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LIVES AND LETTERS
OF THE
DEVEREUX, EARLS OF ESSEX,
IN THE REIGNS OF
ELIZABETH, JAMES L, AND CHAELES I.
1540—1646.
BY THE HONORABLE
WALTER BOURCHIER DEVEREUX,
CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY.
IN TWO VOLUMES.— VOL. II.
LONDON:
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMAELE STREET.
1853.
Dfl
v.l
LONDON :
SPOTTISWOODES and SIIAVV,
New-street-Squarc.
CONTENTS
THE SECOND VOLUME.
CHAPTER I.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
Difficulty about the appointment of a Lord Lieutenant. Bacon's
advice to Essex, to interest himself in Irish matters. Dislike of
Essex to the service. His appointment. Instructions. Com-
mission. Departure. His detention at Helbry. His arrival at
Dublin. Council advise delay. Minister and Leinster journey.
His letters. He advances to Askeaton, and returns by Water-
ford. His able letter to the Queen on the state of Ireland, and
mode of managing an Irish war - Page 1
CHAPTER II.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
Displeasure of the Queen at Southampton's appointment. His
discharge. Queen expresses strong disapprobation of Essex's
proceedings, while Cecyll, in letters to Sir H. Neville, approves.
On the alarm of a Spanish invasion, and preparation of arma-
ment, Essex ordered not to quit Ireland. Trial of Sir H. Har-
rington's men. Defeat and death of Sir Conyers Clifford. Royal
letter of reproof. Essex proceeds to Ulster to make a recon-
noissance. The Council protest against an attack on Tyrone.
Skirmish. Parley. Truce. Another letter of disapprobation
from the Queen 42
A 2
iv CONTENTS.
CHAPTER III.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX continued.
Arrival of Essex at Nonsuch, on the morning of Michaelmas-eve.
His reception by the Queen. He is committed to the Lord
Keeper's custody at York House. The Queen exasperated.
His submissive letters. He falls ill. Lady Essex's grief. Popu-
lar feeling in his favour. The Queen orders a consultation of
physicians. She visits him, but refuses his new year's gift. He
is removed to Essex House. Lady Essex allowed to visit him
in the day. His occupations. He is sent before an irregular
court at York House. Proceedings there. His behaviour. The
censure. He is released, but ordered not to approach the pre-
sence - - Page 76
CHAPTER IV.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
Francis Bacon endeavours to explain his conduct. Essex's reply.
Vain endeavours to obtain access. Consideration of his conduct
in Ireland. Renewal of his lease of sweet wines refused. His
last letter, threatening to enter the royal presence in armour.
Essex House thrown open. Daily preachings. His friends
hold meetings at Drury House. Immediate cause of the insur-
rection. The Lord Keeper goes to Essex House. Vain attempt
to raise the City. Essex House is invested. Essex surrenders,
and with his principal friends is sent to the Tower - 117
CHAPTER V.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
Westminster Hall at the trial of Essex and Southampton. Their
arraignment. Confessions of their companions. Bacon's speech
and behaviour. Essex's speech, and condemnation. Mr. Ashton
obtains a confession. Chamberlain's account. Lady Essex's
letter to Cecyll, who relents. Ralegh's letter, urging the death
of Essex. The story of the ring considered, with the subsequent
regret of Elizabeth. The Queen's indecision. Order of execu-
tion sent. Last hours and death of Essex - 149
CONTENTS. V
CHAPTER VI.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX concluded.
Character of Essex. His writings. Liberality. Children. Fate
of Essex's companions. Popular feeling respecting Essex.
Bacon's " Declaration of the Treasons of the late Earl of Essex."
Anthony Bacon defends Essex to the last. Elizabeth's melan-
choly, grief for Essex's loss, and death. Favour shown by
James I. to Essex's friends. Attainder of Ralegh, Grey, and
Cobham. Northumberland arraigned. Mountjoy returns from
Ireland, marries Lady Rich. His disgrace and death. Descrip-
tion by Moryson - - Page 192
CHAPTER VII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX.
Contrast between Elizabeth and James I. Robert Devereux, at
Eton and Oxford. The attainder of Essex and Southampton
reversed. Quarrel between the Prince of Wales and Essex.
Marriage of Essex and Lady Frances Howard, and festivities at
Court. Dissolute state of the Court. Essex goes abroad. His
letters from France. His correspondence with the Prince of
Wales - - 218
CHAPTER VIII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
Rise of Carr to be favourite. Lady Essex becomes attached to
him. She refuses to live with her husband. Her letters to
Mrs. Turner and Dr. Forman, from Chartley. The connection
of Lady Essex and Rochester becomes notorious. A commis-
sion appointed to inquire into the petition of Lady Essex for
dissolution of the marriage. Its proceedings. Essex challenges
Mr. Henry Howard - - 238
CHAPTER IX.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX continued.
Further proceedings of the commission, and sentence annulling the
marriage of Essex. Rochester created Earl of Somerset, mar-
i CONTENTS.
ries Lady Essex. Festivities and presents on the occasion.
