though he supplemented it occasionally with items furnished by
+his own experience as to the character and general conduct of the
+conspirators on previous occasions, or during their last desperate
+rally. Of this he was able to speak with more authority, as he not only
+chanced to be in the immediate neighbourhood, but actually visited them
+at Huddington House (the seat of Robert Winter) on November 6th, being
+summoned thither by Catesby through his servant Bates.[419] Greenway,
+like Gerard, constantly refers to the published confessions of Winter
+and Faukes as the sources of his information.
+
+It may here be observed that the practical identity of the narratives
+of these two fathers was unknown to Mr. Jardine, who having seen only
+that of Father Greenway, and believing it to be an original work,
+founded upon this erroneous assumption an argument which loses its force
+when we learn the real author to have been Gerard. Mr. Jardine maintains
+that the narrator must, from internal evidence, have been an active and
+zealous member of the conspiracy, "approving, promoting and encouraging
+it with the utmost enthusiasm."[420] It so happens, however, that the
+real author, Father Gerard, is just the one of the incriminated Jesuits
+whose innocence is held by historians certainly not partial to his
+Order, to be beyond question. Mr. Gardiner considers[421] that there is
+"strong reason" to believe him not to have been acquainted with the
+Plot. Dr. Jessopp is still more emphatic, and declares[422] that it is
+impossible for any candid reader of all the evidence to doubt that
+Gerard must be exonerated.
+
+What has been said of Gerard and Greenway may serve also for Father
+Garnet, who in his various examinations and other utterances assumes the
+truth of the government story, for neither had he materials to go upon
+except those officially supplied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is obvious that the conclusion to be drawn from the above
+considerations is chiefly negative. That the conspirators embarked on a
+plot against the state, is, of course unquestionable. What was the
+precise nature of that plot is by no means clear, and still less what
+were the exact circumstances of its initiation and its collapse. This
+only appears to be certain, that things did not happen as they were
+officially related, while the elaborate care expended on the
+falsification of the story seems to indicate that the true version would
+not have served the purposes to which that story was actually put.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[332] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 235. Mr. Jardine is here speaking expressly
+of the trial of Father Garnet, as reported in the book, but evidently
+intends his observations to extend to that of the conspirators as well.
+
+[333] _Ibid._ 105.
+
+[334] _True and Perfect Relation_, Introduction.
+
+[335] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 113.
+
+[336] The contemporary, Hawarde (_Les Reportes del Cases in Camera
+Stellata_) gives a report of the trial of the conspirators, under the
+curious title "_Al le arraignemente del Traitors por le grande treason
+of blowinge up the Parliamente Howse_," which, although evidently based
+upon the official account, differs in two remarkable particulars. In the
+first place it gives a different list of the commissioners by whom the
+trial was conducted, omitting Justice Warburton, and including instead,
+Lord Chief Baron Flemming, Justices Yelverton and Williams, and Baron
+Saville. Moreover, Hawarde says that the king and queen "were both there
+in pryvate," an important circumstance, of which the _True and Perfect
+Relation_ says nothing.
+
+[337] Viz., on January 30th and 31st: not January 31st and February 1st,
+as Mr. Gardiner has it.
+
+[338] Father Garnet clearly believed that this advantage was used
+unscrupulously against him, for when certain evidence attributed to
+Bates was cited, he replied that "Bates was a dead man," and would
+testify otherwise if he were alive. (Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 21203.
+_Foley's Records_, iv. p. 188.)
+
+[339] It is frequently said that the search at Hendlip was undertaken
+not for Garnet but for Oldcorne, whose presence there was known by the
+confession of Humphrey Littleton. But this confession was made several
+days after the search had been begun, and the directions for it given by
+Cecil to the sheriff, Sir H. Bromley, clearly indicate that he had in
+view some capture of prime importance. (See Gardiner's _History_, i.
+271, and Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, f. 693.)
+
+[340] Viz.: Nottingham, Suffolk, Worcester, Devonshire, Northampton,
+Salisbury, Marr, Dunbar, Popham, Coke, and Waad.
+
+[341] In the "original," however, there are some passages which do not
+appear in the copy, notably one in which Lord Monteagle is mentioned. It
+appears, therefore, that the "copy" is not the first version produced,
+but has been edited from another still earlier.
+
+[342] That this is not a slip of the pen is evidenced by the fact that
+Winter first wrote 23, and then corrected it to 25.
+
+[343] Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, 84.
+
+[344] The document is headed in the printed version: "Thomas Winter's
+Confession, taken the Twenty-third of November, 1605, in the Presence of
+the Counsellors, whose Names are underwritten."
+
+[345] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 49.
+
+[346] The list stands thus: "L. Admyrall--L. Chamberlayn--Erle of
+Devonshire--Erle of Northampton--Erle of Salisbury--Erle of Marr--L.
+Cheif Justice--attended by Mr. Attorney Generall."
+
+The Lord Admiral was the Earl of Nottingham, better known as Lord Howard
+of Effingham, the commander-in-chief against the Spanish Armada. There
+appears to be no foundation for the supposition that he was a Catholic.
+Northampton (Henry Howard) was a professing Catholic. The chamberlain
+was the Earl of Suffolk, the Chief Justice, Popham.
+
+[347] The _Calendar of State Papers_ assigns this document, like the
+other, to the 8th, a mistake not easy to understand, for not only is the
+date clearly written, but the printed version in the "King's Book" gives
+it correctly.
+
+[348] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 101.
+
+[349] This was originally written "deposition;" the title is altered in
+Coke's hand, who also added the words, "taken the 17 of Nov. 1605:
+acknowledged before the Lords Commissioners."
+
+[350] Thus the _examination_ of November 8th begins as follows: "He
+confesseth that a Practise in generall was first broken unto him,
+agaynst his Majesty, for the Catholique cause, and not invented, or
+propounded by himself: and this was first propounded unto him, about
+Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the seas, in the Low Countreyes, by
+an English Lay-man, and that English man came over with him in his
+company, into England, and they tow and three more were the first five,
+mencioned in the former examination," etc.
+
+The _declaration_ of November 17th opens: "I confesse that a practise in
+general was first broken unto me against his Majesty, for releife of the
+Catholique cause, and not invented or propounded by myself. And this was
+first propounded unto me about Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the
+Seas, in the Low Countries of the Archdukes obeysance, by Thomas Winter,
+who came thereupon with me into England, and there wee imparted our
+purpose to three other Englishmen more, namely Rob^t Catesby, Tho^s
+Percy, and John Wright, who all five consulting together," etc. See both
+documents in full, Appendix N.
+
+[351] Thus, in the confession of November 8th, we read as follows: "He
+confesseth, that it was resolved amonge them, that the same day that
+this detestable act should have been performed, the same day [_sic_]
+should other of their confederacye have surprised the person of the Lady
+Elizabeth and presently have proclaimed her queen [to which purpose a
+Proclamation was drawne, as well to avow and justifye the Action, as to
+have protested against the Union, and in noe sort to have meddled with
+Religion therein. And would have protested all soe against all
+strangers,] and this Proclamation should have been made in the name of
+the Lady Elizabeth."
+
+The portion within brackets is cancelled, and the following substituted:
+"He confesseth that if their purpose had taken effect, untill they had
+power enough, they would not have avowed the deed to be theirs; but if
+their power ... had been sufficient, they thereafter would have taken it
+upon them."
+
+The corresponding portion of the declaration of November 17th runs thus:
+"It was further resolved amongst us, that the same day that this action
+should have been performed, some other of our confederates should have
+surprised the person of the L. Elizabeth, the King's eldest daughter,
+... and presently proclaimed her for Queene, having a _project_ of a
+Proclamation ready for the purpose, wherein we made no mention of
+altering of Religion, nor would have avowed the deed to be ours, untill
+we should have had power enough to make our partie good, and then we
+would have avowed both."
+
+[352] The printed version of Fauke's declaration is headed: "The true
+Copy of the Deposition of Guido Fawkes, taken in the Presence of the
+Counsellors, whose Names are under written."
+
+[353] See Appendix K., _The Use of Torture_.
+
+[354] In the _Calendar of State Papers_ he is continually styled "Father
+Owen," or "Owen the Jesuit," without warrant in the original documents.
+That he was a soldier and not a priest there is no doubt.
+
+[355] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 38.
+
+[356] E.g. _Item._ Where you have confessed that it was discoursed
+between you that the prisoners in the Tower should have had intelligence
+after the act done, declare the particularity of that discourse, and
+whether some prisoners in the Tower should not have been called to
+office or place, or have been employed, etc.
+
+_Item._ Where you have confessed that the L. Elizabeth should have
+succeeded, and that she should have been brought up as a Catholic, and
+married to an English Catholic. (1) Who should have had the government
+of her? (2) Who was nominated to be the fittest to have married her?
+
+_Item._ Was it not resolved amongst you that after the act done you
+would have taken the Tower, or any other place of strength, and meant
+you not to have taken the spoil of London, and whom should you have
+instantly proclaimed?
+
+_Item._ By what priests or Jesuits were you resolved that it was godly
+and lawful to execute the act?
+
+_Item._ Whether was it not resolved that if it were discovered Catesby
+and others should have killed the king coming from Royston?
+
+_Item._ Were not Edw. Neville, calling himself Earl of Westmorland, Mr.
+Dacre, calling himself Lord Dacre, or any of the Nobility, privy to it?
+How many of the Nobility have you known at Mass? What persons in the
+Tower were named to be partakers with you?
+
+[357] To Edmondes, November 14th, 1605. (Stowe MSS.)
+
+[358] _Viz., The True and Perfect Relation._ The confession of Bates is
+mentioned but not textually quoted. It is in the "King's Book" that the
+confessions of Winter and Faukes are given.
+
+[359] "The great object of the government now was to obtain evidence
+against the priests."--Gardiner, _History of England_, i. 267.
+
+[360] See Rokewood's examination, December 2nd, 1605. (_Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, 136.) In the confession of Keyes, November 30th, 1605 (_Gunpowder
+Plot Book_, 126) we read: "He sayth that the reason that he revealed not
+the project to his ghostly father was for that Catesby told him that he
+had good warrant and authoritie that it might safely and with good
+conscience be done," etc.
+
+[361] _Gunpowder Plot Book_, 145.
+
+[362] This is shown by a mark (Sec.) in the margin opposite the important
+passage, attention being called to this by the same mark, and the name
+"Greenway" in the endorsement.
+
+[363] Brit. Mus., Harleian 360, f. 96.
+
+[364] Brit. Mus., Harleian 360, f. 109, etc. The reporter had clearly
+been present.
+
+[365] Brit. Mus., MSS. Add. 21, 203; Plut. ciii. F. Printed by Foley,
+_Records_, iv. 164 _seq._
+
+[366] _Narrative_, p. 210.
+
+[367] Plut. ciii. F. Sec. 39.
+
+[368] Brit. Mus. MSS. Add. 6178, Sec. 625.
+
+[369] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 116.
+
+[370] In the _Calendar of State Papers_, Mrs. Everett Green, as has been
+said, quite gratuitously and without warrant from the original
+documents, uniformly describes him as "Father Owen," or "Owen the
+Jesuit." Mr. Gardiner (_Hist._ i. 242) has been led into the same error.
+
+It is not impossible that Owen had some knowledge of the conspiracy,
+though the course adopted by his enemies seems to afford strong
+presumption to the contrary. It must, moreover, be remembered that, as
+Father Gerard tells us, he and others similarly accused, vehemently
+protested against the imputation, while in his case in particular we
+have some evidence to the same effect. Thomas Phelippes, the
+"Decipherer," of whom we have already heard, was on terms of close
+intimacy with Owen, and in December, 1605, wrote to him about the Plot
+in terms which certainly appear to imply a strong conviction that his
+friend had nothing to do with it.
+
+"There hath been and yet is still great paynes taken to search to the
+bottom of the late damnable conspiracy. The Parliamente hit seemes shall
+not be troubled with any extraordinarie course for their exemplarye
+punishment, as was supposed upon the Kinges speeche, but onlye with
+their attaynder, the more is the pitye I saye."--_Dom. James I._ xvii.
+62.
+
+[371] Stowe MSS. 168, 54.
+
+[372] This version of the deposition is interesting as being a form
+intermediate between the draft of November 8th and the finished document
+of November 17th. The passages cancelled in the former are simply
+omitted without any attempt to complete the sense of the passages in
+which they occurred. Those "ticked off" are retained.
+
+[373] Stowe MSS. 168, 58.
+
+[374] _I.e._, the Archduke Albert, and his consort the Infanta, daughter
+of Philip II., who, as governors of the Low Countries, were usually so
+designated.
+
+[375] "Nous avons bien voulu aussy par ces presentes, nous mesmes vous
+asseurer que ce qu'il [Edmondes] vous en a desja declare, est fonde sur
+tout verite; et vous dire en oultre, que ces meschantes Creatures d'Owen
+et Baldouin, gens de mesme farine, ont eu aussi leur part en particulier
+a ceste malheureuse conspiration de Pouldre."--_Phillipps' MS._ 6297, f.
+129.
+
+[376] Stowe, 168, 65.
+
+[377] Winwood, ii. 183.
+
+[378] _Dom. James I._ xix. 94.
+
+[379] 3^o _Jac. I._ c. 3. On the 21st of June following, Salisbury
+forwarded to Edmondes a fresh copy of this Act, "because in the former
+there was a great error committed in the printing." (Phillipps, f. 157.)
+It would be highly interesting to know what the first version was. In
+that now extant it is only said regarding Owen, that inasmuch as he
+obstinately keeps beyond the seas, he cannot be arraigned, nor can
+evidence and proofs be produced against him. (_Statutes at large._)
+
+[380] Stowe, 168, 76; Phillipps, f. 141.
+
+[381] Edmondes to Salisbury, January 23rd, 1605(6). P.R.O., Flanders,
+38.
+
+[382] April 19th, 1606, _ibid._
+
+[383] Edmondes to Salisbury, April 5th, 1606, _ibid._
+
+[384] Phillipps, f. 150.
+
+[385] Phillipps, f. 152.
+
+[386] _Dom. James I._ xx. 52.
+
+[387] This is obvious from a marginal note in Coke's own hand, arguing
+that Owen must be guilty in this instance, as he has been guilty on
+former occasions, and "Qui semel malus est semper praesumitur esse malus
+in eodem genere mali."
+
+[388] It will be noticed that the confession of Faukes cited against
+Owen is dated two months after he had first been declared to be proved
+guilty by Faukes' testimony.
+
+[389] These are dated November 5th, 6th [bis], 7th, 8th [the "draft"],
+9th, 16th, 17th, January 9th, 20th, 26th.
+
+[390] Thus, to confine ourselves to the confession of January 20th, with
+which we are particularly concerned, we have the following variations:
+
+_Tanner transcript._ "At my going over M^r Catesby charged me two things
+more: the one to desire of Baldwin & M^r Owen to deal with the Marquis
+[Spinola] to send over the regiment of which he [Catesby] expected to
+have been Lieutenant Colonel under Sir Charles [Percy].... He wished me
+secondly to be earnest with Baldwin to deal with the Marquis to give the
+said M^r Catesby order for a Company of Horse, thinking by that means to
+have opportunity to buy Horses and Arms without suspition."
+
+According to _Abbot_, Faukes was to give instructions that when the time
+of Parliament approached, Sir Wm. Stanley was on some pretext to lead
+the English forces in the archduke's service towards the sea, and with
+them any others he could manage to influence. He also mentions the
+conspiracy of Morgan, as spoken of by Coke.
+
+In addition to all this, Abbot cites from the same confession the
+following extraordinary particulars (p. 160): Faukes, when he came to
+London, with T. Winter, went to Percy's house and found there Catesby
+and Father Gerard. They talked over matters, and agreed that nothing was
+to be hoped from foreign aid, nor from a general rising of Catholics,
+and that the only plan was to strike at the king's person: whereupon
+Catesby, Percy, John Wright, Winter, and himself, were sworn in by
+Gerard.
+
+[This is in absolute contradiction to Winter's evidence (November 23rd)
+that Percy was initiated in the middle of the Easter term, the other
+four having agreed on the scheme at the beginning of the same term; and
+to that of Faukes himself (November 17th) that he and Winter first
+resolved on a plot for the benefit of the Catholic cause, and afterwards
+imparted their idea to Catesby, Wright, and Percy.]
+
+_Sir E. Coke's Version._ "After the powder treason was resolved upon by
+Catesbye, Thomas Winter, the Wrightes, my self, and others, and
+preparation made by us for the execution of it, by their advise and
+direction I went into fflanders and had leave given unto me to discover
+our project in every particular to Hughe Owen and others, but with
+condicion that they should sweare first to secrecie as we our selves had
+done. When I arryved in fflanders I found M^r Owen at Bruxelles to whom
+after I had given the oathe of secrecye I discovered the whole busines,
+howe we had layed 20 whole barrells of powder in the celler under the
+parliament howse, and howe we ment to give it fire the first day of the
+parliament when the King, the prince, the duke, the Lords spirituall and
+temporall, and all the knights, citizens, and burgesses of parliament
+should be there assembled. And that we meant to take the Ladye Elizabeth
+and proclaime hir for we thought most like that the prince and duke
+would be there with the king. M^r Owen liked the plott very well, and
+said that Thomas Morgan had once propounded the very same in quene
+Elizabeth's time, and willed me that by ani meanes we should not make
+any mencion of religion at the first, and assured me that so soone as he
+should have certaine newes that this exploit had taken effect that he
+would give us what assistance he could and that he would procure that
+Sir W^m Stanley should have leave to come with those English men which
+be there and what other forces he could procure."
+
+The confession of Faukes in the Record Office, dated the same, January
+20th, is thus summarized in the _Calendar of State Papers_ (_Dom. James
+I._ xviii. 28): "Talked with Catesby about noblemen being absent from
+the meeting of Parliament; he said Lord Mordaunt would not be there,
+because he did not like to absent himself from the sermons, as the king
+did not know he was a Catholic; and that Lord Stourton would not come to
+town till the Friday after the opening."
+
+[391] The powder design of Morgan is an instance in point. The Thomas
+Morgan in question was doubtless the same as the partisan of Mary Queen
+of Scots.