Rochester guided by Overbury. They quarrel. Overbury is
sent to the Tower, and there poisoned. Somerset and his wife
arrested. They are tried and convicted of the murder of Sir
Thomas Overbury. The uneasiness of James. Lord and Lady
Somerset are pardoned - - Page 254
CHAPTER X.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
The Elector Palatine marries the Princess Elizabeth. Their
friendship for Essex. Essex retires to Chartley. Arthur Wil-
son is taken into his service. Sir William Seymour marries
Lady Frances Devereux. Origin of the Thirty Years' War.
The Elector Palatine chosen King of Bohemia. Essex serves in
the Palatinate - - 270
CHAPTER XL
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX continued.
Parliament of 1621. Essex goes to Holland. Parliament of 1624
votes supplies for the Palatinate. Essex commands a regiment.
He is recalled on the death of King James. Attends the Par-
liament at Oxford. He is appointed Vice- Admiral of the fleet
under Viscount Wimbledon. Expedition to Cadiz, 1625 287
CHAPTER XII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX continued.
Parliament of 1628. Earl of Essex marries Miss Elizabeth Paulet.
Army sent against the Scots Covenanters, 1639, of which Essex
is Lieutenant-General. His proceedings. He is unceremo-
niously dismissed after the treaty. Parliament called in 1640.
The Scottish Covenanters invade England in 1641. Essex and
others petition the King for a Parliament. Council of Peers at
York. Commissioners meet at Ripon - - 303
CONTENTS. Vll
CHAPTER XIII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
The Long Parliament. Earl of Strafford's trial. Essex is appointed
Lord Lieutenant of Yorkshire and Lord Chamberlain. The
King goes to Scotland, leaving Essex Lieutenant-General of the
kingdom, south of the Trent. Return of the King. Impeach-
ment of the five members. Charles leaves London. The Lord
Chamberlain refuses to attend him. His dismissal. Ordinance
concerning the militia. Essex Lord- Lieutenant of Yorkshire,
Staffordshire, Montgomeryshire, Salop, and Herefordshire. His
position at this juncture - - Page 323
CHAPTER XIV.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX continued.
Progress of events. Essex appointed Captain-General by the Par-
liament. He is proclaimed a rebel by the King. The standard
raised by the King. Parliament army assembles at Northamp-
ton. Essex marches to Worcester. His speech to the army.
Battle of Edgehill. Subsequent proceedings. Attempt to
negotiate. Action at Brentford. King Charles returns to
Oatlands, and Oxford. Essex establishes head-quarters at
Windsor - 340
CHAPTER XV.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
The campaign of 1643. 10,000/. a-year voted to Essex. His
letters recommending peace and demanding money. Debate
on their being read. Situation of the royalists. Sir William
Waller's expedition and defeat. Jealousy between Essex and
Waller. Proceedings in Parliament. The King besieges
Gloucester, which place is relieved by Essex. Cirencester sur-
prised. Battle of Newbury. Essex receives the thanks of Par-
liament. He desires leave to resign his commission. Solemn
league and covenant - - 366
Vlii CONTENTS.
CHAPTER XVI.
LIFE OP ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
The King calls a Parliament at Oxford, in January, 1644. An
attempt to negotiate fails. Neglected state of the army. Open-
ing of the campaign. Essex and Waller advance on Oxford.
The King retreats, and is pursued by Waller. Essex marches
into the West. His letters, detailing his proceedings. His
dissatisfaction. He is reprimanded in a letter from the
Speakers - - Page 389
CHAPTER XVII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
Good conduct and discipline of Essex's army compared with others.
The Queen leaves Exeter. Letters reporting the advance into
Devonshire. The Council of War determines to go into Corn-
wall. Essex is pursued by the King. Movements in support
of Essex. The King writes to Essex. Blockade of the rebel
army in Lestwithiel and Fowey. Capitulation - - 412
CHAPTER XVIH.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX concluded.
Movements of the royal army. Proceedings of Lord Essex. His
illness. Second battle of Newbury. Consultation at Essex
House concerning Cromwell. Self-denying Ordinance. Essex
resigns his commission. His conduct as General. Sequestrated
lands assigned to him. Proposal to make Essex and others
Dukes. His illness and death. Lord Clarendon's character of
Lord Essex. His funeral. Litigation about his will - 441
APPENDIX ______ 477
ERRATA IN VOL. II.
Page 32. line 25. for "from whence," read " and thence."
33. line 22. " from whence," dele " from."
69. line 7. "from whence," dele ''from."
128. last line for "vengeful woman," read "vindictive woman.'
LIVES AND LETTERS
OF THE
DEVEREUX, EARLS OF ESSEX,
CHAPTER I.
LIFE OF EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
DIFFICULTY ABOUT THE APPOINTMENT OF A LORD LIEUTENANT.
BACON'S ADVICE TO ESSEX, TO INTEREST HIMSELF IN IRISH MAT-
TERS. DISLIKE OF ESSEX TO THE SERVICE. — HIS APPOINTMENT.