+
+[392] _E.g._: "Winter came over to Owen, by him and the Fathers to be
+informed of a fit and resolute man for the execution of the enterprise.
+This examinate (being by the Fathers and Owen recommended to be used and
+trusted in any action for the Catholicks) came into England with
+Winter."--Faukes, November 19th, 1605 (Tanner MSS.).
+
+Abbot, whose whole object is to incriminate the Jesuits, does not
+mention this remarkable statement.
+
+Again we read, November 30th (_ibid._): "Father Baldwin told this
+examinate that about 2,000 horses would be provided by the Catholicks of
+England to join with the Spanish forces ... and willed this examinate to
+intimate so much to Father Creswell, which this examinate did."
+
+[393] Oliver, _Collectanea_, sub nom.; Foley, _Records_, iv. 120, note.
+
+[394] Foley, _Records_, iii. 509; _English Protestants' Plea_, p. 59.
+
+[395] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 115.
+
+[396] _England's Warning Peece_, by T. S. [Thomas Spencer], P.73.
+
+[397] Cotton MSS. _Vespasian C._, ix. f. 259.
+
+[398] Winwood, _Memorials_, ii. 178.
+
+[399] _Dom. James I._ xvi. 104.
+
+[400] William Stanley.
+
+[401] The last words are added in another hand.
+
+[402] "I am in great dispute with myself to speak in the case of this
+gentleman. A former dearness between me and him tied so firm a knot of
+my conceit of his virtues, now broken by discovery of his imperfections,
+that I protest, did I serve a king that I knew would be displeased with
+me for speaking, in this case I would speak, whatever came of it; but
+seeing he is compacted of piety and justice, and one that will not
+mislike of any man for speaking a truth, I will answer," etc.--_State
+Trials._
+
+[403] "For this do I profess in the presence of Him that knoweth and
+searcheth all men's harts, that if I did not some tyme cast a stone into
+the mouth of these gaping crabbs, when they are in their prodigall
+humour of discourses, they wold not stick to confess dayly how contrary
+it is to their nature to be under your soverainty; though they confess
+(Ralegh especially) that (_rebus sic stantibus_) naturall pollicy
+forceth them to keep on foot such a trade against the great day of mart.
+In all which light and soddain humours of his, though I do no way check
+him, because he shall not think I reject his freedome or his affection
+... yet under pretext of extraordinary care of his well doing, I have
+seemed to dissuade him from ingaging himself so farr," etc.--_Hatfield
+MSS._, cxxxv. f. 65.
+
+[404] _Criminal Trials_, ii. 358.
+
+[405] Father Gerard (_Narrative_, p. 201) denies in the most emphatic
+terms that he was the priest who said mass on this occasion. The point
+is fully discussed by the late Father Morris, S. J., in his Life of
+Father Gerard, pp. 437-438.
+
+[406] The accompanying facsimile of this portion of Faukes' confession
+exhibits the marks made by Coke, and his added direction in the margin,
+_hucusque_ ("thus far"). In the original his additions are in red ink.
+
+[407] It is singular that he should not mention Faukes himself as one of
+those who received the oath from Gerard. There is no mention in any
+document of Greenway as giving the oath to Bates, or anyone else.
+
+The facsimile of Faukes' signature, appended to his confession of
+November 9th, though affording unmistakable evidence of torture, gives
+no idea of the original, wherein the letters are so faintly traced as to
+be scarcely visible. It is evident that the writer had been so severely
+racked as to have no strength left in his hands to press the pen upon
+the paper. He must have fainted when he had written his Christian name,
+two dashes alone representing the other.
+
+This signature, with other of the more sensational documents connected
+with the Plot, is exhibited in the newly established museum at the
+Record Office.
+
+[408] _Dom. James I._ xviii. 97, February 27th, 1606, N. S. (Latin).
+
+[409] _Narratio de rebus a se in Anglia gestis_ (Stonyhurst MSS.).
+Published in Father G. R. Kingdon's translation under the title of
+_During the Persecution_.
+
+[410] _During the Persecution_, p. 83.
+
+[411] _Court and Character of King James_, p. 350 (ed. 1811).
+
+[412] Sir William Waad, Lieutenant of the Tower, to whose charge the
+Powder Plot conspirators were committed, was afterwards dismissed from
+his office on a charge of embezzling the jewels of the Lady Arabella
+Stuart.
+
+[413] Presumably the same Arthur Gregory who at an earlier period had
+counterfeited the seals of Mary Queen of Scots' correspondence.
+
+[414] _Dom. James I._ xxiv. 38.
+
+[415] March 3rd, 1605-6 (Hatfield MSS.).
+
+[416] Eudaemon Joannes cites the renegade Alabaster as testifying to
+having seen a letter seemingly of his own to Garnet, which he had never
+written. (_Answer to Casaubon_, p. 159.)
+
+[417] _Narrative_, p. 54.
+
+[418] _Ibid._ p. 113.
+
+[419] Though we have not now to consider the question of Father
+Greenway's connection with the conspirators, it may not be out of place
+to cite his own account of this visit (_Narrative_, Stonyhurst MSS., f.
+86 b):
+
+"Father Oswald [Greenway] went to assist these gentlemen with the
+Sacraments of the Church, understanding their danger and their need, and
+this with evident danger to his own person and life: and all those
+gentlemen could have borne witness that he publicly told them how he
+grieved not so much because of their wretched and shameful plight, and
+the extremity of their peril, as that by their headlong course they had
+given the heretics occasion to slander the whole body of Catholics in
+the kingdom, and that he flatly refused to stay in their company, lest
+the heretics should be able to calumniate himself and the other Fathers
+of the Society."
+
+[420] In this, as in some other respects, Mr. Jardine shows himself
+rather an advocate than an impartial historian. He holds that the
+complicity of the writer of the _Narrative_ with the plotters is proved
+by the intimate knowledge he displays concerning them, "their general
+conduct--their superstitious fears--their dreams--'their thick coming
+fancies'--in the progress of the work of destruction." (_Criminal
+Trials_, ii. xi.)
+
+There is here an evident allusion to the silly story of the "bell in the
+wall" (related by Greenway and not by Gerard), to which Mr. Jardine
+gives extraordinary prominence. He does not, however, inform us that
+Greenway relates this (_Narrative_, f. 58 b) and some similar matters,
+on the authority of "an acquaintance to whom Catesby told it shortly
+before his death," and that he leaves it to the judgment of his readers.
+
+Greenway's frequent and earnest protestations of innocence Mr. Jardine
+summarily dismisses with the observation that they are "entitled to no
+credit whatever" (p. xii).
+
+[421] _History_, i. 243.
+
+[422] _Dictionary of National Biography_ (Digby, Sir E.).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE SEQUEL.
+
+
+AS we have already seen, the Gunpowder Plot formed no exception to the
+general law observable in conspiracies of its period, proving extremely
+advantageous to those against whom it was principally directed. No
+single individual was injured by it except those concerned in it, or
+accused of being so concerned. On the other hand, it marked an epoch in
+public policy, and irrevocably committed the king and the nation to a
+line of action towards Catholics, which up to that time they had hoped,
+and their enemies had feared, would not be permanently pursued.
+
+"The political consequences of this transaction," says Mr. Jardine,[423]
+"are extremely important and interesting. It fixed the timid and
+wavering mind of the king in his adherence to the Protestant party, in
+opposition to the Roman Catholics; and the universal horror, which was
+naturally excited not only in England but throughout Europe by so
+barbarous an attempt, was artfully converted into an engine for the
+suppression of the Roman Catholic Church: so that the ministers of James
+I., having procured the reluctant acquiescence of the king, and the
+cordial assent of public opinion, were enabled to continue in full force
+the severe laws previously passed against Papists, and to enact others
+of no less rigour and injustice."
+
+Such was the effect in fact produced, and the calm deliberation
+displayed in dealing with the crisis appears to indicate that no
+misgivings were entertained as to the chance of anything but advantage
+resulting from it. We have already seen with what strange equanimity the
+presence of the powder beneath the Parliament House was treated. Not
+less serene was the attitude of the minister chiefly responsible for the
+safety of the State in face of the grave dangers still declared to be
+threatening, even after the "discovery." Preparations, it was officially
+announced, had been made for an extensive rising of the Catholics, and
+this had still to be reckoned with. As the king himself informed Sir
+John Harington, the design was not formed by a few, the "whole legion of
+Catholics" were implicated: the priests had been active in preaching the
+holy war, and the Pope himself had employed his authority on behalf of
+the cause.[424]
+
+Moreover, the conspirators, except Faukes, escaped from London, and
+hurried to the intended scene of action, where, though no man
+voluntarily joined them, they were able at first to collect a certain
+force of their own retainers and domestics, and began to traverse the
+shires in which their influence was greatest, committing acts of plunder
+and violence, and calling on all men to join them for God and the
+country. For a couple of days the local magistrates did not feel strong
+enough to cope with them, and forwarded to the capital reports capable,
+it might be supposed, of alarming those who were bewildered by so
+totally unexpected an assault, for which the evidence in hand showed
+preparations of no ordinary magnitude to have been made. The numbers of
+the insurgents, it was said, were constantly increasing; only a feeble
+force could be brought against them; they were seizing horses and
+ammunition, and all this in "a very Catholic country."
+
+In his famous speech to Parliament, delivered on November 9th, the king
+dwelt feelingly on the danger of the land, left exposed to the traitors,
+in the absence of the members of the legislature, its natural guardians.
+"These rebels," he declared,[425] "that now wander through the country
+could never have gotten so fit a time of safety in their passage, or
+whatsoever unlawful actions, as now; when the country, by the aforesaid
+occasions, is, in a manner, left desolate and waste unto them."[426]
+
+Meanwhile, however, the secretary remained imperturbably tranquil as
+before, and so well aware of the true state of the case that he could
+afford to make merry over the madcap adventurers. On the same 9th of
+November he wrote to the ambassadors: "It is also thought fit that some
+martial men should presently repair down to those countries where the
+Robin Hoods are assembled, to encourage the good and to terrify the bad.
+In which service the Earl of Devonshire is used, a commission going
+forth for him as general: although I am easily persuaded that this
+Faggot will be burnt to ashes before he shall be twenty miles on his
+way."
+
+His prescience was not at fault, for before despatching the letter the
+minister was able to announce the utter collapse of the foolish and
+unsupported enterprise.
+
+No time was lost in turning the defeated conspiracy to practical
+account. On the very 5th of November[427] itself the Commons proceeded,
+before all other business, to the first reading of a bill for the better
+execution of penal statutes against Recusants. On the following day this
+was read a second time. The house next met on the 9th, to hear the
+king's speech, and was then prorogued to January 21st following. On that
+day, the foremost article on the programme was the first reading of a
+bill (whether the same or another) for the better execution of penal
+statutes; another was likewise proposed for prevention of the danger of
+papistical practices; and a committee was appointed "to consider of some
+course for the timely and severe proceeding against Jesuits, Seminaries,
+and other popish agents and practisers, and for the prevention and
+suppression of their plots and practices."[428] On the 22nd there was a
+motion directed against the seminaries beyond the seas, and the bill for
+better execution of penal statutes was read a second time. On the 23rd
+the bill for a public thanksgiving was read twice, being finally passed
+on the 25th. Its preamble runs thus: "Forasmuch as ... no nation of the
+earth hath been blessed with greater benefits than this kingdom now
+enjoyeth, having the true and free profession of the gospel under our
+most gracious sovereign lord King James, the most great, learned, and
+religious king that ever reigned therein ... the which many malignant
+and devilish papists, Jesuits, and seminary priests, much envying and
+fearing, conspired most horribly ..." and so forth.
+
+Thus did the Commons set to work, and the other House, though they
+declined to sanction all that was proposed in the way of exceptional
+severity towards the actual conspirators, were no wise lacking in zeal
+against the Catholic body.
+
+The course of legislation that ensued is thus described by Birch:[429]
+
+"The discovery of the Plot occasioned the Parliament to enjoin the oath
+of allegiance to the king, and to enact several laws against Popery, and
+especially against the Jesuits and Priests who, as the Earl of Salisbury
+observed,[430] sought to bring all things into confusion.... In passing
+these laws for the security of the Protestant religion, the Earl of
+Salisbury exerted himself with distinguished zeal and vigour, which
+gained him great love and honour from the kingdom, as appeared, in some
+measure, in the unusual attendance upon him at his installation into the
+Order of the Garter, on the 20th of May, 1606,[431] at Windsor."
+
+It is, indeed, abundantly clear that beyond all others this statesman
+benefited by the Plot, in consequence of which he obtained, at least for
+a time, a high degree of both power and popularity. His installation at
+Windsor, above mentioned, was an almost regal triumph. Baker notes[432]
+that he was attended on the occasion "beyond ordinary promotion." Howes
+writes[433] that he "set forward from his house in the Strand, being
+almost as honourably accompanied, and with as great a train of lords,
+knights, gentlemen, and officers of the Court, with others besides his
+peculiar servants, very richly attired and bravely mounted, as was the
+King when he rid in state through London."
+
+Neither were there wanting to the secretary other advantages which, if
+less showy, were not less substantial. It will be remembered how, in
+his secret correspondence with the King of Scots before the death of
+Elizabeth, Cecil had constantly endeavoured to turn the mind of his
+future sovereign against the Earl of Northumberland, whom he declared to
+be associated with Raleigh and Cobham in a "diabolical triplicity," and
+to be "a sworn enemy of King James."[434] These efforts had not been
+altogether successful, and though Cobham and Raleigh had been
+effectually disposed of in connection with the conspiracy known as the
+"Main," Northumberland was still powerful, and was thought by many to be
+Cecil's most formidable rival. As one result of the Gunpowder Plot, he
+now disappeared for ever from public life.
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. III.]
+
+When we remember the terms in which the secretary had previously
+described him, as well as the result about to ensue, it is not a little
+startling to remark with what emphasis it was protested, in season and
+out, that a ruling principle of the government's action was to do
+nothing which might even seem to cast a slur upon the earl's character,
+while at the same time the very point is artfully insinuated which was
+to be turned against him.[435] Thus in the "King's Book," in explanation
+of the curious roundabout courses adopted in connection with the
+"discovery," we are told that a far-fetched excuse was devised for the
+search determined upon, lest it might "lay an ill-favoured imputation
+upon the Earl of Northumberland, one of his Majesty's greatest subjects
+and counsellors; this Thomas Percy being his kinsman and most confident
+familiar." So again Cecil wrote to the ambassadors: "It hath been
+thought meet in policy of State (all circumstances considered) to commit
+the Earl of Northumberland to the Archbishop of Canterbury, there to be
+honourably used, until things be more quiet. Whereof if you shall hear
+any judgment made, as if his Majesty or his council could harbour a
+thought of such a savage practice to be lodged in such a nobleman's
+breast, you shall do well to suppress it as a malicious discourse and
+invention, this being only done to satisfy the world that nothing be
+undone which belongs to policy of State, when the whole monarchy was
+proscribed to dissolution; and being no more than himself discreetly
+approved when he received the sentence of the council for his
+restraint."
+
+Yet what was the issue? A series of charges were brought against
+Northumberland, all of which broke down except that of having, as
+Captain of the Royal Pensioners, admitted Percy amongst them without
+exacting the usual oath. He in vain demanded an open trial, and was
+brought before the Star Chamber, by which, after he had been assailed by
+Coke in the same violent strain previously employed against Raleigh, he
+was sentenced to forfeit all offices which he held under the Crown, to
+be imprisoned during the king's pleasure, and to pay a fine of L30,000,
+equal to at least ten times that sum at the present day.
+
+As if this were not enough, fresh proceedings were taken against him six
+years later, when he was again subjected to examination, and again, says
+Lingard,[436] foiled the ingenuity or malice of his persecutor.
+
+It seems, therefore, by no means extraordinary that men, as we have
+heard from the French ambassador, should have commonly attributed the
+earl's ruin to the resolution of his great rival to remove from his own
+path every obstacle likely to be dangerous, or that Cecil should himself
+bear witness,[437] in 1611, to the "bruites" touching Northumberland
+which were afloat, and should be anxious, as "knowing how various a
+discourse a subject of this nature doth beget," to "prevent any
+erroneous impression by a brief narrative of the true motive and
+progress of the business."
+
+As to Northumberland's own sentiments, he, we are told by Osborne,[438]
+declared that the blood of Percy would refuse to mix with that of Cecil
+if they were poured together in the same basin.
+
+It is, moreover, evident not only that the great statesman, to use
+Bishop Goodman's term, actually profited largely by the powder business,
+but that from the first he saw in it a means for materially
+strengthening his position; an opportunity which he lost no time in
+turning to account by making it appear that in such a crisis he was
+absolutely necessary to the State. This is shown by the remarkable
+manifesto which he promptly issued, a document which appears to have
+been almost forgotten, though well deserving attention.
+
+A characteristic feature of the traitorous proceedings of the period was
+the inveterate habit of conspirators to drop compromising documents in
+the street, or to throw them into yards and windows. In the court of
+Salisbury House was found, in November, 1605, a threatening letter, more
+than usually extraordinary. It purported to come from five Catholics,
+who began by unreservedly condemning the Gunpowder Plot as a work
+abhorred by their co-religionists as much as by any Protestants. Since,
+however, his lordship, beyond all others, seemed disposed to take
+advantage of so foul a scandal, in order to root out all memory of the
+Catholic religion, they proceeded to warn him that they had themselves
+vowed his death, and in such fashion that their success was certain.
+None of the accomplices knew who the others were, but it was settled who
+should first make the attempt, and who, in order, afterwards. Moreover,
+death had no terrors for any of them, two being stricken with mortal
+sickness, which must soon be fatal; while the other three were in such
+mental affliction as not to care what became of them.
+
+As a reply to this strange effusion Cecil published a tract,[439]
+obviously intended as a companion to the famous "King's Book," in which
+with elaborate modesty he owned to the impeachment of being more zealous
+than others in the good cause, and protested his resolution, at whatever
+peril to himself, to continue his services to his king and country. The
+sum and substance of this curious apology is as follows.