INSTRUCTIONS. COMMISSION. DEPARTURE. HIS DETENTION
AT HELBRY. — HIS ARRIVAL AT DUBLIN. — COUNCIL ADVISE DELAY.
MUNSTER AND LEINSTER JOURNEY. — HIS LETTERS HE AD-
VANCES TO ASKEATON, AND RETURNS BY WATERFORD. HIS ABLE
LETTER TO THE QUEEN ON THE STATE OF IRELAND, AND MODE
OF MANAGING AN IRISH WAR.
THE defeat of the royal forces under Sir H. Bagenall,
by the rebels led by the Earl of 'Tyrone, near the
Blackwater, has been mentioned. In order to crush
this rebellion, rendered doubly formidable by such
unwonted success, it was resolved to send to Ireland
a greater force than had ever yet been engaged in
VOL. II. B
2 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
that country. A difficulty arose in the nomination
of a commander.
Camden, whose authority has been received un-
questioned by every subsequent writer, has stated
that Lord Mountjoy was nominated ; that his ap-
pointment was opposed by Essex, on the ground that
he was not sufficiently experienced in the conduct of
warlike affairs ; that his fortune and connections
were not sufficiently great ; and that he was too much
devoted to study ; that every body perceived Essex
meant to point at himself as the only fit person : and
upon his enemies becoming aware of this, they con-
spired with alacrity to obtain his appointment ; thus,
while they gratified his ambition, obtaining for them-
selves a clear field at court.
Francis Bacon, whose intimate friendship with the
Earl had decayed since the summer of 1597, when
Essex had made ineffectual efforts to further the
interests of Bacon in his suit to the rich widow,
Lady Hatton, and who probably had contemplated,
and was prepared to execute, when occasion should
offer, that base desertion of his generous and unsus-
pecting friend, which has cast a shade of infamy on
his memory, that not all the reverence felt for
his splendid intellect, nor all his great services to
mankind, have ever been able to remove: in an
apology for his conduct which he thought it neces-
sary to write in the following reign to the Earl of
Devonshire, declares, that he did not only dissuade,
but most vehemently protest against, the Earl's going
to Ireland, foreseeing his overthrow in that journey ;
CHAP. I. • ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX.
but that though the ear of Essex was open, his heart
was shut against advice.
Now, presumptuous as it may seem, I not only
mean to attempt to show, that neither of these great
authorities is to be trusted in this case, but I
believe that I shall be able to prove my assertion,
that the Earl of Essex had, from the first, a very
strong aversion to the service, and accepted the office
of Deputy most unwillingly. It must be recollected
that Bacon wrote as his own advocate, in a cause
which the general detestation of his conduct even
then shown, required him to explain if possible, and
that his letters to Essex, by means of which we intend
to refute him, were not published to the world.
With respect to Camden, I shall produce a series
of letters from Essex to various persons, both pre-
vious to his going over, and from Ireland, all demon-
strative of the most marked dislike to his employment.
That he may have objected to the nomination of
Mountjoy is highly probable, for the same reason
that he had before opposed that of Sir William
Knollys, that he was one of his very few true friends,
who had access and influence at Court : there was
another possible influence, the unwillingness of Lady
Rich to part with her lover.
I will first dispose of Francis Bacon. While Sir
Robert Cecyll was in France, he had written to the
Earl of Essex urging his attention to Irish matters,
as " one of the aptest particulars that can come upon
" the stage, for your Lordship to purchase honor
B 2
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
" upon," x and for three reasons ; that it was in-
generate in his house in consequence of his noble
father's attempts ; that of all state affairs, that was
at present the most important; and that he would
induce a comparison between those who set it out of
frame, and those who bring it into frame, greatly
to the honour of the last. There were two ways by
which he could obtain that honour ; employing persons
named by himself, or himself undertaking the care
of the matter. He ends by urging him to seize the
advantage of the time of Mr. Secretary's absence, to
put his sickle to other men's harvests.
It might have suited the principles of Mr. Francis
Bacon to think lightly of the promise given by Essex
to do nothing during the absence of Cecyll damag-
ing to his interests ; not so with the Earl ; we need
scarcely say this advice was not followed.