+
+Having resolved to recall his thoughts from the earthly theatre to
+higher things, which statesmen are supposed overmuch to neglect, he had
+felt he could choose no better theme for his meditations than the
+"King's Book," wherein so many lively images of God's great favour and
+providence are represented, every line discovering where Apelles' hand
+hath been; so that all may see there needs now no Elisha to tell the
+King of Israel what the Aramites do in their privatest councils.
+
+While in this most serious and silent meditation, divided between
+rapture at God's infinite mercy and justice, and thought of his own
+happiness to live under a king pleasing to God for his zealous
+endeavours to cleanse the vessels of his kingdom from the dregs and lees
+of the Romish grape,--and while his heart was not a little cheered to
+observe any note of his own name in the royal register, for one that had
+been of any little use in this so fortunate discovery,--as the poor day
+labourer who taketh contentment when he passeth that glorious
+architecture, to the building whereof he can remember to have carried
+some few sticks and stones,--while thus blissfully engaged, he is
+grieved to find himself singled out from the honourable body of the
+council,--why, he knows not, for with it he would be content to be
+identified--as the author of the policy which is being adopted; and,
+conscious that in his humble person the Body of Authority is assailed,
+he thinks it well, for once, to make a reply.
+
+Having recited the threatening letter in full, he presently continues:
+
+"Though I participate not in the follies of that fly who thought herself
+to raise the dust because she sat on the chariot-wheel, yet I am so far
+from disavowing my honest ambition of my master's favour, as I am
+desirous that the world should hold me, not so much his creature, by the
+undeserved honours I hold from his grace and power, as my desire to be
+the shadow of his mind, and to frame my judgment, knowledge, and
+affections according to his. Towards whose Royal Person I shall glory
+more to be always found an honest and humble subject, than I should to
+command absolutely in any other calling."
+
+Of those who threaten him he says very little, assuming, however, as
+self-evident, that they are set on by some priest, who, after the manner
+of his tribe, doth "carry the unlearned Catholics, like hawks hooded,
+into those dangerous positions."
+
+But, as for himself, let the world understand that he is not the man to
+neglect his duty on account of the personal danger it entails. "Far I
+hope it shall be from me, who know so well in whose HOLY BOOK my days
+are numbered, once to entertain a thought to purchase a span of time, at
+so dear a rate, as for the fear of any mortal power, in my poor talent,
+_Aut Deo, aut Patriae, aut Patri patriae deesse_."[440]
+
+In spite of the singular ability of this manifesto, the art of the
+writer is undoubtedly somewhat too conspicuous to permit us to accept it
+as the kind of document which would be produced by one who felt himself
+confronted by a serious peril. An interesting and most pertinent
+commentary is supplied by a contemporary Jesuit, Giles Schondonck,
+Rector of St. Omers College, in a letter to Father Baldwin, the same of
+whom we have already heard in connection with the Plot.[441]
+
+Schondonck has, he says, read and re-read Cecil's book, which Baldwin
+had lent him. If his opinion be required, he finds in it many flowers of
+wit and eloquence, and it is a composition well adapted for its object;
+but the original letter which has evoked this brilliant rejoinder is a
+manifest fraud, not emanating from any Catholic, but devised by the
+enemies of the Church for her injury. The writers plainly contradict
+themselves. They begin by denouncing the Powder Plot as impious and
+abominable, and they do so most righteously, and they declare its
+authors to have been turbulent spirits and not religious, in which also
+they are right. But they go on to approve the design of murdering Cecil.
+What sense is there in this? If the one design be impious and
+detestable, with what colour or conscience can the other be approved?
+There is no difference of principle, though in the one case many were to
+be murdered, in the other but a single man. No one having in him any
+spark of religion could defend either project, much less approve it.
+Moreover, much that is set down is simply ridiculous. Men in the last
+extremity of sickness, or broken down by sorrow, are not of the stuff
+whereof those are made by whom desperate deeds are done.
+
+From another Jesuit we obtain instructive information which at least
+serves to show what was the opinion of Catholics as to the way in which
+things were being managed. This is conveyed in a letter addressed
+December 1st, 1606, to the famous Father Parsons by Father Richard
+Blount, Father Garnet's successor as superior of the English
+mission.[442] It must be remembered that this was not meant for the
+public eye, and in fact was never published. It cannot have been
+intended to obtain credence for a particular version of history, and it
+was written to him who, of all men, was behind the scenes so far as the
+English Jesuits were concerned. Much of it is in cipher which,
+fortunately, has been interpreted for us by the recipient.
+
+Blount begins with a piece of intelligence which is startling enough.
+Amongst the lords of the council none was a more zealous enemy of Popery
+than the chamberlain, the Earl of Suffolk,[443] who was more than once
+on the commission for expelling priests and Jesuits, and had in
+particular been so energetic in the matter of the Powder Plot that
+Salisbury modestly confessed that in regard of the "discovery" he had
+himself been "much less forward."[444] Now, however, we are told, only a
+twelvemonth later, that this nobleman and his wife are ready for a
+sufficient fee to procure "some kind of peace" for the Catholics. The
+needful sum may probably be raised through the Spanish Ambassador, but
+the issue is doubtful "because Salisbury will resist."--"Yet such is the
+want of money with the chamberlain at this time--whose expenses are
+infinite--that either Salisbury must supply, or else he must needs break
+with him."[445]
+
+After some particulars concerning the jealousy against the Scots, and
+the matter of the union (which "sticketh much in the Parliament's
+teeth") Blount goes on to relate how Cecil has been attempting to float
+a second Powder Plot--the scene being this time the king's court itself.
+He has had another letter brought in, to set it going, and had seemingly
+calculated on capturing the writer himself and some of his brethren in
+connection with it. In this, however, he has been foiled, and the matter
+appears to have been dropped. In Blount's own words:[446]
+
+"Now these last days we expected some new stratagem, because Salisbury
+pretended a letter to be brought to his lordship found by chance in St.
+Clement's Churchyard, written in ciphers, wherein were many persons
+named, and a question asked, whether there were any concavity under the
+stage in the court. But belike the device failed, and so we hear no
+words of it. About this time this house was ransacked, where by chance
+Blount came late the night before, finding four more, Talbot, N. Smith,
+Wright, Arnold; being all besieged from morning to night. If things had
+fallen out as was expected, then that letter would have haply been
+spoken of, whereas now it is very secret, and only served to pick a
+thanks of King James, with whom Salisbury keepeth his credit by such
+tricks, as upon whose vigilancy his majesty's life dependeth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One other feature of the after history demands consideration. As Fuller
+tells us,[447] "a learned author, making mention of this treason,
+breaketh forth into the following rapture:
+
+ 'Excidat illa dies aevo, ne postera credant
+ Saecula; nos certe taceamus, et obruta multa
+ Nocte tegi propriae patiamur crimina gentis.'
+
+ 'Oh, let that day be quite dashed out of time,
+ And not believ'd by the next generation;
+ In night of silence we'll conceal the crime,
+ Thereby to save the credit of the nation.'"
+
+"A wish," he adds, "which in my opinion, hath more of poetry than of
+piety therein, and from which I must be forced to dissent." Assuredly
+if it were judged that silence and oblivion should be the lot of the
+conspiracy, no stranger means were ever adopted to secure the desired
+object. A public thanksgiving was appointed to be held every year, on
+the anniversary of the "discovery;" a special service for that day was
+inserted in the Anglican liturgy, and Gunpowder Plot Sermons kept the
+memory of the Treason green in the mind not of one but of many
+generations.
+
+Moreover, the country was flooded with literature on the subject, in
+prose and rhyme, and the example of Milton is sufficient to show how
+favourite a topic it was with youthful poets essaying to try their
+wings.[448]
+
+In regard of the history, one line was consistently adopted. The Church
+of England in its calendar marked November 5th, as the _Papists'
+Conspiracy_, and in the collect appointed for the day the king and
+estates of the realm were described as being "by Popish treachery
+appointed as sheep to the slaughter, in a most barbarous and savage
+manner, beyond the examples of former ages." Similarly, preachers and
+writers alike concurred in saying little or nothing about the actual
+conspirators, but much about the iniquity of Rome; the official
+character of the Plot, and its sanction, even its first suggestion, by
+the highest authorities of the Church, being the chief feature of the
+tale hammered year after year into the ears of the English people. The
+details of history supplied are frequently pure and unmixed fables.[449]
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. IV.]
+
+Nor was the pencil less active than the pen in popularizing the same
+belief. Great was the ingenuity spent in devising and producing pictures
+which should impress on the minds of the most illiterate a holy horror
+of the Church which had doomed the nation to destruction. One of the
+most elaborate of these was headed by an inscription which admirably
+summarizes the moral of the tale.
+
+THE POWDER TREASON.--Propounded by _Satan_: Approved by _Antichrist_
+[_i.e._ the Pope]: Enterprised by _Papists_: Practized by _Traitors_:
+Revealed by an _Eagle_ [Monteagle]: Expounded by an _Oracle_ [King
+James]: Founded in _Hell_: Confounded in _Heaven_.
+
+Accordingly we find representations of Lucifer, the Pope, the King of
+Spain, the General of the Jesuits, and other such worthies, conspiring
+in the background while the redoubtable Guy walks arm in arm with a
+demon to fire the mine, the latter grasping a papal Bull (unknown to the
+Bullarium), expedited to promote the project: or again, Faukes and
+Catesby stand secretly conspiring in the middle of the street, while
+Father Garnet, in full Jesuit habit (or what is meant for such) exhorts
+them to go on: or a priest gives the conspirators "the sacrament of
+secrecy;" or representative Romish dignitaries blow threats and curses
+against England and her Parliament House,--or the Jesuits are buried in
+Hell in recompense of their perfidy.
+
+It cannot, however, escape remark that while the limners have been
+conscientiously careful in respect of these details, they have one and
+all discarded accuracy in regard of another matter in which we might
+naturally have expected it. In no single instance is Guy Faukes
+represented as about to blow up the right house. Sometimes it is the
+House of Commons that he is going to destroy, more frequently the
+Painted Chamber, often a nondescript building corresponding to nothing
+in particular,--but in no single instance is it the House of Lords.
+
+[Illustration: THE POWDER PLOT. V.]
+
+The most extraordinary instance of so strange a vagary is afforded by a
+plate produced immediately after the occurrence it commemorates, in the
+year 1605 itself.[450] In this, Faukes with his inseparable lantern, but
+without the usual spurs, is seen advancing to the door of the "cellar,"
+which stands conspicuous above ground. Aloft is seen the crescent moon,
+represented in exactly the right phase for the date of the
+discovery.[451] The accuracy exhibited as to this singular detail makes
+it more than ever extraordinary that the building to which he directs
+his steps is unquestionably St. Stephen's Chapel--The House of Commons.
+
+One point of the history, in itself apparently insignificant, was at the
+time invested with such extravagant importance, as to suggest a question
+in its regard, namely the day itself whereon the marvellous deliverance
+took place. A curious combination of circumstances alone assigned it to
+the notorious Fifth of November. Parliament, as we have seen, was
+originally appointed to meet on the 3rd of October, but was suddenly
+adjourned for about a month, and so little reason did there seem to be
+for the prorogation[452] as to fill the conspirators with alarm lest
+some suspicion of their design had prompted it; wherefore they sent
+Thomas Winter to attend the prorogation ceremony, and observe the
+demeanour of those who took part in it. Afterwards, though the discovery
+might have easily been made any time during the preceding week, nothing
+practical was done till the fateful day itself had actually begun, when,
+as the acute Lingard has not failed to observe, a remarkable change at
+once came over the conduct of the authorities, who discarding the
+aimless and dilatory manner of proceeding which had hitherto
+characterized them, went straight to the point with a promptitude and
+directness leaving nothing to be desired.
+
+Whatever were their motive in all this, the action of the government
+undoubtedly brought it about that the great blow should be struck on a
+day which not a little enhanced the evidence for the providential
+character of the whole affair. Tuesday was King James' lucky day, more
+especially when it happened to be the 5th of the month, for on Tuesday,
+August the 5th, 1600, he had escaped the mysterious treason of the
+Gowries.
+
+This coincidence evidently created a profound impression. "Curious folks
+observe," wrote Chamberlain to Carleton,[453] "that this deliverance
+happened on the fifth of November, answerable to the fifth of August,
+both Tuesdays; and this plot to be executed by Johnson [the assumed name
+of Faukes], and that at Johnstown [_i.e._, Perth]." On the 27th of
+November, Lake suggested to the Archbishop of Canterbury,[454] that as
+a perpetual memorial of this so providential circumstance, the
+anniversary sermon should always be delivered upon a Tuesday. Two days
+later, the Archbishop wrote to his suffragans,[455] reminding them how
+on a Tuesday his majesty had escaped the Gowries, and now, on another
+Tuesday, a peril still more terrible, which must have ruined the whole
+nation, had not the Holy Ghost illumined the king's heart with a divine
+spirit. In remembrance of which singular instance of God's governance,
+there was to be an annual celebration.[456]
+
+Most important of all, King James himself much appreciated the
+significance of this token of divine protection, and not only impressed
+this upon his Parliament, but proroguing it forthwith till after
+Christmas, selected the same propitious day of the week for its next
+meeting, as a safeguard against possible danger. "Since it has pleased
+God," said his majesty,[457] "to grant me two such notable deliveries
+upon one day of the week, which was Tuesday, and likewise one day of the
+month, which was the fifth, thereby to teach me that as it was the same
+devil that still persecuted me, so it was one and the same God that
+still mightily delivered me, I thought it therefore not amiss, that the
+twenty-first day which fell to be upon Tuesday, should be the day of
+meeting of this next session of parliament, hoping and assuring myself,
+that the same God, who hath now granted me and you all so notable and
+gracious a delivery, shall prosper all our affairs at that next session,
+and bring them to an happy conclusion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whatever may be thought of this particular element of its history, it is
+perfectly clear that the fashion in which the Plot was habitually set
+before the English people, and which contributed more than anything else
+to work the effect actually produced, was characterized from the first
+by an utter disregard of truth on the part of those whose purposes it so
+opportunely served, and with such lasting results.
+
+
+A SUMMARY.
+
+The evidence available to us appears to establish principally two
+points,--that the true history of the Gunpowder Plot is now known to no
+man, and that the history commonly received is certainly untrue.
+
+It is quite impossible to believe that the government were not aware of
+the Plot long before they announced its discovery.
+
+It is difficult to believe that the proceedings of the conspirators were
+actually such as they are related to have been.
+
+It is unquestionable that the government consistently falsified the
+story and the evidence as presented to the world, and that the points
+upon which they most insisted prove upon examination to be the most
+doubtful.
+
+There are grave reasons for the conclusion that the whole transaction
+was dexterously contrived for the purpose which in fact it opportunely
+served, by those who alone reaped benefit from it, and who showed
+themselves so unscrupulous in the manner of reaping.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[423] _Criminal Trials_, ii. I.
+
+[424] _Nugae Antiquae_, i. 374.
+
+[425] _Harleian Miscellany_, iv. 249.
+
+[426] This terrible state of things was alleged as a principal reason
+for the prorogation of the Parliament for two months and a half. As a
+matter of fact, the rebels had been overthrown and captured the day
+before that on which the king's speech was delivered, and news of that
+event was received that same evening.
+
+[427] _Commons' Journals._
+
+[428] In the preamble of the Act so passed we read: "Forasmuch as it is
+found by daily experience, that many his Majesty's subjects that adhere
+in their hearts to the popish religion, by the infection drawn from
+thence, and by the wicked and devilish counsel of Jesuits, seminaries,
+and other like persons dangerous to the church and state, are so
+perverted in the point of their loyalties and due allegiance unto the
+King's majesty, and the Crown of England, as they are ready to entertain
+and execute any treasonable conspiracies and practices, as evidently
+appears by that more than barbarous and horrible attempt to have blown
+up with gunpowder the King, Queen ..." etc., etc.
+
+[429] _Negotiations_, p. 256.
+
+[430] "Our parliament is prorogued till the 18th of next November. Many
+things have been considerable in it, but especially the zeal of both
+Houses for the preservation of God's true religion, by establishing many
+good laws against Popery and those firebrands, Jesuits, and Priests,
+that seek to bring all things into confusion. His Majesty resolveth once
+more by proclamation to banish them all; and afterwards, if they shall
+not obey, then the laws shall go upon them without any more
+forbearance."--Cecil to Winwood, June 7th, 1606 (Winwood, _Memorials_,
+ii. 219).
+
+[431] In the _Dictionary of National Biography_, and Doyle's _Official
+Baronage_, this installation is erroneously assigned to 1605.
+
+[432] _Chronicle_, p. 408.
+
+[433] Continuation of Stowe's _Annals_, p. 883.
+
+[434] Letter iii.
+
+[435] At Northumberland's trial Lord Salisbury thus expressed
+himself: "I have taken paines in my nowne heart to clear my lord's
+offences, which now have leade me from the contemplation of his
+virtues; for I knowe him vertuous, wyse, valiaunte, and of use and
+ornamente to the state.... The cause of this combustion was the
+papistes seekinge to restore their religion. Non libens dico, sed res
+ipsa loquitur."--Hawarde, _Les Reportes_, etc.
+
+[436] _History_, vii. 84, note. On this subject Mr. Sawyer, the editor
+of Winwood (1715), has the following remark: "We meet with some account
+of his [Northumberland's] offence, though couched in such tender terms,
+that 'tis a little difficult to conceive it deserved so heavy a
+punishment as a fine of L30,000 and perpetual imprisonment."
+(_Memorials_, iii. 287, note.)
+
+[437] To Winwood, _Memorials_, iii. 287.
+
+[438] _Traditional Memoirs_, p. 214.
+
+[439] _An Answere to certaine Scandalous Papers, scattered abroad under
+colour of a Catholicke Admonition._ "Qui facit vivere, docet orare."
+Imprinted at London by Robert Barker, Printer to the King's most
+Eccellent Majestie. Anno 1606.
+
+This was published in January, 1605-6, on the 28th of which month Sir W.
+Browne, writing from Flushing, mentions that "my lord of Salisbury hath
+lately published a little booke as a kynd of answer to som secrett
+threatning libelling letters cast into his chamber." (Stowe MSS., 168,
+74, f. 308.)
+
+[440] On this subject Cornwallis wrote to Salisbury (Winwood, ii. 193):
+"Many reports are here spread of the Combination against your Lordship,
+and that five English Romanists would resolve your death. It seems that
+since they cannot be allowed _Sacrificium incruentum_, they will now
+altogether put in use their sacrifices of blood. But I hope and suppose
+that their hearts and their hands want much of the vigour that rests in
+their wills and their pens. Your Lordship doth take especial courage in
+this, that they single you out as the chief and principal watch Tower of
+your Country and Commonwealth, and turn the strength of their malice to
+you whom they hold the discoverer of all their unnatural and destructive
+inventions against their prince and country," etc.
+
+[441] P.R.O. _Dom. James I._ xviii. 97, February 27th, N.S., 1606. The
+original, which is in Latin, has been utterly misunderstood by the
+Calendarer of State Papers.
+
+[442] Stonyhurst MSS., _Anglia_, iii. 72.
+
+[443] Thomas Howard, cr. 1603.
+
+[444] To the ambassadors.
+
+[445] Father Blount's account is undoubtedly in keeping with what we
+know of the Earl, and especially of his Countess, who was a sister of
+Sir Thomas Knyvet, the captor of Guy Faukes. Suffolk, in 1614, became
+Lord High Treasurer, but four years afterwards grave irregularities were
+discovered in his office; he was accused of embezzlement and extortion,
+in which work his wife was proved to have been even more active than
+himself. They were sentenced to restore all money wrongfully extorted,
+to a fine of L30,000, and to imprisonment during pleasure.
+
+[446] In this letter all proper names are in cipher, as well as various
+other words.
+
+[447] _Church History_, x. 40.
+
+[448] We have four Latin epigrams of Milton's, _In proditionem
+Bombardicam_, which, though pointless, are bitterly anti-Catholic. A
+longer poem, of 226 lines, _In quintum Novembris_, is still more
+virulent.
+
+It is somewhat remarkable that the universal Shakespeare should make no
+allusion to the Plot, beyond the doubtful reference to equivocation in
+_Macbeth_ (ii. 3). He was at the time of its occurrence in the full flow
+of his dramatic activity.
+
+[449] See Appendix L, _Myths and Legends of the Powder Plot_.
+
+[450] Brit. Mus. Print Room, Crace Collection, portf. xv. 28. This is
+reproduced, as our frontispiece.
+
+[451] There was a new moon at 11.30 p.m. on October 31st.
+
+[452] The reasons assigned in the proclamation for this prorogation are
+plainly insufficient: viz., "That the holding of it [the Parliament] so
+soone is not convenient, as well for that the ordinary course of our
+subjects resorting to the citie for their usuall affaires at the Terme
+is not for the most part till Allhallowtide or thereabouts." Why, then,
+had the meeting been fixed for so unsuitable a date?
+
+[453] November 7th, 1605. (_Dom. James I._)
+
+[454] Tanner MSS. lxxv. 44.
+
+[455] _Ibid._
+
+[456] On his arrival in England, as Osborne tells us (_Memoirs_, p.
+276), King James "brought a new holiday into the Church of England,
+wherein God had publick thanks given him for his majestie's deliverance
+out of the hands of Earle Goury;" but the introduction was not a
+success, Englishmen and Scots alike ridiculing it. Gunpowder Plot Day
+was more fortunate.
+
+[457] _Harleian Miscellany_, iv. 251.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A.
+
+NOTES ON THE ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+_Frontispiece. The Powder Plot. I._
+
+FROM the Crace Collection, British Museum, _Portf._ xv. 20. Thus
+described in the catalogue of the collection:
+
+"A small etching of the House of Lords. Guy Fawkes in the foreground.
+W.E. exc. 1605."
+
+This plate is of exceptional interest as having been executed within
+five months of the discovery of the Plot, _i.e._, previously to March
+25th, 1606, the first day of the year, Old Style.
+
+Guy Faukes is represented as approaching the House of Commons (St.
+Stephen's Chapel), not the House of Lords, as the catalogue says.
+
+
+_Title-Page._
+
+Obverse, or reverse, of a medal struck, by order of the Dutch senate, to
+commemorate the double event of the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot and
+the expulsion of the Jesuits from Holland. Drawn from a copy of the
+medal in pewter, by Paul Woodroffe. The design here exhibited is thus
+described in Hawkins and Frank's _Medallic Illustrations_:
+
+"The name of Jehovah, in Hebrew, radiate, within a crown of thorns."
+
+"Legend, chronogrammatic,
+
+ Non DorMItastI AntIstes IaCobI"
+
+[which gives the date 1605]
+
+On its other face the medal bears a snake gliding amid roses and lilies
+[symbolizing Jesuit intrigues in England and France], with the legend
+_Detectus qui latuit. S.C._ [Senatus Consulto]."
+
+This is reproduced on the cover.
+
+
+_Group of Conspirators_ (p. 3).
+
+From a print published at Amsterdam.
+
+Eight conspirators are represented, five being omitted, viz., Grant,
+Keyes, Digby, Rokewood, and Tresham.
+
+Bates, as a servant, wears no hat.
+
+
+_The Houses of Parliament in the time of James I._ (pp. 56-7).
+
+Restored from the best authorities, and drawn for the author by H.W.
+Brewer.
+
+
+_Ground Plan of House of Lords and adjacent Buildings_ (p. 59).
+
+Extracted from the "Foundation plan of the Ancient Palace of
+Westminster; measured, drawn and engraved by J. T. Smith" (_Antiquities
+of Westminster_, p. 125)
+
+
+_The House of Lords in 1807_ (p. 61).
+
+From J.T. Smith's _Antiquities of Westminster_.
+
+This sketch, made from the east, or river, side, was taken during the
+demolition of the buildings erected against the sides of the Parliament
+House. These were put up previously to the time when Hollar made his
+drawing of the interior (temp. Charles II.), which shows the walls hung
+with tapestry, the windows having been blocked up.
+
+According to a writer in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ (No. 70, July,
+1800), who signs himself "Architect," in a print of the time of James I.
+the tapestry is not seen, and the House "appears to have preserved much
+of its original work." The only print answering to this description
+which I have been able to find exhibits the windows, but is of no value
+for historical purposes, as it is a reproduction of one of the time of
+Queen Elizabeth, the figure of the sovereign alone being changed. This
+engraving is said to be "taken from a painted print in the Cottonian
+Library," of which I can find no trace. [B. Mus., K. 24. 19. b.]
+
+To the left of our illustration is seen the gable of the Prince's
+Chamber. The door to the right of this opened into the cellar, and by
+it, according to tradition, Faukes was to have made his exit.
+
+In front of this is seen part of the garden attached to Percy's lodging.
+
+
+_Interior of "Guy Faukes' Cellar"_ (p. 71).
+
+Two views of the interior of the "cellar," drawn by H. W. Brewer, from
+elevations in J.T. Smith's _Antiquities of Westminster_, p. 39.
+
+The remains of a buttery-hatch, at the southern end, testify to the
+ancient use of the chamber as the palace kitchen; of which the Earl of
+Northampton made mention at Father Garnet's trial.
+
+The very ancient doorway in the eastern wall, seen on the left of the
+picture, was of Saxon workmanship, and, like the foundations beneath,
+probably dated from the time of Edward the Confessor, who first erected
+this portion of the palace, most of which had been rebuilt about the
+time of Henry III. By this doorway, according to some accounts, Faukes
+intended to escape after firing the train, though others assign this
+distinction to one near the other end.
+
+These two illustrations were originally prepared for the _Daily Graphic_
+of November 5th, 1894, and it is by the courtesy of the proprietors of
+that journal that they are here reproduced.
+
+
+_Vault under the East End of the Painted Chamber_ (p. 73).
+
+From Brayley and Britton's _Palace of Westminster_, p. 247.
+
+This has been constantly depicted and described as "Guy Faukes' Cellar."
+
+
+_Arches from Guy Faukes' Cellar_ (p. 75).
+
+Drawn for the author by H. W. Brewer.
+
+Sir John Soane, who in 1823 took down the old House of Lords, removed
+the arches from the "cellar" beneath it, to his own house in Lincoln's
+Inn Fields, now the Soane Museum, where they are still to be seen in a
+small court adjoining the building. They do not, however, appear to have
+been set up precisely in their original form, being dwarfed by the
+omission of some stones, presumably that they might occupy less space.
+In our illustration they are represented exactly as they now stand,
+with the modern building behind them. Some incongruous relics of other
+stonework which have been introduced amongst them have, however, been
+omitted.
+
+The architecture of these arches, and of the adjacent Prince's Chamber,
+assigns them to the best period of thirteenth century Gothic.
+
+
+_Cell at S.E. corner of Painted Chamber_ (p. 83).
+
+Often styled "Guy Faukes' Cell."
+
+From Brayley and Britton, _op. cit._, p. 360.
+
+There appears to be no reason for associating this with Faukes.
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. II._ (p. 90).
+
+"Invented by Samuel Ward, Preacher, of Ipswich. Imprinted at Amsterdam,
+1621." [British Museum, _Political and Personal Satires_, i. 41.]
+
+This is the portion to the right of a composition representing on the
+left the Spanish Armada, and in the centre a council table at which are
+gathered the Devil, the Pope, the King of Spain, the General of the
+Jesuits, and others. An eye above is fixed on the cellar. Faukes in this
+case is going to blow up the Painted Chamber.
+
+
+_Interior of the old House of Lords (Scene on occasion of the King's
+Speech, 1755)_ (p. 97).
+
+This plate represents the House in the reign of George II. In the
+century and a half since the time of the Powder Plot it is probable that
+the windows in the side walls had been blocked up, and the tapestry
+hung. The latter represented the defeat of the Armada.
+
+[From Maitland's _London_ (1756), ii. 1340.]
+
+
+_Lord Monteagle and the Letter_ (p. 115).
+
+From _Mischeefes Mystery_.
+
+King James enthroned, with crown and sceptre, upon a dais, at the foot
+of which stands the Earl of Salisbury. An eagle bears a letter in its
+beak, to receive which the king and his minister extend their left
+hands.
+
+The English poem, by John Vicars, embellished with this woodcut, was
+published in 1617, being a much expanded version of one in Latin
+hexameters, entitled _Pietas Pontificia_, by Francis Herring, which
+appeared in 1606.
+
+
+_Arrest of Guy Faukes_ (p. 125).
+
+From _Mischeefes Mystery_.
+
+Guy Faukes booted and spurred, and with his lantern, prepares to open a
+door at the extremity of the Painted Chamber. Sir Thomas Knyvet with his
+retinue approaches unseen. The stars and the beams from the lantern show
+that it is the middle of the night.
+
+
+_Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot_ (p. 136).
+
+From a print in the Guildhall Library.
+
+Catesby, Faukes, and Garnet (the latter in what is apparently meant for
+the Jesuit habit) stand in the middle of the street conspiring
+secretly. Through the open door of the "cellar" the powder barrels are
+seen.
+
+This illustration (without the coins) stands at the head of Book XVIII.
+of M. Rapin de Thoyras' _History of England_, translated by N. Tindal.
+
+
+"_Guy Faukes' Lantern_" (p. 139).
+
+Drawn by H.W. Brewer.
+
+This object, the authenticity of which is not unquestionable, is
+exhibited in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. It bears the inscription,
+"Laterna illa ipsa qua usus est, et cum qua deprehensus Guido Faux in
+crypta subterranea ubi domo Parliamenti difflandae operam dabat. Ex dono
+Robti Heywood nuper Academiae Procuratoris, Ap. 4^o, 1641."
+
+It will be remembered that the honour of having arrested Faukes has been
+claimed for one of the name of Heywood.
+
+The history of the famous lantern has not escaped the variations which
+we are accustomed to meet with on other points. Faukes is generally said
+to have been found with it in his hands, and it has consequently become
+an inseparable adjunct in pictures of him. On the other hand, we are
+told, "In a corner, behind the door, was a dark lantern containing a
+light" (Brayley and Britton, _Palace of Westminster_, p. 377).
+
+
+_Thomas Percy_ (p. 149).
+
+From Grainger.
+
+Around the portrait are four small engravings representing:
+
+1. The arrest of Guy Faukes, who is here called "Thomas Ichrup."
+
+2. The presentation of Thomas Ichrup to the King of Jerusalem (_i.e._,
+the British Solomon).
+
+3. The assault and bombardment of the "citadel" to which Percy has fled.
+
+4. Percy killed by an arrow.
+
+
+_Thomas Winter's Confession_ (p. 168).
+
+A portion of the copy of Winter's confession, in the handwriting of
+Levinus Munck, Lord Salisbury's private secretary, and dated November
+23rd. In the margin is a note in the handwriting of King James,
+objecting to a certain "uncleare phrase," which has been altered in
+accordance with the royal wish. In the printed version it appears in the
+amended form.
+
+
+_Signatures exemplifying the Effects of Torture_ (p. 173).
+
+Three signatures of Faukes (November 9th, 1605), and three of Father
+Edward Oldcorne (March 6th, 1605-6), at different stages of the same
+examination.
+
+
+_Guy Faukes' Confession of November 9th, 1605_ (p. 199).
+
+A portion of this confession, in which Faukes speaks of the oath taken
+by the conspirators and of their reception of the sacrament at the hands
+of Father John Gerard, adding, however, that "Gerard was not acquainted
+with their purpose." The last clause has been marked for omission by Sir
+Edward Coke who has written in the margin _hucusq._ ("thus far").
+
+The letter B in the margin is also inserted by Coke, who habitually
+indicated by such letters which portions of the depositions were to be
+read in court and which omitted, all being always suppressed which told
+in any way in favour of the accused.
+
+The document is written by a clerk, and signed by Faukes at the foot of
+each page.
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. III._ (p. 215).
+
+This is taken from a large plate [British Museum, _Political and
+Personal Satires_, i. 67], of which only the lower portion is here
+reproduced. At the top is the inscription:
+
+THE POWDER TREASON, Propounded by Sathan, Approved by Anti-Christ,
+Enterprised by Papists, Practized by Traitors, Reveled by an Eagle,
+Expounded by an Oracle.--Founded in Hell, Confounded in Heaven.
+
+Beneath are many emblematical devices.
+
+In the portion here exhibited, King James is seen on his throne with
+Lords and Commons before him. Under the floor is a diminutive figure of
+Faukes with an ample store of barrels. At the bottom, in the left hand
+corner, some of the conspirators receive the sacrament from Father
+Gerard: on the right they are executed. On a lunette are the thirteen
+conspirators, with the arch-traitor Garnet in the centre, the band being
+described as "The Pope's Saltpeeter Saints." Within the lunette are the
+Jesuits in Hell.
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. IV._ (p. 227).
+
+This is the portion on the left of a composite picture [British Museum,
+_Political and Personal Satires_, 63], on the right being represented
+the catastrophe known as the "Blackfriars Downfall." On Sunday, October
+26th, 1623, many Catholics having assembled in an upper room of the
+French ambassador's house, in Blackfriars, to hear a sermon from the
+Jesuit, Father Drury, the floor collapsed, and many, including the
+preacher, were killed. As October 26th, O.S., corresponded to November
+5th, N.S., it was ingeniously discovered that the accident was meant to
+signalize Gunpowder Plot day, though this fell on November 5th, O.S., or
+November 15th, N.S.
+
+In our illustration the Parliament House is represented by a nondescript
+edifice, the wall of which is partially removed, showing King James and
+some of the Peers. An oven-like vault beneath represents the "cellar,"
+well stored with barrels, which Faukes is preparing to light with a
+torch fanned by a crowned fiend with a pair of bellows. A company of
+halberdiers approaches under the guidance of an angel. In the background
+is a royal funeral procession.
+
+A Latin inscription is attached which runs thus:
+
+ "Anno 1623, Quinto Novembris, eo scripto die quo Angliae
+ Parliamentum, a^o 1605, proditione et insidiis Jesuitarum, pulvere
+ nitreo inflammari et in aethera spargi debuit, Jesuitarum conventus
+ Londini, ... ad missam et conciones audiendas congregatus, fatali
+ providentia, aedium ruina praecipitatus et dissipatus est, oppressis
+ centum et plus totidem vulneratis.
+
+ Loiolides sanctos efflare volebat ad astra;
+ Astra repercutiunt fulmine Loiolidem.
+ Loiolides, sine te penetrabit astra fidelis:
+ Tu fato ad Stygias praecipitaris aquas."
+
+
+_The Powder Plot. V._ (p. 229).
+
+This is an edition of Samuel Ward's print described above, improved and
+embellished by a "Transmariner" in 1689. [British Museum, _Political and
+Personal Satires_, i. 43.]
+
+The tent in which the council table stands is ornamented at the four
+corners with figures of a wolf, a parrot, an owl, and a dragon: a
+cockatrice is on the table; on the top lie a gun, a sword, and a brace
+of pistols. A demon, bearing behind him a Papal Bull, accompanies
+Faukes, beneath whose lantern, as a play on his name, is written _Fax_.
+At the door of the cellar are scorpions and a serpent. On the top of the
+barrels within are seen the "yron barres," placed there to make the
+breach the greater.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B. (p. 33).
+
+_Sir Everard Digby's letter to Salisbury._
+
+
+IT seems to have been always assumed that this celebrated letter, which
+is undated, was written after the failure of the Gunpowder Plot, and the
+consequent arrest of Sir Everard, and doubtless to some extent internal
+evidence supports this view, as the writer speaks of himself as
+deserving punishment, and of "our offence." It is, moreover, clear that
+the letter, which is undated, cannot have been written before May 4th,
+1605, the date of Cecil's earldom. On the other hand, the whole tone of
+the document appears utterly inconsistent with the supposition that it
+was written by one branded with the stigma of such a crime as the
+Powder Plot. Some of the expressions used, especially in the opening
+sentence, appear, likewise, incompatible with such a supposition, and
+the letter bears the usual form of address for those sent in ordinary
+course of post, "To the Right Hon. the Earl of Salisburie give these";
+it has moreover been sealed with a crest or coat-of-arms; all of which
+is quite unlike a document prepared by a prisoner for those who had him
+under lock and key. It is noteworthy, too, that at the trial, according
+to the testimony of the official account itself, on the very subject of
+the treatment of Catholics, Salisbury acknowledged "that Sir E. Digby
+was his ally."