After Essex was appointed, or at least nominated,
for the government of Ireland, Francis Bacon wrote
him another letter. He says, « Your Lordship is
" designed to a service of great merit and great
I' peril; and as the greatness of the merit must
' needs include no small consequence of peril, if
" it be not temperately governed; so all immoderate
1 success extinguished merit, and stirreth up dis-
taste and envy, the assured forerunner of whole
" changes of peril. But I am at the last point first,
some good spirit leading my pen to presage your
Lordship's success." Again, « You embrace that
1 Bacon's works, xii. 15.
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 5
" condition which many noble spirits have accepted
" for advantage, which is, that you go upon the
" greater peril of your fortune, and the loss of your
" reputation ; and so the honor counter vaileth the
" adventure ; of which honor your Lordship is in
" no small possession, when that Her Majesty, known
" to be one of the most judicious princes in discerning
" of spirits, that ever governed, hath made choice of
" you merely out of her royal judgment, her affection
" inclining rather to continue your attendance, into
" whose hands and trust to put the commandment
" and conduct of so great charge, the execution of
" so many counsels, the redeeming the faults of so
" many former governors, and the clearing the glory
"of so many years happy reign, only in this part
" excepted." He then reminds the Earl that " merit
" is worthier than fame, obedience is better than
" sacrifice. For designing to fame and glory may
" make your Lordship, in the adventure of your
" person, to be valiant as a private soldier, rather
" than as a general ; it may make you in your
" commandments rather to be gracious than disci-
" plinary ; it may make you press action, in respect
" of the great expectations conceived, rather hastily
" than seasonably and safely ; it may make you seek
" rather to achieve the war by force, than by mixture
44 of practice ; it may make you, if God shall send
<fc you prosperous beginnings, rather seek the fruition
" of the honor, than the perfection of the work in
"hand."1
1 Bacon's works, xii. 20.
B 3
6 LIVES OF THE EABLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
So far from vehement protestation against the
service in Ireland, it appears that the whole scope of
Bacon's letters was to induce the unwilling Essex to
take a more favourable view of it, and, in all respects,
an encouragement to turn his mind that way. The
probable solution is, that the adverse party in the
Queen's Council, who could always command a ma-
jority against Essex, took hold of his incautious objec-
tions to the persons named to force upon him the office
of Deputy, and persuaded the Queen to sanction it.
During each of his absences in the Cadiz and Island
voyages, they had been enabled to loosen his hold on
the Queen's affections: a bitter quarrel, followed by
a cold reconciliation, gave them reason now to hope
that, during another absence, especially if he did not
succeed, as no man had yet, in pacifying unhappy
Ireland, they might succeed in completely unseat-
ing him.
We must now refer to our good gossip, Mr. Cham-
berlain, whose letters will place us completely au
courant of events at Court.
20th October, 1598. — No Lord Treasurer is appointed, the
voice ran all this week Sir John Fortescue was to have
it ; now Lord Buckhurst is come about again. The next
new councillors, it is thought, shall be Lord Mountjoy and
Lord Chief Justice, who hath played vex of late among
whores and bawds, and persecutes poor pretty wenches out
of all pity and mercy. The Court of Wards sits not for
want of a Master, and though the Earl of Essex be alone in
election, there is still some rub in his way. Some say the
Queen means to dissolve that Court, and, instead thereof, to
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 7
raise yearly contributions out of all lands in capite, or knight's
service, which would be more for her profit, and less griev-
ance to the subject; but this is too good to be true : others
say he may have it if he will ; but because there is a course
spoken of, somewhat to geld and curtail it, he refuseth to
accept it unless he may have it whole and unmaimed ; and
others say he finds some scruple in the strictness of the oath,
and wonders how the late Lord Treasurer could dispense so
easily and so largely with it and his conscience ; but this
were somewhat too pure and maidenlike, or rather inutilis
verecundia. The state of Ireland grows deeply di mal in
peggio. Some think the Lord Mountjoy shall be sent thither
Deputy ; others say the Earl of JBssex means to take it upon
him, and hopes by his countenance to quiet that country.
Marry ! he would have it under the broad seal of England,
that after a year he might return when he will.
This demand of unusual conditions which is as-
scribed to Essex, and probably with truth, tends to
corroborate the opinion of his disinclination to go to
Ireland, for had the objections lain on the other side
he never would have thrown such difficulties in the
way.
8th November. — It is generally held that the Earl of
Essex shall go to Ireland towards the spring, and Lord
Mountjoy as his Deputy, with divers other young lords and
noblemen, and that he shall be accompanied with the most
part of those knights that be his creatures ; for it is thought
fit that they should not come so easily by their honour, but
that in this case, as in many others, it should be granted for
service done and to be done.
8th December. — The Earl of Essex's journey to Ireland is
neither fast nor loose, but holds still in suspense by reason
the proportions are daily dipt and diminished. For eight or
B 4
8 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
ten days the soldiers flocked about him, and every man
hoped to be a colonel at the least. The Lord Buckhurst KJ
full cry to be Lord Treasurer; some say the Queen will
give it to some mean man, who shall execute the place to
her best advantage. Some say the Earl should have 60007.
yearly out of it; others, that he should have 20,0007. to help
pay his debts, and so loose his hold, but we see neither come
on very fast. He kept a kind of Marshal's Court to hear
arguments on the title of Nevile to be Lord of Aberga-
venny, and Sir Henry Leonard to be Lord Dacre of the
South.