+
+It seems probable, therefore, that the letter was written before Digby
+had been entangled by Catesby in the conspiracy (_i.e._, between May and
+September, 1605). If so, what was the "offence" of which he speaks? The
+answer to this question would throw an interesting light on this
+perplexed history. The following is Sir Everard's letter:
+
+"Right Honourable, I have better reflected on your late speeches than at
+the present I could do, both for the small stay which I made, and for my
+indisposition that day, not being very well, and though perhaps your
+Lordship may judge me peremptory in meddling, and idle in propounding,
+yet the desire I have to establish the King in safety will not suffer me
+to be silent.
+
+"One part of your Lordship's speech (as I remember) was that the King
+could not get so much from the Pope (even then when his Majesty had done
+nothing against Catholics) as a promise that he would not excommunicate
+him, so long as that mild course was continued, wherefore it gave
+occasion to suspect, that if Catholics were suffered to increase, the
+Pope might afterwards proceed to excommunication, if the King would not
+change his religion. But to take away that doubt, I do assure myself
+that his Holiness may be drawn to manifest so contrary a disposition of
+excommunicating the King, that he will proceed with the same course
+against all such as shall go about to disturb the King's quiet and happy
+reign; and the willingness of Catholics, especially of priests and
+Jesuits, is such as I dare undertake to procure any priest in England
+(though it were the Superior of the Jesuits) to go himself to Rome to
+negotiate this business, and that both he and all other religious men
+(till the Pope's pleasure be known) shall take any spiritual course to
+stop the effect that may proceed from any discontented or despairing
+Catholic.
+
+"And I doubt not but his return would bring both assurance that such
+course should not be taken with the King, and that it should be
+performed against any that should seek to disturb him for religion. If
+this were done, there could then be no cause to fear any Catholic, and
+this may be done only with those proceedings (which as I understood your
+lordship) should be used. If your Lordship apprehend it to be worth the
+doing, I shall be glad to be the instrument, for no hope to put off from
+myself any punishment, but only that I wish safety to the King and ease
+to Catholics. If your Lordship and the State think it fit to deal
+severely with Catholics, within brief there will be massacres,
+rebellions, and desperate attempts against the King and State. For it is
+a general received reason amongst Catholics, that there is not that
+expecting and suffering course now to be run that was in the Queen's
+time, who was the last of her line, and last in expectance to run
+violent courses against Catholics; for then it was hoped that the King
+that now is would have been at least free from persecuting, as his
+promise was before his coming into this realm, and as divers his
+promises have been since his coming, saying that he would take no soul
+money nor blood. Also, as it appeared, was the whole body of the
+Council's pleasure, when they sent for divers of the better sort of
+Catholics (as Sir Thos. Tressam and others) and told them it was the
+King's pleasure to forgive the payment of Catholics, so long as they
+should carry themselves dutifully and well. All these promises every man
+sees broken, and to thrust them further in despair, most Catholics take
+note of a vehement book written by Mr. Attorney, whose drift (as I have
+heard) is to prove that the only being a Catholic is to be a traitor,
+which book coming forth, after the breach of so many promises, and
+before the ending of such a violent parliament, can work no less effect
+in men's minds than a belief that every Catholic will be brought within
+that compass before the King and State have done with them. And I know,
+as the priest himself told me, that if he had not hindered there had
+somewhat been attempted, before our offence, to give ease to Catholics.
+But being so safely prevented, and so necessary to avoid, I doubt not
+but your Lordship and the rest of the Lords will think of a more mild
+and undoubted safe course, in which I will undertake the performance of
+what I have promised and as much as can be expected, and when I have
+done, I shall be as willing to die as I am ready to offer my service,
+and expect not nor desire favour for it, either before the doing it, nor
+in the doing it, nor after it is done, but refer myself to the resolved
+course for me. So, leaving to trouble your Lordship any further, I
+humbly take my leave. Your Lordship's poor bedesman, EV. DIGBY."
+
+_Addressed_ "To the Right Honourable the Earl of Salisburie give these."
+
+_Sealed._ [P.R.O. _Dom. James I._ xvii. 10.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX C. (p. 34).
+
+_The Question of Succession._
+
+
+FATHER PARSONS' well-known book on this subject, written under the
+pseudonym of Doleman, was denounced by Sir Edward Coke as containing
+innumerable treasons and falsehoods. In fact, as may be seen in the work
+itself, it is an exhaustive and careful statement of the descent of each
+of the possible claimants, and of other considerations which must enter
+into the settlement. Sir Francis Inglefield wrote that it was necessary
+to take some step of this kind, to set men thinking on so important a
+question which would soon have to be decided, for that the anti-Catholic
+party had made it treason to discuss it during the queen's life, with
+intent to foist a successor of their own selection on the nation, when
+the moment should arrive, trusting to the ignorance universally
+prevalent as to the rights of the matter; but that such lack of
+information could not help the people to a sound decision. [Stonyhurst
+MSS., _Anglia_, iii. 32.]
+
+The Spanish sympathies of Parsons and his party were afterwards made
+much of as evidence of their traitorous disposition. On this subject it
+must be noted (1) the Infanta of Spain was amongst those whose claim was
+urged on genealogical grounds; (2) the project was to marry her to an
+English nobleman. As Parsons tells us, when she married and was endowed
+with another estate, English Catholics ceased to think of her. [_Ibid._
+ii. 444.] (3) Father Garnet notes that, "since the old king of Spain
+died [1598], there hath been no pretence ... for the Infanta, or the
+King [of Spain], or any of that family, but for any that should maintain
+Catholic religion, and principally for His Majesty" [James I.]. [_Ibid._
+iii. n. 41.]
+
+A remark of Parsons' on this point, which at the time was considered
+almost blasphemous, will seem now almost a truism, viz., that the title
+of particular succession in kingdoms is founded only upon the positive
+laws of several countries, since neither kingdoms nor monarchies are of
+the essence of human society, and therefore every nation has a right to
+establish its own kings in what manner it likes, and upon what
+conditions. Wherefore, as each of the other great parties in England
+(whom he designates as Protestants and Puritans) will look chiefly to
+its own political interests, and exact from the monarch of its choice
+pledges to secure them, it behoves Catholics, being so large a part of
+the nation, to take their proper share in the settlement, and therefore
+to study betimes the arguments on which the claims of the competitors
+are severally based.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX D. (p. 36).
+
+_The Spanish Treason._
+
+
+THE history of the alleged treasonable negotiations with Spain,
+conducted by various persons whose names were afterwards connected with
+the Gunpowder Plot, appears open to the gravest doubt and suspicion. It
+would be out of place to discuss the question here, but two articles on
+the subject, by the present writer, will be found in the _Month_ for May
+and June, 1896.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX E. (p. 60).
+
+_Site of Percy's lodging_ [_see_ View, p. 56, and Plan, p. 59.]
+
+
+THAT the lodging hired by Percy stood near the south-east corner of the
+old House of Lords (_i.e._ nearer to the river than that building, and
+adjacent to, if not adjoining, the Prince's Chamber) is shown by the
+following arguments.
+
+1. John Shepherd, servant to Whynniard, gave evidence as to having on a
+certain occasion seen from the river "a boat lye cloase to the pale of
+Sir Thomas Parreys garden, and men going to and from the water through
+the back door that leadeth into Mr. Percy his lodging." [_Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, 40, part 2.]
+
+2. Faukes, in his examination of November 5th, 1605, speaks of "the
+windowe in his chamber neere the parliament house towards the water
+side."
+
+3. It is said that when digging their mine the conspirators were
+troubled by the influx of water from the river, which would be
+impossible if they were working at the opposite side of the Parliament
+House.
+
+[It has always been understood that Percy's house stood at the south end
+of the House of Lords, but Smith (_Antiquities of Westminster_, p. 39)
+places it to the south-west instead of the south-east, saying that it
+stood on the site of what was afterwards the Ordnance Office.]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX F. (p. 64).
+
+_Enrolment of Conspirators._
+
+
+The evidence on this point is most contradictory.
+
+1. The Indictment, on the trial of the conspirators, mentions the
+following dates.
+
+_May 20th, 1604._ [Besides Garnet, Greenway, Gerard, "and other
+Jesuits,"] there met together T. Winter, Faukes, Keyes, Bates, Catesby,
+Percy, the two Wrights, and Tresham, by whom the Plot was approved and
+undertaken.
+
+_March 31st, 1605_, R. Winter, Grant, and Rokewood were enlisted.
+
+[No mention is made of Digby, who was separately arraigned, nor in his
+arraignment is any date specified.]
+
+2. According to Faukes' confession of November 17th, 1605, Percy,
+Catesby, T. Winter, J. Wright, and himself were the first associates.
+Soon afterwards C. Wright was added. After Christmas, Keyes was
+initiated and received the oath. At a later period, Digby, Rokewood,
+Tresham, Grant, and R. Winter were brought in. Bates is not mentioned.
+
+[In this document the names of Keyes and R. Winter have been
+interchanged, in Cecil's writing, and thus it was printed: the latter
+being made to appear as an earlier confederate.]
+
+3. According to T. Winter's declaration of November 23rd, 1605, Catesby,
+J. Wright, and himself were the first associates, Percy and Faukes being
+presently added. Keyes was enlisted before Michaelmas, C. Wright after
+Christmas, Digby at a later period, and Tresham "last of all." No others
+are mentioned.
+
+4. Keyes--November 30th, 1605--says that he was inducted a little before
+Midsummer, 1604.
+
+5. R. Winter and Grant (January 17th, 1605-6) fix January, 1604-5, for
+their introduction to the conspiracy, and Bates (December 4th, 1605)
+gives the preceding December for his. Neither date agrees with that of
+the indictment in support of which these confessions were cited.
+
+6. There is, of course, no evidence of any kind to show that Father
+Garnet and the "other Jesuits" ever had any conference with the
+conspirators, nor was such a charge urged on his trial.
+
+7. Sir Everard Digby's case is exceptionally puzzling. All the evidence
+represents him as having been initiated late in September, or early in
+October, 1605. Among the Hatfield MSS., however, there is a letter
+addressed to Sir Everard, by one G. D., and dated June 11th, 1605,
+which treats ostensibly of a hunt for "the otter that infesteth your
+brooks," to be undertaken when the hay has been cut, but has been
+endorsed by Cecil himself, "Letter written to Sir Everard Digby--_Powder
+Treason_;" the minister thus attributing to him a knowledge of the Plot,
+more than three months before it was ever alleged that he heard of it.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX G. (p. 94).
+
+_Henry Wright the Informer._
+
+
+1. _Letter to Sir T. Challoner, April, 1604._ [_Gunpowder Plot Book_, n.
+236.]
+
+Good Sir Thomas, I am as eager for setting of the lodgings as you can
+be, and in truth whereas we desired but twenty, the discoverer had set
+and (if we accept it) can set above three score, but I told him that the
+State would take it for good service if he set twenty of the most
+principal Jesuits and seminary priests, and therewithal I gave him
+thirteen or fourteen names picked out of his own notes, among the which
+five of them were sworn to the secresy. He saith absolutely that by
+God's grace he will do it ere long, but he stayeth some few days
+purposely for the coming to town of Tesmond [Greenway] and Kempe, two
+principals; their lodgings are prepared, and they will be here, as he
+saith for certain, within these two days. For the treason, Davies
+neither hath nor will unfold himself for the discovery of it till he
+hath his pardon for it under seal, as I told you, which is now in great
+forwardness, and ready to be sealed so that you shall know all.... Your
+worship's most devoted,
+
+HEN. WRIGHT.
+
+[A pardon to Joseph Davies for all treasons and other offences appears
+on the Pardon Roll, April 25th, 1605, thus supplying the approximate
+date of the above letter.]
+
+2. _Application to the King._ [_Gunpowder Plot Book_, n. 237.]
+
+"If it may please your Majesty, can you remember that the Lord Chief
+Justice Popham and Sir Thomas Challoner, Kt., had a hand in the
+discovery of the practices of the Jesuits in the powder, and did from
+time reveal the same to your Majesty, for two years' space almost before
+the said treason burst forth by an obscure letter to the Lord
+Mounteagle, which your Majesty, like an angel of God, interpreted,
+touching the blow, then intended to have been given by powder. The man
+that informed Sir Thomas Challoner and the Lord Popham of the said
+Jesuitical practices, their meetings and traitorous designs in that
+matter, whereof from time to time they informed your Majesty, was one
+Wright, who hath your Majesty's hand for his so doing, and never
+received any reward for his pains and charges laid out concerning the
+same. This Wright, if occasion serve, can do more service."
+
+[_Addressed_, "Mr. Secretary Conway."
+
+_Headed_, "Touching Wright and his services performed in the damnable
+plot of the Powder treason."]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX H. (p. 119).
+
+_Lord Monteagle to King James_, (British Museum MSS. Add. 19402, f.
+146.)
+
+
+"MOST gracious Soveraine.--Your maiestyes tender and fatherly love over
+me, In admonishinge me heartofore, to seake resolution In matter of
+religion, geves me both occasion, and Incouragement, as humbly to thanke
+your maiestye for this care of my soules good, so to crave leave of
+gevinge into your maiestyes hand this accompt, that your wisdome, seinge
+the course and end of my proceadinges, might rest assured that by the
+healp of god, I will [live and] dye, In that religion which I have nowe
+resolved to profes.
+
+"It may please your maiestye therfore to knowe, that as I was breed upp
+In the Romish religion and walked in that, because I knew no better, so
+have I not sodainely or lightly made the chaunge, which nowe I desire to
+be seane In, for I speake, Sir, as before him that shall Judg my soule,
+I have by praier, for god his gidance, and with voues to him, to walk in
+that light he should shew me, and by longe carefull and diligent
+readinge, and conference with lerned men, on both sides, and impartiall
+examination of ther profes and argumentes, come to discerne the
+Ignorance I was formerly wrapped In, as I nowe wonder that ether my
+self, or any other of common understandinge, showld bee so blynded, as
+to Imbrace that gods trewth, [_sic_] which I nowe perseyue to be
+grounded uppon so weake foundations. And as I never could digest all
+poyntes therin, wherof not few seamed to bee made for gaine and
+ambition, of the papacye, so nowe I fynde that the hole frame and bodye
+of that religion (wherin they oppose us) difereth from the platforme,
+which god him self hath recorded In the holy scriptures, and hath In
+length of tyme, by the Ignorance and deceiptfulness of men, bene peaced
+together, and is now maintayned by factious obstinacye, and certain
+coulerable pretences, such as the wittes and learninge of men, are able
+to cast uppon any humaine errors, which they list to uphowld. Nether
+have I left any thinge I doubted of untried or unresolued, becawse I did
+Intend and desire to so take up the trewth of god, once discouered to
+me, as neuer to suffer yt to bee questioned any more In my owne
+consienc. And In all this, Sir, I protest to your maiestye, before
+almightye god, I have simply and only propounded to my self the trew
+seruise of god, and saluation of my owne soule, Not gaine, not honor, no
+not that which I doe most highly valew, your maiestyes fauour, or better
+opinion of me. Nether on the other side am I affraide of those censures
+of men whether of the partye I have abandoned, or of others which I
+shall Incur by this alteration, howldinge yt contentment Innough to my
+self, That god hath in mercye enlightened my mynde to see his sacred
+trewth, with desire to serue [the paper here is mutilated].... And rest,
+your maie[styes] most loyall and obedient servant W. Mownteagle."
+
+_Addressed_, "To the Kinge his most excellent Maiestye."
+
+From the absence of any allusion to the Powder Plot and its "discovery,"
+it appears certain that this letter must have been written previously to
+it.
+
+On August 1st, 1609, Sir Wm. Waad wrote to Salisbury that the disorders
+of Lord Monteagle's house were an offence to the country. At this period
+he appears to have been suspected of concealing Catholic students from
+St. Omers. [_Calendar of State Papers._]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX I. (p. 140).
+
+_Epitaph in St. Anne's, Aldersgate._ [Maitland, London (1756), p. 1065.]
+
+
+"_Peter Heiwood_, younger son of _Peter Heiwood_, one of the Counsellors
+of _Jamaica_, ... Great Grandson to _Peter Heiwood_ of _Heywood_ in the
+County Palestine of _Lancaster_; who apprehended _Guy Faux_ with his
+dark Lanthorn; and for his zealous prosecution of Papists, as Justice of
+Peace, was stabbed in _Westminster-Hall_ by _John James_, a _Dominican_
+Friar, An. Dom. 1640. Obiit _Novem. 2. 1701_.
+
+ Reader, if not a Papist bred
+ Upon such Ashes gently tread."
+
+It is to be presumed that the person who died in 1701 is not the same
+who was stabbed in 1640, or who discovered Guy Faukes in 1605.
+
+The Dominican records contain no trace of any member of the Order named
+John James, nor does so remarkable an event as the stabbing of a Justice
+of Peace in Westminster Hall appear to be chronicled elsewhere.
+
+Peter Heywood, J.P. for Westminster, was active as a magistrate as late
+as December 15th, 1641. [_Calendar of State Papers._]
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX K. (p. 173).
+
+_The Use of Torture._
+
+
+THERE can be no doubt that torture was freely employed to extract
+evidence from the conspirators and others who fell into the hands of the
+government.
+
+The Earl of Salisbury, in his letter to Favat, of December 4th, 1605,
+clearly intimates that this was the case, when he complains "most of the
+prisoners have wilfully forsworn that the priests knew anything in
+particular, and obstinately refuse to be accusers of them, _yea, what
+torture soever they be put to_."
+
+About the middle of November, Lord Dunfermline wrote to Salisbury [_Dom.
+James I._ xvi. 81] recommending that the prisoners should be confined
+apart and in darkness, that they should be examined by torchlight, and
+that the tortures should be slow and at intervals, as being thus most
+effectual.
+
+There is every reason to believe that the Jesuit lay-brother, Nicholas
+Owen, _alias_ Littlejohn, actually died upon the rack. [_Vide_ Father
+Gerard's _Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot_, p. 189.]
+
+Finally we have the king's instructions as to Faukes [_Gunpowder Plot
+Book_, No. 17]. "The gentler tortours are to be first usid unto him, _et
+sic per gradus ad ima tenditur_,[458] and so God speede your goode
+worke."[459] Guy's signature of November 9th is sufficient evidence that
+it was none of the "gentler tortours" which he had endured.
+
+In the violently Protestant account of the execution of the
+traitors,[460] we read: "Last of all came the great Devil of all Faukes,
+who should have put fire to the powder. His body being weak with torture
+and sickness, he was scarce able to go up the ladder, but with much ado,
+by the help of the hangman, went high enough to brake his neck with the
+fall."
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX L. (p. 227).
+
+_Myths and Legends of the Powder Plot._
+
+
+AROUND the Gunpowder Plot has gathered a mass of fabulous embellishment
+too curious to be passed over in silence. This has chiefly attached
+itself to Guy Faukes, who, on account of the desperate part allotted to
+him has impressed the public mind far more than any of his associates,
+and has come to be erroneously regarded as the moving spirit of the
+enterprise.
+
+One of the best authenticated facts regarding him is that when
+apprehended he was booted and spurred for a journey, though it is
+usually said that he was to have travelled by water.
+
+There is, however, a strange story, told with much circumstantiality,
+which gives an elaborate but incomprehensible account of a tragic
+underplot in connection with him. This is related at considerable length
+in a Latin hexameter poem, _Venatio Catholica_, published in 1609, in
+the _History of the Popish Sham Plots_, and elsewhere. According to this
+tangled tale the other conspirators wished both to get rid of Faukes,
+when he had served their purpose, and to throw the suspicion of their
+deed upon their enemies, the Puritans. To this end they devised a
+notable scheme. A certain Puritan, named Pickering, a courtier, but a
+godly man, foremost amongst his party, had a fine horse ("Bucephalum
+egregium"). This, Robert Keyes, his brother-in-law, purchased or hired,
+and placed at the service of Faukes for his escape. The steed was to
+await him at a certain spot, but in a wood hard by assassins were to
+lurk, who, when Guy appeared, should murder him, and having secured the
+money with which he was furnished, should leave his mangled corpse
+beside the Bucephalus, known as Mr. Pickering's. Thus Faukes would be
+able to tell no tales, and--though it does not appear why--suspicion
+would be sure to fall on the Puritan, and he would be proclaimed as the
+author of the recent catastrophe.
+
+ "Hoc astu se posse rati convertere in hostes
+ Flagitii infamiam, causamque capessere vulgo
+ Qua Puritanos invisos reddere possent,
+ Ut tantae authores, tam immanis proditionis.
+ Cognito equo, et facta (pro more) indagine caedis,
+ Aulicus hic sceleris tanquam fabricator atrocis
+ Proclamandus erat, Falso (ne vera referre
+ Et socios sceleris funesti prodere possit)
+ Sublato."
+
+Many curious circumstances have likewise been imported into the history,
+and many places connected with it which appear to have no claim whatever
+to such a distinction.
+
+Thus we hear (_England's Warning Peece_) that the Jesuit Cresswell came
+over from Spain for the occasion "to bear his part with the rest of his
+society in a victorial song of thanksgiving." Also that on November 5th,
+a large body of confederates assembled at Hampstead to see the House of
+Parliament go up in the air.
+
+In the _Gentleman's Magazine_, February, 1783, is a remarkable
+description of a summer house, in a garden at Newton Hall, near
+Kettering, Northamptonshire, in which the plotters used to meet and
+conspire, the place then belonging to the Treshams; "and for greater
+security, they placed a conspirator at each window, Guy Faukes, the arch
+villain, standing in the doorway, to prevent anybody overhearing them."
+
+According to a wide-spread belief Guy Faukes was a Spaniard.[461] He has
+also been called a Londoner, and his name being altered to Vaux, has
+been said to have a family connection with Vauxhall. He was in fact a
+Yorkshireman of good family, though belonging to a younger branch of no
+great estate. His father, Edward Faukes, was a notary at York, where he
+held the office of registrar and advocate of the cathedral church. Guy
+himself was an educated man, more than commonly well read. He is always
+described in the process as "Guido Faukes, Gentleman."
+
+Another most extraordinary example of an obvious myth, which was
+nevertheless treated as sober history, is furnished by the absurd
+statement that the astute and wily Jesuits not only contrived the Plot,
+but published its details to the world long before its attempted
+execution, in order to vindicate to themselves the credit of so glorious
+a design. Thus Bishop Kennet, in a fifth of November sermon, preached at
+St. Paul's before the Lord Mayor, in 1715, tells us:[462]
+
+"It was a general surmise at least among the whole Order of Jesuits in
+foreign parts: or else one of them could hardly have stated the case so
+exactly some four or five years before it broke out. Father Del-Rio, in
+a treatise printed An. 1600, put the case, as if he had already looked
+into the Mine and Cellars, and had surveyed the barrels of powder in
+them, and had heard the whole confessions of Faux and Catesby."
+
+This "general surmise" does not appear to have been confined to the
+Jesuits themselves. Another ingenious writer, nearly a century
+earlier,[463] tells a wonderful story concerning the sermon of a
+Dominican, preached in the same year, 1600, wherein it was related how
+there was a special hell, beneath the other, for Jesuits, so thick and
+fast did they arrive as to need extra accommodation. The preacher avowed
+that he had, in his vision of the place, given warning to the demon in
+charge of it, "to search them with speed, for fear that they had
+conveyed hither some gunpowder with them, for they are very skilfull in
+Mine-workes, and in blowing up of whole States and Parliament-houses,
+and if they can blow you all up, then the Spanyards will come and take
+your kingdom from you."
+
+Another notable specimen of the way in which reason and probability were
+cast to the winds is afforded by two letters written from Naples in
+1610, one to King James and the other to Salisbury, by Sir Edwin
+Rich,[464] who announced that Father Greenway--who of all the Jesuits
+was said to be most clearly convicted as a traitor--intended to send to
+the king a present of an embroidered satin doublet and hose, which,
+being craftily poisoned, would be death to him if he put them on.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[458] "And so by degrees to the uttermost."
+
+[459] These instructions furnish an interesting specimen of the king's
+broad Scotch, _e.g._, "Quhat Gentlewomans Letter it was y^t was founde
+upon him, and quhairfor doth she give him an other Name in it y^n he
+giues to himself. If he was ever a papiste; and if so, quho brocht him
+up in it. If otherwayes, hou was he convertid, quhair, quhan, and by
+quhom."
+
+The following passage is very characteristic of the writer:
+
+"Nou last, ye remember of the crewellie villanouse pasquille y^t rayled
+upon me for y^e name of Brittanie. If I remember richt it spake
+something of harvest and prophecyed my destructi[=o] about y^t tyme. Ye
+may think of y^s, for it is lyke to be by y^e Laboure of such a
+desperate fellow as y^s is."
+
+[460] _The Arraignment and execution of the late traitors_, etc., 1606.
+
+[461] See, for instance, _London and the Kingdom_ (mainly from the
+Guildhall Archives), by Reginald R. Sharpe, ii. 13.
+
+[462] P. 9.
+
+[463] Lewis Owen, _Unmasking of all popish Monks_, etc. (1628), p. 49.
+
+[464] _Dom. James I._ lvii. 92-93, October 5th.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX M.
+
+_Sir William Waad's Memorial Inscriptions._
+
+
+IN a room of the Queen's House in the Tower, in which the conspirators
+are supposed to have been examined by the Lords of the Council, Sir
+William Waad has left a series of inscriptions as memorials of the
+events in which he played so large a part. Of these the most noteworthy
+are the following:
+
+I.
+
+ Jacobus Magnus, Magnae Britanniae
+ rex, pietate, justitia, prudentia, doctrina, fortitudine,
+ clementia, ceterisq. virtutibus regiis clariss'; Christianae
+ fidei, salutis publicae, pacis universalis propugnator, fautor
+ auctor acerrimus, augustiss', auspicatiss'.
+ Anna Regina Frederici 2. Danorum Regis invictiss' filia sereniss^a,
+ Henricus princeps, naturae ornamentis, doctrinae praesidiis, gratiae
+ Muneribus, instructiss', nobis et natus et a deo datus,
+ Carolus dux Eboracensis divina ad omnem virtutem indole,[465]
+ Elizabetha utriusq. soror Germana, utroque parente dignissima
+ Hos velut pupillam oculi tenellam
+ providus muni, procul impiorum
+ impetu alarum tuarum intrepidos
+ conde sub umbra.
+
+[This is evidently intended for a Sapphic stanza, but the last two words
+of v. 3 have been transposed, destroying the metre.]
+
+II.
+
+ Robertus Cecil, Comes Sarisburiensis, summus et regis
+ Secretarius, et Angliae thesaurarius, clariss' patris
+ et de repub. meritissimi filius, in paterna munera
+ successor longe dignissimus;
+ Henricus, comes Northamptoniae, quinq. portuum praefectus et
+ privati sigilli custos, disertorum litteratissimus, litteratorum
+ disertissimus;
+ Carolus comes Nottingamiae, magnus Angliae admirallus
+ victoriosus;
+ Thomas Suffolciae comes, regis camerarius splendidissimus,
+ tres viri nobilissimi ex antiqua Howardorum familia, ducumq.
+ Norfolciae prosapia;
+ Edwardus Somersetus, comes Wigorniae, equis regiis praefectus
+ ornatissimus;
+ Carolus Blunt, comes Devoniae, Hyberniae prorex et pacificator,
+ Joannes Areskinus,[466] illustris Marriae comes, praecipuarum in
+ Scotia arcium praefectus;
+ Georgius Humius, Dunbari comes, Scotiae thesaurarius
+ prudentiss'
+ omnes illustriss' ordinis garteri milites;
+ Joannes Popham, miles, justiciarius Angliae capitalis,
+ et justitiae consultissimus:
+
+ Hi omnes illustrissimi viri, quorum nomina ad sempiternam eorum
+ memoriam posteritati consecrandam proxime supra ad lineam posita
+ sunt, ut regi a consiliis, ita ab eo delegati quaesitores, reis
+ singulis incredibili diligentia ac cura saepius appellatis, nec
+ minore solertia et dexteritate pertentatis eorum animis, eos suis
+ ipsorum inter se collatis responsionibus convictos, ad voluntariam
+ confessionem adegerunt: et latentem nefarie conjurationis seriem,
+ remq. omnem ut hactenus gesta et porro per eos gerenda esset, summa
+ fide erutam, aeterna cum laude sua, in lucem produxerunt, adeo ut
+ divina singulari providentia effectum sit, ut tam praesens, tamq.
+ f[oe]da tempestas, a regia majestate, liberisq. regiis, et omni
+ regno depulsa, in ipsos autores eorumq. socios redundarit.
+
+III.
+
+Conjuratorum Nomina, ad perpetuam ipsorum infamiam et tantae diritatis
+detestationem sempiternam.
+
+ Thomas Winter Thomas Percy
+ Robert Winter Robert Catesby
+ _Monachi_ { Henry Garnet John Winter John Wright
+ _salutare_ { John Gerrard Guy Fawkes Christopher Wright
+ _Jesu_ { Oswald Tesmond Thomas Bates Francis Tresham
+ _nom[=e]_ { Ham[=o] Everard Digby, K. Thomas Abbington
+ _ementiti_ { Baldw[=i] Am' Rookewood Edmond Baineham, K.
+ John Graunt William Stanley, K.
+ Robert Keyes Hughe Owen.
+ Henry Morg[=a]
+
+IV.
+
+Besides the above there is a prolix description of the Plot, devised
+against the best of sovereigns, "a Jesuitis Romanensibus, perfidiae
+Catholicae et impietatis viperinae autoribus et assertoribus, aliisq.
+ejusdem amentiae scelerisq. patratoribus et sociis susceptae, et in ipso
+pestis derepente inferendae articulo (salutis anno 1605, mensis Novembris
+die quinto), tam praeter spem quam supra fidem mirifice et divinitus
+detectae."
+
+There is, moreover, a sentence in Hebrew, with Waad's cipher beneath,
+and a number of what seem to be meant for verses. The following lines
+are evidently the Lieutenant's description of his own office:
+
+ "Custodis Custos sum, Carcer Carceris, arcis
+ Arx, atque Argu' Argus; sum speculae specula;
+ Sum vinclum in vinclis; compes cum compede, clav[=u]
+ Firmo haerens, teneo tentus, habens habeor.
+ Dum regi regnoq. salus stet firma quieta,
+ Splendida sim Compes Compedis usque licet."
+
+This is considerably more metrical and intelligible than some of the
+rest.
+
+In 1613 Waad was dismissed from his post, one of the charges against him
+being that he had embezzled the jewels of Arabella Stuart.[467]
+
+In Theobald's _Memoirs of Sir Walter Raleigh_ (p. 16), Waad is described
+as "the Lieutenant of the Tower, and Cecil's great Creature."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[464] _Dom. James I._ lvii. 92-93, October 5th.
+
+[465] At the time of the Plot Charles was not quite five years old.
+
+[466] Erskine.
+
+[467] _Dom. James I._ lxxii. 129.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX N.
+
+THE PUBLISHED CONFESSION OF GUY FAUKES. A.
+
+
+_The draft, November 8th, 1605_ (G.P.B. 49).
+
+*** Passages between square brackets have been cancelled. Those marked *
+have been ticked off for omission.
+
+
+_The Confession of Guy Fawkes, taken the 8 of November, 1605._
+
+HE confesseth that a Practise in generall was first broken unto him,
+agaynst his Majesty, for the Catholique cause, and not invented or
+propounded by himself, and this was first propounded unto him about
+Easter last was twelvemonth, beyond the seas in the Low countreyes, by
+an English Lay-man, and that English man came over with him in his
+company into England, and they tow and three more weare the first five
+mencioned in the former examination. And they five resolving to do some
+thinge for the Catholick cause,--a vowe being first taken by all of them
+for secrecye,--one of the other three propounded to perform it with
+Powder, and resolved that the place should be,--where this action should
+be performed and justice done,--in or neere the place of the sitting of
+the Parliament, wherein Religion had been uniustly suppressed. This
+beeinge resolved the manner [of it] was as followeth.
+
+
+THE PUBLISHED CONFESSION OF GUY FAUKES. B.
+
+_As signed by Faukes, November 17th, 1605_ (G.P.B. 101).
+
+*** Square brackets indicate an erasure. Italics an addition or
+substitution.
+
+The [deposition] _declaration_ of Guy Fawkes prisonner in the Tower of
+London _taken the 17 of Nov. 1605, acknowledged before the Lords
+Commissioners._[468]
+
+
+_A._ I confesse that a practise in generall was first broken unto me
+against his Majestie, for releife of the Catholique cause, and not
+invented or propounded by my self.
+
+And this was first propounded unto me about Easter last was twelvemonth,
+beyond the Seas, in the Low countries of the Archdukes obeysance by
+Thomas Wynter, who came thereupon with me into England, and there wee
+imparted our purpose to three other Englishmen more, namely Rob^t
+Catesby, Tho^s Percy, and John Wright, who all five consulting together
+of the meanes how to execute the same, and taking a vowe among our
+selves for secresie Catesby propounded to have it performed by
+Gunpowder, and by making a myne under the upper house of Parliament,
+which place wee made choice of the rather,
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+First they hyred the Howse at Westminster of one Ferris,[469] and
+havinge the howse they sought to make a myne under the upper howse of
+Parliament, and they begann to make the myne in or about the xi of
+December, and they five first entered into the worke, and soone after
+toke an other unto them, havinge first sworne him and taken the
+Sacrament, for secrecye. And when they came to the wall,--that was about
+three yards thicke,--and found it a matter of great difficultie, they
+tooke to them an other in like manner, with oath and Sacrament as afore
+sayd. All which seaven, were gentlemen of name and bloode, and not any
+man was employed in or about that action,--noe not so much as in
+digginge and myning that was not a gentleman. And having wrought to the
+wall before Christmas, they reasted untill after the holydayes, and the
+day before Christmas,--having a masse of earth that came out of the
+myne,--they carryed it into the Garden of the said Howse, and after
+Christmas they wrought on the wall till Candlemas, and wrought the wall
+half through, and sayeth that all the tyme while the others wrought he
+stood as Sentynell to descrie any man that came neere, and when any man
+came neere to the place, uppon warninge given by him they rested untill
+they had notyce to proceed from hym, and sayeth that they seaven all lay
+in the Howse, and had shott and powder, and they all resolved to dye in
+that place before they yeilded or weare taken.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+because Religion having been unjustly suppressed there, it was fittest
+that Justice and punishment should be executed there.
+
+_B._ This being resolved amongst us, Thomas Percy hired a howse at
+Westminster for that purpose, neare adjoyning the Parl^t howse, and
+there wee beganne to make a myne about the xi of December 1604. The fyve
+that entered into the woorck were Thomas Percye, Robert Catesby, Thomas
+Wynter, John Wright, and my self, and soon after we tooke another unto
+us, Christopher Wright, having sworn him also, and taken the Sacrament
+for secrecie.
+
+_C._ When wee came to the verie foundation of the Wall of the house,
+which was about 3 yeards thick, and found it a matter of great
+difficultie, we took to us another gentleman Robert [Wynter] _Keys_[470]
+in like manner with our oathe and Sacrament as aforesaid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_D._ It was about Christmas when wee brought our myne unto the Wall, and
+about Candlemas we had wrought the Wall half through. And whilst they
+were a working, I stood as sentinell, to descrie any man that came
+neare, whereof I gave them warning, and so they ceased untill I gave
+them notice agayne to proceede. All wee seaven lay in the house, and had
+shott and powder, being resolved to dye in that place before we should
+yeild or be taken.
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+And as they weare workinge, they heard a rushinge in the cellar which
+grew by _one_[471] Brights selling of his coles whereuppon this
+Examinant, fearinge they had been discovered, went into the cellar and
+viewed the cellar, and perceivinge the commoditye thereof for their
+purposs, and understandinge how it would be letten his maister, M^r
+Percy, hyred the Cellar for a yeare, for 4 pounds rent. And confesseth
+that after Christmas 20^{ty} barrells of Powder weare brought by
+themselves to a Howse which they had on the Banksyde in Hampers, and
+from that Howse removed the powder to the sayd Howse, neere the upper
+Howse of Parliament. And presently upon hyringe the cellar, they
+themselfs removed the powder into the cellar, and couvered the same with
+faggots which they had before layd into the sellar.