20th December. — The matters of Ireland stand at a stay,
or rather go backward ; for the Earl of Essex's journey that
was in suspense is now, they say, quite dashed. From
Friday 15th to Sunday 17th it held fast and firm that the
Earl of Essex was to go, and all things were accordingly
settled and set down; but a sudden alteration came on
Sunday night, the reason whereof is yet kept secret ; some
say the Queen had promised to forgive him 12,0007. debt
due by his father, and 20,0007. he owed her himself for
cochenilla since his last journey, which belike was mistaken ;
for the Queen says she meant but the forbearing of it, and
that it should not be called for in his absence ; but whether
it were this or some other matter, all is turned upside down,
and he and Mr. Secretary have so good leisure that they ply
the tables hard in the presence-chamber, and play so round a
game as if Ireland were to be recovered at Irish.
3rd January, 1599. — The wind is come about again for
Ireland, and the disgust that made stay of the Earl's going
for awhile, is sweetened and removed.
17 th January. — The Queen on Twelfth-day, to close up
the holidays, and do the Danish ambassador honor, danced
with the Earl of Essex, very richly and freshly attired.
Since then fell out great unkindness betwixt the Earl and
the Lord Admiral, about Sir Wm. Woodhouse. The Earl's
CIIAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX.
going to Ireland deferred from February to March. He
shall carry a great troop of gallants with him, if all go that
are spoken of, as the Earls of Derby *, Rutland, Southamp-
ton, Lords Windsor, Grey, Audley, and Cromwell, who
stands to be Lord Marshal ; besides knights sans number,
whereof Sir Ferdinando Gorges is named to be Serjeant
Major, Sir Henry Davers2 the leading of 300 horse, Sir
Chas. Davers, Sir Chas. Blunt, Sir Thos. Egerton, Sir
Thos. Germaine, Sir Alex. Ratcliffe, and I know not how
many more to be colonels ; and yet Sir Christopher Blount,
Sir Edward Wingfield, and ten or twelve others of that
standing, look to be served too. Many that wish well to the
journey have no great conceit of it, so many raw youths
press for the greatest charges.
1.9* March. — My Lord of Essex, much crossed, does not
succeed ; new difficulties arise daily about his commission,
as touching the time of his abode, his entertainment, and
disposing of offices; his Lordship so dissatisfied, that it is
doubtful whether he will go ; the treatise of Henry IV.3 is
1 William Stanley, sixth Earl, born, 1562 ; K. G. ; died, 1594.
2 Sir H. Davers or Danvers, second son of Sir J. D. of Dantsey, Wilts ;
by a daughter of Neville, Lord Latimer, created by Charles I. Earl of
Danby, K. G. ; ob. s. p. at Cornbury, 1643. Sir Charles, who was
executed for his share in the Essex insurrection, was the elder brother of
Sir Henry.
3 This refers to a book written by one Hayward, which containing a
history of the deposition of Richard II., gave great offence : it was dedi-
cated to the Earl of Essex, with expressions of esteem and respect. Hay-
ward was imprisoned. Elizabeth consulted Francis Bacon whether the
offence did not constitute treason. This was rather too much even for his
pliant spirit : he said, he could not discover treason, but could prove the
author to have been guilty of felony. " How ?" asked Elizabeth. "Madam,
I can shew that he has stolen very many texts from other authors, and
transplanted them into his book as his own." She then doubted whether
Hayward was the author, and proposed to put him to the torture to force
him to reveal. " Nay, Madam," said Bacon, " he is a doctor ;" never rack
his person, but rack his style ; let him have pens, ink, and paper, with help
of books, and continue the story where it breaketh off; I will undertake,
by collating the styles, to judge whether he be the author or not."
10 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
reasonably well written, the author a young man of Cam-
bridge, toward the civil law, — much descanting about it,
why such a story should come out at this time, — many ex-
ceptions taken to the epistle, which is a short thing in Latin
dedicated to the Earl of Essex, and objected to him in good
earnest ; whereon it was ordered to be cut out. I have got
you a transcript that you may pick out the offence if you
can ; for my part, I can pick out no such buggeswords, but
that every thing is as it is taken.
Thus it would appear that Essex threw all sorts of
difficulties in the way of his going to Ireland ; yet,
so anxious were his enemies, and perhaps the Queen,
to be relieved from his presence at Court, that ulti-
mately all were smoothed with a great show of
liberality to him, in pardoning his father's debt and
his own to the Crown.
The copy of the letters passed under the great
seal1, shows us that this vaunted liberality did not
much exceed the sum of 300£.
6th March, 1599, XLI Eliz.
Letters passed under the Great Seal, pardoning the Earl of
Essex, Debts due to Her Majesty by his Father, the late
Earl Walter, and himself.
First owing by the said Earl Robert to Sir Horatio Palla-
vicino, by three several obligations ; all which H. M.
undertook to pay, and thereof acquitted him - - 1000 0 0
•One bond of 600Z., dated 14th May, anno
xviii., acknowledged by Walter, late Earl,
for payment of - - 500 0 0
One other bond of the like penalty and date 500 0 0
Debts of his
father in
Ireland.
Five other bonds of the same date, every of
them, 1200?. to a piece, for the payment
of 1000Z. in each of them, all acknow-
ledged ' - 5000 0 0
1 S. P. O.
CHAP, I. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 11
Debts of his
father in
Ireland.
Also by the same Earl, owing for munition
hadoutofH. M. Tower - 195 16 8
Also, owing by the said late Earl, on the
account of Sir Henry Wallop, of the wars
in Ireland, ended A.D. 1591 - - 1013 7 7
Also, owing by him for a subsidy granted
, anno xviii., taxed at 53 6 8
Timber. Also owing by the now Earl, for timber by him
taken upon the land of the late Francis Englefield, Knt.,
attainted of treason, as by certificate made 8th Nov.
anno xxx. appeareth ----- 838 6 8
Rent of fee farms. Also by him for rent of the fee farms
of the manor of Ross-foreign in Com. Hereford, taken
at 28/. 6*. 2d. per annum, due by seven years - - 172 19 7
Court of wards. Three obligations of 200Z. a piece, ac-
knowledged by him and others, for the payment of ,
dated 24th Oct. anno xxix. - - 300 0 0
Timber. One obligation of 3000Z., dated 28th Jan. anno
xxxvii. for certain timber afterwards valued at - 406 13 4
9980 10 6
From Her Highness. Surplusage due to the late Earl,
upon account finished of the affairs of Ireland - - 9621 16 4
£358 14 2
If Her Majesty's liberality did not shine brightly
in a pecuniary light, she made up for it by the ample
powers given to Essex in his instructions, of which
we give a precise abstract, because we shall hereafter
find great blame laid upon him for having exercised
the authority given him.
" Instructions for our right trusty and right well
11 beloved cousin and councillor, Robert Earl of Essex,
" Lord Marshal of England, Lieutenant and Governor
" General of Ireland. Given at Richmond, the 26th
" day of March, 1599."1
His dislike to the service -is almost acknowledged
in the preamble, which runs : " Whosoever we shall
i S. P. o.
12 LIVES 'OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
" chuse thereunto, if he shall rightly descend into
" the true consideration of our election, cannot but
" have that great sense and feeling which so great
" an honor and trust deserveth, and both resolve to
" undergo the charge with comfort, and study by all
" effects of diligence, faith, and wisdom to yield us
" and our state timely fruits;" and then says that,
" having cast her eyes on all her servants, she had
" chosen him before all others, out of former ex-
" perience of his faith, valor, and wisdom, and extra-
" ordinary merit."
As soon as he has taken the oaths, he is to assemble
the Council, and require from them a report of the
state of Ireland. He is directed,
By his example and endeavor, that the army and
people be instructed in the true exercise of religion,
and service of God, from which they have grievously
fallen away ; the infection of popery is so spread over
the kingdom, that many of the parishes within the
English Pale have neither incumbent nor teacher,
and in the great towns even massing and idolatry
are winked at and tolerated.
To countenance and assist the judges.
To reform abuses in the army, of false certificates
of numbers, and filling vacancies with Irishry.
To take order about the stores of provisions, and
not to allow private settlers to forestal the public
victualler.
To have the same care of ordnance, powder, and
munition.
Having settled the establishment of 16,000 foot
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 13
and 1300 horse, to issue his warrant from time to
time to the treasurer at war for the payment of the
entertainment due to such establishment of numbers,
and no more — all defalcations being first deducted.
To issue his warrant to the treasurer to pay such
governors of provinces, castles, and forts, pensioners,
almsmen, &c., as are not included in the establish-
ment, not to exceed 15,000£. per annum.
" And where we have been pleased heretofore in
" divers commissions to give power and authority to
" bestow the order of knighthood on such persons as
" should deserve the same ; and there hath been so
" little moderation used in it, as many men have had
" that honor done to them, who neither for birth nor
" living were capable of it, nor for any extraordinary
" service done by them in particular ; a matter that
" is no small grief and discountenance to divers of
" our good servants, gentlemen of blood and value,
" who are placed beneath them ; we do require you
" to use this power and authority in that point with
" that discretion which you think we shall allow of;
" and that you confer that title upon none that shall
" not deserve it by some notorious service, or have
" not in possession or reversion sufficient living to
" maintain their degree and calling."
In using his power of granting pardons, he is not to
forget the Queen's profits, and to impose fines, or re-
serve beeves, or a rising out of horse and foot ; to bind
them to keep open the dangerous passes ; to use the
English language and habits : he has power to grant
the lands of the rebels ; but, as she has reason to
1 4 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
think O'Doherty and Sir Arthur O'Neale are rebels
of necessity rather than out of disloyalty, not to
grant their possessions till Her Majesty's pleasure
be known.
To reduce the large numbers of 16,000 foot and
1300 horse, to which she had yielded to make a
speedy end of the war, as soon as the service will
permit.