+
+After, about Easter, he went into the Low Countryes,--as he before hath
+declared in his former examination,--and that the trew purpos of his
+goinge over was least beinge a dangerous man he should be known and
+suspected, and in the meane tyme he left the key [of the cellar] with
+M^r Percye, whoe in his absence caused more Billetts to be layd into the
+Cellar, as in his former examination he confessed, and retourned about
+the end of August or the beginninge of September, and went agayne to the
+sayd howse, nere to the sayd cellar, and received the key of the cellar
+agayne of one of the five. And then they brought in five or six barrells
+of powder more into the cellar, which all soe they couvered with
+billetts, saving fower little barrells covered with ffaggots, and then
+this examinant went into the Country about the end of September.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+_E._ As they were working upon the wall, they heard a rushing in a
+cellar of removing of coles; whereupon wee feared wee had been
+discovered, and they sent me to go to the cellar, who fynding that the
+coles were a selling, and that the Cellar was to be lett, viewing the
+commoditye thereof for our purpose, Percy went and hired the same for
+yearly Rent.
+
+Wee had before this provyded and brought into the house 20 barrells of
+Powder, which wee removed into the Cellar, and covered the same with
+billets and fagots, which we provided for that purpose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_F._ About Easter, the Parliament being proroged tyll October next, wee
+dispersed our selfs and I retired into the Low countryes, _by advice and
+direction of the rest, as well to acquaint Owen with the particulars of
+the plot, as also_[472] lest by my longer staye I might have grown
+suspicious, and so have come in question.
+
+In the meane tyme Percy, having the key of the Cellar, layd in more
+powder and wood into it.
+
+I returned about the beginning of September next and then receyving the
+key againe of Percy, we brought in more powder and billets to cover the
+same againe.
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+* It appeareth the powder was in the cellar, placed as it was found the
+5 of November, when the Lords came to proroge the Parliament, and sayeth
+that he returned agayne to the sayd Howse neare the cellar on Wednesday
+the 30 of October.
+
+[He confesseth he was at the Erle of Montgomeryes marriage, but as he
+sayeth with noe intention of evill, havinge a sword about him, and was
+very neere to his Majesty and the Lords there present.]
+
+Forasmuch as they knew not well how they should come by the person of
+the Duke Charles, beeinge neere London, where they had no forces,--if he
+had not been all soe blowne upp,--He confesseth that it was resolved
+amonge them, that the same day that this detestable act should have been
+performed, the same day should other of their confederacye have
+surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth, and presently have
+proclaimed her queen [to which purpose a Proclamation was drawne, as
+well to avowe and justify the Action, as to have protested against the
+Union, and in no sort to have meddeled with Religion therein. And would
+have protested all soe agaynst all strangers] and this proclamation
+should have been made in the name of the Lady Elizabeth.
+
+* Beinge demanded why they did not surprise the Kinges person and draw
+him to the effectinge of their purpose, sayeth that soe many must have
+been acquaynted with such an action as it could not have been kept
+secrett.
+
+He confesseth that if their purpose had taken effect untill they had
+power enough they would not have avowed the deed to be theirs; but if
+their power,--for their defence and safetye,--had been sufficient they
+themselfes would have taken it upon them.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+And so [I] went for a tyme into the country, till the 30 of October.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_G._ It was farther resolved amongst us that the same day that this
+action should have been performed some other of our confederates should
+have surprised the person of the Lady Elizabeth the Kings eldest
+daughter, who was kept in Warwickshire at the Lo. Harringtons house, and
+presently have proclaimed her for Queene, having a project of a
+Proclamation ready for the purpose, wherein we made no mention of
+altering of Religion,----
+
+ * * * * *
+
+---- nor would have avowed the deed to be ours untill we should have had
+power enough to make our partie good, and then we would have avowed
+both.
+
+
+[_A. The draft._]
+
+* They meant all soe to have sent for the Prisoners in the Tower to have
+come to them, of whom particularly they had some consultation.
+
+* He confesseth that the place of Rendez-vous was in Warwickshire, and
+that armour was sent thither, but the particuler thereof he knowes not.
+
+He confesseth that they had consultation for the takinge of the Lady
+Marye into their possession, but knew not how to come by her.
+
+And confesseth that provision was made by some of the conspiracye of
+some armour of proofe this last Summer for this Action.
+
+* He confesseth that the powder was bought of the common Purse of the
+Confederates.
+
+ L. Admyrall }
+ L. Chamberlayne }
+ Erle of Devonshire } attended by M^r
+ Erle of Northampton } Attorney generall.
+ Erle of Salisbury }
+ Erle of Marr }
+ L. cheif Justice }
+
+[_Endorsed_] Examination of Guy Fauks, Nov^r 8th, 1605.
+
+
+[_B. The Confession as signed._]
+
+_H._ Concerning Duke Charles, the Kings second son, we hadd sundrie
+consultations how to sease on his person, but because wee found no
+meanes how to compasse it,--the Duke being kept near London,--where we
+had not forces enough, wee resolved to serve ourselves with the Lady
+Elizabeth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_J._ The names of other principall persons that were made privie
+afterwards to this horrible conspiracie.
+
+ [_Signed_] GUIDO FAUKES.
+
+ Everard Digby, Knight
+ Ambrose Ruckwood
+ Francis Tresham
+ John Grant
+ Robert [Keys] _Wynter_
+
+ [_Witnessed_] Edw. Coke W. Waad.
+
+ [_Endorsed_] Fawkes his [deposition] _declaration 17 Nov.
+ 1605_.[473]
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[468] Alterations and additions (in italics) made by Sir Edward Coke.
+
+[469] This name has seemingly been tampered with.
+
+[470] Changed by Cecil; but on November 14th, writing to Edmondes, he
+included Keyes amongst those that "wrought not in the myne," and R.
+Winter amongst those who did.
+
+[471] Interlined.
+
+[472] The words italicised are added in the published version.
+
+[473] Words in italics added by Coke.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ Abbot, Robert, Bishop of Salisbury, his version of the missing
+ confessions of Faukes, 192 _seq._
+
+ Acton, Robert, 113.
+
+ Alabaster, Thomas, a priest in government employ, 204 _note_.
+
+ Andrew, William, servant to Sir E. Digby, evidence of, 78 _note_.
+
+ _Annals of England_, cited, 48.
+
+ _Answere to Scandalous papers_ (Cecil's manifesto), 44, 219 _seq._
+
+
+ Babington's Plot, 14.
+
+ Baldwin, Father William, S.J.; allegations against him, 185, 187
+ _seq._; which are not substantiated, 195; correspondence with Father
+ Schondonck, 201, 222.
+
+ Bancroft, Richard, Archbishop of Canterbury, 46, 147.
+
+ Barlow, Thomas, Bishop of Lincoln, 62, 70 _note_.
+
+ Barnes, a government agent, 112.
+
+ Bartlett, George, servant to Catesby, his evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Bates, Thomas, servant to Catesby, his introduction to the
+ Conspiracy, 3, 178; his alleged evidence against Greenway, 178-183;
+ trial and execution, 6. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Batty, Matthew, evidence regarding Monteagle, 78 _note_.
+
+ "Blackfriars Downfall," the, 242.
+
+ Blount, Father Richard, S.J., on government intelligence, 77; on
+ Suffolk's proposal of toleration, 224; on Cecil's "new stratagem,"
+ 224, 225.
+
+ Brayley and Britton (_Palace of Westminster_), 79 _note_.
+
+ Brewer, Rev. John Sherren, on the fate of Parry, the conspirator,
+ 14; on government devices, 15; on Cecil's knowledge of the Plot, 48;
+ on the Monteagle letter, 117.
+
+ Bromley, Sir Henry, Sheriff of Worcestershire, 167 _note_.
+
+ Buck, Mr., alleged warning given to, 51 _note_, 106.
+
+ Burnet, Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury, 46.
+
+ "Bye," the, 15 _note_.
+
+
+ Camden, William, the historian, 36 _note_.
+
+ Capon, William, on the old Palace of Westminster, 79, 86; on traces
+ of the mine, 87.
+
+ Carleton, Dudley, afterwards Viscount Dorchester, patronized by
+ Cecil, 62; assists Percy to hire the house at Westminster, 61;
+ reports the French version of the Plot, 140; and its contradiction,
+ 141; his mysterious connection with the Conspiracy, 150 _note_; his
+ opinion of Percy, 150.
+
+ Castlemaine, Earl of (Roger Palmer), on State plots, 14, 48; on
+ Osborne's qualifications as an historian, 44 _note_; on the fate of
+ decoy ducks, 152.
+
+ Carte, Thomas (_General History of England_), 46.
+
+ Carey, ----, evidence regarding Percy, 150.
+
+ Catesby, Robert, a ringleader in the Conspiracy, 9, 64; his
+ character and antecedents, 35 _seq._; persuades his associates not
+ to reveal their project to priests, 179; undertakes to proclaim the
+ new sovereign, 83; his death, 4, 152 _seq._; suspicions concerning
+ him, 156, 160. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Catholics, their numbers, 28; their condition under Elizabeth, 29;
+ their hopes from James, 31, 33, 247, 248; his promises to them, 29;
+ they welcome his accession, _ibid_, 34; temporary relief at his
+ hands, _ibid_; their consequent increase, 28, 30; Cecil's hostility,
+ 28, 30, 47, 48, 51, 105; attempt to charge them with the Plot, 4-6,
+ 107, 108; legislation against them on account of it, 212 _seq._; its
+ lasting effects in their regard, 209, 225.
+
+ Cecil, Robert, first Earl of Salisbury, his character, 19 _seq._;
+ dignities conferred by James I., 19 _note_; and nicknames, 19
+ _note_; his unpopularity, 21 _seq._; difficulties and dangers of his
+ position, 26 _seq._; in the pay of Spain, 21; and probably of
+ France, 22 _note_; his secret correspondence with King James, 21;
+ his intrigues against Northumberland and Raleigh, 26, 198, 216;
+ hostility to the Catholics, 27, 95, 105; anxiety on account of the
+ king's attitude, 28; and dealings with Pope Clement VIII., 104;
+ endeavours to commit James to a policy of intolerance, 105; his
+ political methods, 44, 111; employs the services of forgers, 112
+ _note_, 203; his knowledge of the Plot, 94 _seq._; alleged secret
+ dealings with Percy, 15; Tresham, 158; and Catesby, 160; contradicts
+ himself concerning the "discovery," 123 _seq._; his inexplicable
+ delay in making it, 132; and conduct afterwards, 137; was not taken
+ by surprise, 210; at once turns the Plot to his advantage, 213; his
+ determination to incriminate priests, 4 _seq._, 130; advantages
+ reaped by him, 30, 213 _seq._; his Manifesto, 218 _seq._; suspected
+ of having originated or manipulated the Conspiracy, 43 _seq._;
+ alleged attempt to float a second Plot, 225.
+
+ Cecil, Thomas, first Earl of Exeter, 19 _note_, 160 _note_.
+
+ Cecil, William, second Earl of Salisbury, his testimony reported,
+ 160.
+
+ Cecil, William, a priest in government employ, 45 _note_.
+
+ "Cellar," the, its situation and character, 58, 79 _note_; hired by
+ the conspirators, 69 _seq._; problems concerning it, 87 _seq._; its
+ after history, 137; accompanies the migrations of the House of
+ Lords, 80 _note_.
+
+ Challoner, Sir Thomas, information addressed to, 94, 95.
+
+ Chamberlain, John, M.P., on Cecil's death and character, 23, 24;
+ account of the "discovery," 128; on the King's lucky day, 231; on
+ Percy's character, 150.
+
+ Charles, Duke of York, afterwards Charles I.; plans of the
+ conspirators regarding him, 81 _seq._
+
+ Chichester, Sir Arthur, Deputy in Ireland, 4, 108, 124.
+
+ Coal, Father Greenway's description of, 71 _note_.
+
+ Cobham, eighth Lord (Henry Brooke), his charge of forgery against
+ Waad, 202.
+
+ Cobham, ninth Lord (William Brooke), his evidence reported, 45.
+
+ Coke, Sir Edward, Attorney-General, his falsification of evidence,
+ 200; Cecil's instructions to him, 116 _note_; his assertions, 85,
+ 88; interrogatories prepared by him, 176; his humour, 63 _note_;
+ proofs against Owen, 190; witnesses Thomas Winter's declaration,
+ 169; and that of Faukes, 172; his treatment of Raleigh and
+ Northumberland, 217.
+
+ Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice, on the English penal laws, 29 _note_.
+
+ Conspirators, the, list of, 2, 3; their character and antecedents,
+ 35-41; their enrolment, 9, 64, 252; their plans and proceedings,
+ 9-11, 60 _seq._; mining operations, 10, 63; incredibility of the
+ story, 65 _seq._, 76 _seq._, 141; they hire the "cellar," 69 _seq._;
+ purchase and store gunpowder, 78; difficulties concerning it, 78,
+ 132, 134-137; further designs, 11, 80-82; alarmed by the
+ prorogation, 114, 230; flight and attempted rebellion, 2; their
+ fate, 4-6.
+
+ Cope, Sir Walter, on the character of Cecil, 27 _note_.
+
+ Cornwallis, Sir Charles, English Ambassador in Spain, on the
+ character of the conspirators, 40; letter to Father Cresswell, 195;
+ on the Catholic design to murder Cecil, 221 _note_.
+
+ Cresswell, Father Joseph, S.J., allegations concerning him, 195;
+ Cornwallis' letter to him, _ibid_.
+
+
+ Dacre, Francis, titular Lord, efforts to connect him with the Plot,
+ 177.
+
+ Darnley, Henry, Lord, father of James I., the victim of a gunpowder
+ plot, 37, 50.
+
+ Davenport, Father Christopher, O.P. (Francis a S. Clara), 145
+ _note_.
+
+ Davies, Joseph, a government "discoverer," 94.
+
+ De Beaumont, M., French Ambassador, 119 _note_.
+
+ De la Boderie, M., French Ambassador, on Cecil's insecurity, 26; on
+ the ruin of Northumberland, 23.
+
+ Del-Rio, Father Martin, S.J., said to have described the Plot A.D.
+ 1600, 263.
+
+ Derby, Earl of (William Stanley), attempt to incriminate him, 198.
+
+ De Ros, Lord, on Faukes' plan of escape, 144 _note_.
+
+ Devonshire, Earl of (Charles Blount), 168 _note_, 170 _note_, 211,
+ 266.
+
+ Digby, Sir Everard, joins the Conspiracy, 10, 253; difficulties and
+ contradictions regarding him, 79 _note_, 253; his letter to
+ Salisbury, 33, 245; part assigned to him, 78 _note_; his fate, 6.
+ _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Digby, Sir John, English Ambassador in Spain, 22 _note_.
+
+ Digby, Sir Kenelm, his evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Digby, Sir Robert, 38 _note_.
+
+ Dixon, Hepworth (_Her Majesty's Tower_), on government intelligence,
+ 111 _note_.
+
+ Dodd, Rev. Charles, on the origin of the Plot, 18, 51.
+
+ Dorset, Earl of (Thomas Sackville), his esteem for Cecil, 21.
+
+ Dunbar, Earl of (George Hume), 168 _note_, 172, 266.
+
+ Dunfermline, Earl of (Alexander Seaton), on the effective use of
+ torture, 259.
+
+ Dunsmoor Heath, projected hunting match on, 11.
+
+
+ Edmondes, Sir Thomas, English Ambassador at Brussels, account of the
+ "discovery" sent to him, 108, 124; version of Faukes' confession
+ sent to him, 186; proofs against Owen sent to him, 190, 191; his
+ negotiations with the archdukes, 186 _seq._; letters of, 102, 187,
+ 188, 189; letters to, 85, 106, 113, 154, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190.
+
+ Elizabeth, Princess, daughter of James I., designs of the
+ conspirators regarding her, 81.
+
+ _England's Warning Peece_, 195, 262.
+
+ _English Protestants' Plea_, 40, 51, 108 _note_, 195 _note_.
+
+ Eudaemon-Joannes, Father Andrew, S.J., 204.
+
+
+ Faukes, Guy or Guido, _alias_ John Johnson, his position and
+ character, 39, 262; his Spanish mission, 36; introduced to the
+ Conspiracy, 9, 64; passes as Percy's servant, 71, 77; keeps guard
+ while the others work, 66; discovers the "cellar," 70; has charge of
+ the premises, 77, 89, 142; visits Flanders, 91, 162; appointed to
+ fire the powder, 1; plans for his escape, 144; arrest, 123-128;
+ published confession, 169 _seq._, 268 _seq._; evidence falsified,
+ 200; missing depositions, 191; tortured, 172, 200, 260; trial and
+ execution, 6, 260; fables respecting him, 261. _See also_
+ Conspirators.
+
+ Favat, Mr., Cecil's letter to, 5, 182.
+
+ Ferrers, Henry, sub-lets the house at Westminster to Percy, 61.
+
+ Fifth of November, a propitious day for the "discovery," 231; the
+ day solemnized, 5.
+
+ Floyde, Griffith, a government spy, 49.
+
+ French historians on the Plot, 141 _note_.
+
+ French official accounts of the Plot, 140, 141.
+
+ Fuller, Mr., M.P., 132 _note_.
+
+ Fuller, Thomas (_Church History of Britain_), 46, 225.
+
+ Fulman MSS., 169.
+
+
+ Gardiner, Professor Samuel Rawson, his favourable estimate of
+ Cecil's character, 20; on the Spanish pension, 22 _note_; repudiates
+ imputations against the government, 18; on the conspirators' plans,
+ 82; on the Monteagle letter, 117; on the king's interpretation, 132
+ _note_; on the desire to incriminate priests, 4 _note_.
+
+ Garnet, Father Henry, S.J., proclaimed as a principal conspirator,
+ 5; his capture, 7, 166; lack of evidence, 7; trial and execution,
+ _ibid_.; his account of the conspirators' proceedings, 208; his
+ evidence against Catesby, 157; on the accession of James, 29 _note_.
+
+ _Gentleman's Magazine_, 52 _note_, 262.
+
+ Gerard, Col. John, 160 _note_.