It is not unlikely that capital traitor Tyrone may,
on his arrival, profess to him, as he did to the Earl of
Ormonde, his desire to be received and to live as a
good subject ; and because he has " vilely abused our
" mercy," she is in no way disposed to receive him
as yet : he is only to receive him on " simple sub-
" mission to our mercy." Yet, if that drive him to
despair, Essex may grant him pardon for his life,
provided he submit in all lowly and reverent form :
but he is not to be allowed to depart without due
security given that he will not return to his dis-
loyalty ; with this addition, for the " better pre-
" venting of sending to and fro, by which opportunity
" may be lost, whensoever you shall fall into treaty
" of speech with him, and shall perceive that either
" his pride or his disposition is such as he cannot be
" brought to such conditions, and you shall discover
" some prejudice likely to follow without the en-
•' larging of the measure of our grace towards him,
" we give you full power and authority to take him
" in on such conditions as you shall find good."
The commission appointing him Lieut enant-General
and Governor-General of Ireland, authorised him to
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 15
pardon all treasons without exception ; to restore
traitors and rebels to their dignities and lands ; to
grant lands in certain parts of the country specially
named ; to displace martial officers not having patents ;
to sequester such as have patents ; to make knights ;
to have the command of all ships on service in Ire-
land ; to dispose of the treasure with the advice of
the Council, but not to exceed the establishment, and
not to grant any new pensions.
He had also a commission authorising him to carry
over a body of his friends, tenants, and farmers with
him, who, during their absence, were to be free from
any musters or contributions ; and his lands in Eng-
land and Wales, in consideration of the store of
victuals he took from them, were to be exempted
from all purveyors and takers.1
Essex appointed Edward Eeynolds to be his agent
at the Court during his absence, who writes to him :
" There are but three of the Council whose affection
" I hold to be settled on you : the most just Lord
" Keeper2, the most reverend Archbishop3, and your
" Lordship's worthy uncle, Mr. Comptroller4 ; the
" rest are either declared opposite or neuter." Rey-
nolds gives it as his opinion, that unless he gets a
strong party in the Council, to weaken the power of
his opponents with Her Majesty, whose ears are too
open to suggesting tongues, and to provide him sup-
plies from time to time of men and money, he will
find it impossible to go through the great service he
has undertaken.
1 From a docket in S. P. O. * Egerton.
^ 3 John Whitgift, 1585—1604. * Sir William Knollys.
1 6 LIVES OF THE EAI^LS OF ESSEX. CHAP, I.
We shall have occasion to remark on these instruc-
tions.
" On the 27th of March, about 2 o'clock in the
" afternoon, Kobert Earl of Essex, Viceregent of
" Ireland, &c. took horse in Seething Lane1, and
" from thence, accompanied with divers noblemen
" and many others, himself very plainly attired,
" rode through Grace Street, Cornhill, Cheapside,
" and other high streets, in all which places and in
" the fields the people pressed exceedingly to behold
" him, especially in the highways, for more than
" four miles space, crying out, saying, ' God bless
" your Lordship ! ' ' God preserve your Honour ! '
" &c. ; and some followed him till the evening.
" When he and his company came forth of London,
" the sky was very calm and clear ; but before he
" could get past Iseldon2 there arose a great black
" cloud in the N.E., and suddenly came thunder and
" lightning, with a great shower of hail and rain,
" which some held an ominous prodigy." 3
On the 1st of April he wrote two letters to the
Council from Bromley. He says in the first, that " he
" hears how miserable the army is in Ireland, and
" therefore what he must crave from their LL. is
" their favourable censure, if at his coming he studies
" to cherish it, and bring it to some strength again,
" rather than to put it to those travails by which it
1 Originally Sidon Lane, runs from Great Tower Street into Crutched
Friars. Sir Francis Walsingham's house was here, where Essex occa-
sionally lodged. — See Handbook of London.
* Islington.
3 Nicholl's Progresses of Queen Elizabeth.
CHAP. T. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 17
" would be utterly overwhelmed." The other letter is
as follows.
No. I.*
Essex to the Council.
My very good Lords, — As your LL. by my other letter,
sent by Sir Calisthenes Brooke, shall see how weak Her
Majesty's army is like to be at my coming into Ireland, so by
that kind of governing and directing a matter of that weight,
you may judge of the strength of Her Majesty's Council
there ; and how it will be supplied by any that goes with me,
the audit is quickly made. I did only move Her Majesty
for her service to give me one strong assistant, but it is not
her will. What my body and mind will suffice to, I will by
God's grace discharge with industry and faith. But neither
can a rheumatic body promise itself that health in a moist
rotten country, nor a sad mind, vigor and quickness in a dis-
comfortable voyage. But I sit down and waste my suit, now
I know Her Majesty's resolute pleasure ; only I must desire
to be freed from all imputation, if the body of the army prove
unwieldy, that it is so ill furnished, or so unfurnished of
joints ; or of any maim in the service, when I am sent out
maimed before hand. I have returned Sir Christopher
Blount, whom I hoped to have carried over, for I shall have
no such necessary use of his hands, as, being barred the use of
his head, I would carry him to his own disadvantage, and the
disgrace of the place he should serve in. Hereof I thought
it fit to advertise your LL., that you might rather pity me
than expect extraordinary successes from me. I rest, &c.
Bromley, this Sunday morning, the 1st April. ESSEX.