+
+ Gerard, Father John, S.J., proclaimed as a principal conspirator, 5;
+ exonerated by historians, 237; his history of the Plot, 205; his
+ experiences in the Tower, 202; on the persecution of Catholics, 32;
+ opinion of the "discovery," 49; and of the official narrative, 129;
+ on the death of Percy and Catesby, 156 _note_.
+
+ Goodman, Godfrey, Bishop of Gloucester, on the origin of the
+ Conspiracy, 44; on the king's promises to Catholics, 29 _note_; on
+ the persecution of Catholics, 32; on the "discovery," 134 _note_; on
+ the death of Whynniard, 92 _note_; on Percy's intercourse with
+ Cecil, 151; on the death of Percy and Catesby, 154; his religious
+ views, 145 _note_.
+
+ Gowrie Conspiracy, the, 231, 232.
+
+ "Great Horses," 2 _note_.
+
+ Grange, Justice E., 148 _note_.
+
+ Grant, John, 37. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Green, Mrs. Everett, wrongly describes Owen as a Jesuit, 185 _note_.
+
+ Green, John Richard (_History of the English People_), 30.
+
+ Greenway, _alias_ Tesimond, Father Oswald, S.J., proclaimed as a
+ principal conspirator, 5; Bates' alleged evidence against him,
+ 178-183; his history of the Plot, 206; opinion of the official
+ narrative, 134; on the effects of an explosion, 133; on government
+ despatches concerning Percy, 155; his visit to the rebels at
+ Huddington, 206 _note_; fables respecting him, 264.
+
+ Gregory, Arthur, a forger employed by government, 203.
+
+ Grene, Father Martin, S.J., notes on the Plot, 45.
+
+ Gunpowder, amount procured by the conspirators, 78; difficulties
+ concerning it, 132 _seq._
+
+
+ Hagley Hall, R. Winter and S. Littleton captured there, 4.
+
+ Hallam, Henry (_Constitutional History_), repudiates imputations
+ against the government, 18; on Father Garnet's capture, _ibid_.,
+ _note_; on King James's title to the crown, 34.
+
+ Harington, Sir John, 4.
+
+ Hawarde, John (_Les Reportes del Cases in Camera Stellata_), 165
+ _note_.
+
+ Heiwood, or Heywood, Peter, 139 _note_, 258.
+
+ Hendlip House (Thomas Abbington's), the scene of Father Garnet's
+ capture, 18 _note_, 166 _note_.
+
+ Henry, Prince of Wales, anticipations concerning him, 33; the
+ conspirators' plans in his regard, 80, 81, 176.
+
+ Herring, Francis (_Pietas Pontificia_), 27 _note_, 143 _note_.
+
+ Higgons, Bevil (_English History_), 47.
+
+ Hoby, Sir Edward, on the death of Percy, 154.
+
+ Holbeche House (Stephen Littleton's), the conspirators there slain
+ or captured, 2, 4.
+
+ House of Lords, its situation and subsequent migrations, 55 _seq._;
+ never represented in pictures of the Plot, 228.
+
+ House, Percy's, at Westminster, its position, 60, 251; circumstances
+ of the bargain for it, 60; difficulties concerning it, 62, 64, 67,
+ 88.
+
+ Howes, Edmund (continuation of Stowe's _Chronicle_), 127.
+
+ Huddington House (Robert Winter's), 206 _note_.
+
+
+ Ichrup, Thomas, name given to Faukes, 149, 244.
+
+ Inglefield, Sir Francis, 249.
+
+
+ James I., King of Great Britain, his claim to the succession, 34;
+ circumstances of his accession, 34, 35; hopes of the Catholics, 28;
+ who support his cause, 34; his policy at first favourable to them,
+ 29; soon reversed, 31; his dealings with Pope Clement VIII., 104;
+ his supposed interpretation of the letter, 128, 131; Tuesday his
+ lucky day, 230; his speech to Parliament, 211; accuses Catholics in
+ general and the Pope, 4; suspected of previous knowledge of the
+ Plot, 46; anxiety for evidence against priests, 182; letter to the
+ Archdukes, 187 _note_; alleged subsequent opinion of the Plot, 45;
+ instructions for the torture of Faukes, 259; his Scotch dialect, 260
+ _note_; gives his royal word against Owen and Baldwin, 187; his
+ policy permanently affected, 209.
+
+ James, John, a supposed Dominican, 139 _note_, 258.
+
+ Jardine, David, on the character of the official narrative, 129,
+ 163; on the falsification of evidence, 199; on the Monteagle letter,
+ 117; on the king's interpretation, 132 _note_; on the established
+ facts of the case, 12; not perfectly impartial, 161, 207; on the
+ results of the Plot, 213.
+
+ Jessopp, Augustus, D.D., on the value of money, 36 _note_, 117
+ _note_; on Father Gerard's innocence, 207.
+
+ Jesuits, efforts to incriminate, 177 _note_; Cecil on their
+ "insolencies," 106.
+
+
+ Kennet, White, Bishop of Peterborough, 45 _note_, 46, 263.
+
+ Keyes, Robert, contradictions respecting him, 84 _note_, 183. _See
+ also_ Conspirators.
+
+ "King's Book," the, its character, 108; Cecil's description of it,
+ 219, 220.
+
+ Knyvet, or Knevet, Sir Thomas, leads the party which captures
+ Faukes, 124 _seq._; receives a peerage, 139 _note_; the Countess of
+ Suffolk his sister, 224 _note_.
+
+
+ Lake, Sir Thomas, 19, 232.
+
+ Lenthal, William, Speaker of the Long Parliament, his evidence
+ reported, 160.
+
+ Lindsay, Sir James, conveys messages between King James and Pope
+ Clement VIII., 104.
+
+ Lingard, John, D.D., 68 _note_, 231.
+
+ Littleton, Humphrey, 167 _note_.
+
+ Littleton, Stephen, 2, 4, 156.
+
+ Lodge, Edmund, F.S.A. (_Illustrations of British History_), 98.
+
+ Lopez' Plot, 14.
+
+
+ "Main," the, 15 _note_, 26, 216.
+
+ Mar, Earl of (John Erskine), 168 _note_, 172, 266.
+
+ Mary, Princess, daughter of James I., 81, 176.
+
+ Milton, poems on the Plot, 226.
+
+ Mine, the, story told respecting it, 63 _seq._; difficulties
+ respecting it, 84 _seq._
+
+ _Mischeefe's Mystery_, 72, 115, 121, 123, 153 _note_, 159.
+
+ Money, value of, 36 _note_, 117 _note_; amount raised by
+ conspirators, 39.
+
+ Monteagle, Lord (William Parker), his character and antecedents,
+ 118; relations with the king and court, 34, 119; letter to the king,
+ 119, 256; connection with the conspirators, 118; communicates the
+ warning letter to Cecil, 120-123, 160; attends parliament on the day
+ of the "discovery," 137 _note_; devices of the government on his
+ behalf, 116; rewards conferred, 116; subsequent conduct, 258.
+
+ Moore, Sir Francis, his evidence reported, 151.
+
+ Moore, Sir Jonas, 138.
+
+ More, Father Henry, S.J., 49.
+
+ Morgan, Harry, 81 _note_.
+
+ Morgan, Thomas, 157 _note_, 193 _note_.
+
+
+ Naunton, Sir Robert, on Cecil's character, 19.
+
+ Northampton, Earl of (Henry Howard), a nominal Catholic promoted by
+ King James, 29; Cecil's agent in his secret correspondence, 26
+ _note_; on Cecil's death, 23; on the history of the "cellar," 58
+ _note_; not admitted to all Cecil's secrets, 112.
+
+ Northumberland, Earl of (Henry Percy), a rival of Cecil's, 26; who
+ secretly traduces him, 26 _note_, 215, 216; the Plot turned to his
+ ruin, 26, 107, 216-218; which is attributed to Cecil, 26 _note_,
+ 218, his sentiments in return, 218.
+
+ Nottingham, Earl of, Lord Admiral (Charles Howard), 170 _note_,
+ 265.
+
+
+ Oates, Titus, 46, 138.
+
+ Oath taken by the conspirators, 9.
+
+ Oldcorne, _alias_ Hall, Father Edward, S.J., captured along with
+ Garnet, 7; never accused of complicity _ib._; Catholic demonstration
+ at his execution, 28 _note_; tortured, 173.
+
+ Oldmixon (_Royal House of Stuart_), 25 _note_, 46.
+
+ Osborne, Francis, on Cecil's unpopularity, 25; on the "discovery,"
+ 44; on the 5th of August celebration, 232 _note_; on Northumberland
+ and Cecil, 218; his qualifications as an historian, 44.
+
+ Owen, Captain Hugh, falsely described as a Jesuit, 173 _note_, 185
+ _note_; particularly obnoxious to the government, 173, 185; evidence
+ fabricated against him, 174; Cecil's instruction respecting him, 116
+ _note_; efforts made to secure him, 185 _seq._; his intercourse with
+ Phelippes, 112, 185 _note_.
+
+ Owen, Lewis, 263.
+
+
+ Paris, Henry, 162.
+
+ Parliament, its successive adjournments, 67, 70 _note_, 91, 114,
+ 230; meets on the day of the "discovery," 136; activity against
+ Catholics, 5, 212 _seq._
+
+ Parry, Sir Thomas, English Ambassador at Paris, instructions given
+ to, 28 _note_; intelligence supplied by, 98, 101, 102; account of
+ the discovery furnished to, 126 _seq._
+
+ Parry, Dr. William, his Plot, 14, 153.
+
+ Parsons, Father Robert, S.J., letters to, 29 _note_, 77, 223; his
+ views as to the succession, 249; on Walsingham's "spyery," 77.
+
+ Percy, Sir Charles, 192 _note_.
+
+ Percy, Thomas, one of the first and principal conspirators, 9, 64;
+ his antecedents, 36, 37, 148; house hired by him, 60; and "cellar,"
+ 75; strange conduct in both transactions, 88; conduct afterwards,
+ 88, 91; undertakes to seize Duke Charles or Princess Elizabeth, 82;
+ his death, 4, 152 _seq_; profession of religious zeal, 148; bigamy,
+ _ibid_; Catholics suspicious of him, 150; alleged secret dealings
+ with Cecil, 151; the case against him, 148-156. _See also_
+ Conspirators.
+
+ Phelippes, Thomas, the "decipherer," employed by the government,
+ 111; their devices against him, 112; correspondence with Hugh Owen,
+ 185 _note_.
+
+ Pickering, Mr., and his horse, 261. _Plain and Rational Account of
+ the Catholick Faith_, 49.
+
+ Plots under Elizabeth and James I., 14, 15, 153, 157 _note_, 193
+ _note_; their common feature, 13.
+
+ _Polititian's Catechism_, 51 _note_, 106, 137 _note_.
+
+ Pope Clement VIII., interchanges communications with James I., 104.
+
+ Pope Paul V., represented as an accomplice in the Plot, 5, 239.
+
+ Popham, Sir John, Lord Chief Justice, 170 _note_, 197, 266.
+
+
+ Raleigh, Sir Walter, Cecil's enmity towards him, 26 _note_, 48
+ _note_, 198; his ruin, 26, 216; attempt to implicate him in the
+ Powder Plot, 197, 198.
+
+ Ratcliffe, Ralph, a government spy, 95, 96, 191.
+
+ Rich, Sir Edwin, 264.
+
+ Richardot, President, 189.
+
+ Rogers, Professor Thorold, on the value of money, 117 _note_; on
+ James's title to the throne, 34.
+
+ Rokewood, Ambrose, 179 _note_. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+
+ Salisbury, first Earl of. _See_ Cecil, Robert.
+
+ Salisbury, second Earl of. _See_ Cecil, William.
+
+ Sanderson, Sir William, 46.
+
+ Schondonck, Father Giles, S. J., Rector of St. Omers, on the
+ innocence of the Jesuits, 201; on Cecil's manifesto, 222.
+
+ Scott, Sir Walter, 132 _note_.
+
+ Shakespeare, never alludes to the Plot, 226 _note_.
+
+ Sharpe, Dr. R. R., 262 _note_.
+
+ Shepherd, John, evidence of, 251.
+
+ Smith, John Thomas (_Antiquities of Westminster_), 58 _note_, 79
+ _note_, 89 _note_.
+
+ Soane, Sir John, 238.
+
+ Southwaick, or Southwell, a government spy, 99-102.
+
+ Speed, John (_Historie_), 62, 63 _note_.
+
+ Squires, Edward, his plot, 14.
+
+ Stanley, Sir William, 185, 192 _note_.
+
+ Strange, Father Thomas, S. J., 96 _note_.
+
+ Streete, John, pensioned for killing Percy and Catesby, 155.
+
+ Strype, John (_Annals_), 28 _note_.
+
+ Suffolk, Earl of, Lord Chamberlain (Thomas Howard), his venality,
+ 224.
+
+
+ Talbot, John, of Grafton, 38 _note_.
+
+ Talbot, Peter, Archbishop of Dublin. _See Polititian's Catechism._
+
+ Theobald, Lewis, 267.
+
+ Topcliffe, Richard, priest-hunter, 202.
+
+ Torture, use of, 4, 5, 172, 173, 201 _note_, 259, 260.
+
+ Tresham, Francis, enlisted in the enterprise, 10, 252 _seq_.; his
+ previous record, 35, 36; his action on behalf of King James, 34;
+ suspected of writing the warning letter, 147, 158; and of collusion
+ with Cecil, _ibid._; his conduct after the "discovery," 3, 158; his
+ death in the Tower, 6 _note_, 158. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Tresham, Sir Thomas, proclaims King James, 34; summoned to Court,
+ 248.
+
+ _True and Perfect Relation_, character of the narrative, 43, 163.
+
+ Tytler, Patrick Fraser, 112.
+
+
+ Usher, James, Archbishop of Armagh, his evidence reported, 45.
+
+
+ _Venatio Catholica_, 261.
+
+ _Vetusta Monumenta_, 79, 86.
+
+ Villeroy, M., on Cecil's duplicity, 23.
+
+ "Vinegar House," 60 _note_.
+
+ Vowell, Peter, evidence reported, 160.
+
+
+ Waad, Sir William, lieutenant of the Tower, charged by Cobham with
+ forgery of evidence, 202; dismissed from his post, 203 _note_, 267;
+ his inscriptions in the Tower, 264, 267; letters to Cecil, 168, 258.
+
+ Walsh, Sir Richard, sheriff of Worcestershire, 4, 154 _note_.
+
+ Ward, Samuel, preacher and artist, 239.
+
+ Webb, John, evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Weldon, Sir Anthony, on Cecil's unpopularity, 25.
+
+ Welwood, James (_Memoirs_), 46.
+
+ Westmoreland, titular Earl of (Henry Neville), attempt to implicate
+ him, 197.
+
+ Whynniard, Mr., landlord of Percy's house, 61 _note_, 89; his sudden
+ death, 92 _note_.
+
+ Whynniard, Mrs., evidence of, 61, 67, 72, 88, 142.
+
+ Willaston, William, intelligence supplied by, 99.
+
+ Wimbledon, Viscount (Edward Cecil), his evidence reported, 160.
+
+ Windsor, Lord, his house plundered by the conspirators, 2.
+
+ Winter, Robert, introduced to the conspiracy, 10; captured at
+ Hagley, 4; evidences of foul play in his regard, 183, 184; trial and
+ execution, 6. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Winter, Thomas, one of the first conspirators, 9, 64; character, 35;
+ Spanish mission, 36, 118; brings Faukes from Flanders, 9; attends
+ the prorogation, Oct. 3rd, 74 _note_, 230; captured at Holbeche, 4;
+ his published confession, 167 _seq._; probably tortured, 169; trial
+ and execution, 6. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Wood, Anthony a, notes addressed to, 159.
+
+ Worcester, Earl of (Edward Somerset), 168 _note_, 266.
+
+ Wotton, Sir Henry, 160.
+
+ Wren, Sir Christopher, 138.
+
+ Wright, Christopher, his introduction to the Conspiracy, 9, 64;
+ character, 35, 37; previous employment in Spain, 36; killed at
+ Holbeche, 4, 152. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+ Wright, Henry, his informations, 94, 95, 254.
+
+ Wright, John, one of the first conspirators, 9, 64; character, 35,
+ 37; killed at Holbeche, 4, 152. _See also_ Conspirators.
+
+
+CHISWICK PRESS:--CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
+TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
+
+
+TRANSCRIBERS' NOTES:
+
+p 14: there is no closing quotation mark following the line '"making and
+fomenting plots was then in fashion; nor can it be denied that good
+grounds for such an opinion were not lacking.' The closing mark is
+placed at the end of this sentence, though this may be incorrect.
+
+p 20: continuation of footnote 37 from previous page begins with 'avor';
+this is a typo for 'favor'.
+
+p 24: 'the' repeated in footnote 49, epigram 2; one 'the' removed.
+
+p 32: added a closing quotation mark following 'and prepared for them'.
+
+p 36: added . to end of footnote 87, after 'The Spanish Treason'.
+
+p 49: Inserted , into footnote 124; 'James I., lxxxi.'.
+
+p 120: footnote 257: missing closing bracket; corrected.
+
+p 154: inserted , into footnote 310; 'James I., i. 588'.
+
+p 160: changed ' to " to match quote mark style, footnote 329.
+
+p 194: footnote 396: 'Englands' changed to 'England's'.
+
+p 248: added missing full-stop: 'give ease to Catholics'.
+
+p 255: added opening double-quote marks to the passage entitled
+'Application to the King.'
+
+p 266: the oe ligature was represented as [oe]
+
+p 268, 269: uncommon 'inverted asterism' topographic marks are used to
+signify important notes on conventions used in the text; they have the
+form of three asterixes arranged in a v-shape. For simplicity, they are
+replaced with '***' in this document.
+
+p 281: 'incrediblty' changed to 'incredibility', 'o' changed to 'of'.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's What was the Gunpowder Plot?, by John Gerard
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? ***
+
+***** This file should be named 34807.txt or 34807.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/4/8/0/34807/
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Adam Styles and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+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 1.F.3. 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, are 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.
diff --git a/34807.zip b/34807.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e553e52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/34807.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b5ec363
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #34807 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/34807)