No great symptoms here of the content and satis-
faction of the man who has just started for the com-
1 S. P. O.
VOL. II. C
18 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
mand he had been struggling for months to obtain, but
rather the letter of one proceeding upon a service he
dislikes, with most unwilling steps. We shall see, by
his progress too, so different from those rapid rides
between London and Plymouth, that his heart was
not in it. The parish register of Tamworth contains
a notice that, on the 3rd of April, Eobert, Earl of
Essex, went from Drayton Bassett towards Ireland.
On the fifth he writes to announce his arrival at
Helbry, a small island in the estuary of the river
Dee. Thus he had taken eight days to perform
a far shorter journey than that to Plymouth, which
he accomplished between Thursday night and Satur-
day morning. Here was a lagging will, rather en-
deavouring to retard his progress towards Ireland,
than to reach the scene of action.
Why Sir Christopher Blount had been objected to
does not appear ; but when Essex, who had intended
to make him Marshal of the army, sent him back, he
was found fault with. Writing from Helbry he says,
" As for Sir Christopher Blount's ill success, or rather
" mine for him, I fear it will be semble to all my
" speed when I sue or move for anything. I sued to
" Her Majesty to grant it out of favor, but I spake a
" language that was not understood, or to a goddess
" not at leisure to hear prayers. I since, not for my
" sake, but for her service sake, desired to have it
" granted ; but I see, let me plead in any form, it is in
" vain. I must save myself by protestation, that it is
" not Tyrone and the Irish rebellion that amazeth
" me, but to see myself sent of such an errand, at such
CHAP. I. - ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 19
" a time, with so little comfort or ability from the
" Court of England to effect that I go about. But
" video, taceo. I will commit you to God, and rest
" ready to requite all good offices that are done me.
" From aboard the Popinjay, thwart of Helbry.
" Essex."
Sir Christopher Blount, although an intriguing and
turbulent character, was an experienced soldier, well
fitted for the post Essex had intended him to fill ;
and we do not see why, unless to produce dissatisfac-
tion, he was refused by the Queen.
The next letters are reports to the Council of his
arrival at Helbry and the cause of his delay there,
with a strong remonstrance in favour of Sir Christo-
pher ; and of his having, in consequence of the foul
winds, thick fog, and wet weather, sent the vessels to
Beaumaris, himself going post. The ride over
Penman Mawr, in those days, must have been any-
thing but easy under favourable circumstances; by
night, in wet weather, I can well imagine it to be
the worst way that he had ever travelled.
He was not detained much longer. On what day
he sailed from Beaumaris, I do not know ; he arrived
at Dublin the 15th April.
No. II. *
Essex to the Council.
My very good Lords, — Being here at Helbry, I received
a letter by Orme, my servant, signed by your LL., my Lord
Chamberlain, my Lord North, and by Mr. Secretary, wherein
1 S. P. O.
c 2
20 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. T.
you signify Her Maj. mislike of my sending back Sir Chris-
topher Blount, since I find so great lack of one in his room ;
and that Her Maj. hath heretofore signified how much she
thought him to blame to forget her favor for thinking him
fit to be Marshal of her army. First, for mine own excuse,
I did find a lack, and so shall, of going to manage a difficult
war, and to govern an undisciplined dissolute army, and to
consult with a Council to whom Her Majesty imputeth the
loss almost of a kingdom. I have not one able assistant ; I
do not say to execute my directions, for that I shall find
many able for, but to consult with what is to be directed ; to
debate and dispute the doubtful and knotty questions, how
the war is to be managed, and to command where I am not ;
and, lastly, to keep all things in order whiles I repose myself,
which all men must of necessity do. In all which, under
correction, he can be no strong assistant to me, being ex-
cluded from the Council ; for how can I have power to confer
privately with him, or relate to him what passeth in council,
when all the day, though I allow myself never so little time
to eat and sleep, will be too short to hear the multitude of
those that will come for direction, and to satisfy them as the
service will require ; or, had I time, what will it avail me to
hear him speak privately, when, if he concur with the rest,
his opinion is needless ; if he dissent, it is bootless ? For
I must rather trust a sworn councillor of Her Maj. than any
other that wanteth both that grace and her favor also. As
for his ability to command, chiefly with that respect of the
army which is due to a Marshal, there is no hope of it ; for,
first, the whole army will take notice that he wanteth that
grace which all his predecessors have had ; and next, those
which are now councillors, and yet, in the army, are to be
commanded by the Marshal, will not so submit themselves to
his commandment as they ought to do. For these reasons, I
thought to have taken upon me both offices, whiles I could
CHAP. 1. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 21
have lasted, though I moved him by whose hand I received
Her Maj. denial of my humble motion, to solicit Her Maj.
and your LL., that my successor might quickly be sent after
me ; for he that shall do two such offices, and discharge them
as he ought, should not value his life at many months
purchase. These were my reasons, which moved me to
return Sir Christopher Blount, whom I must free from any
knowledge of Her Maj. will to have him go in any sort ; for,
as Her Maj. may remember, I did protest to herself that I
was not only unable to carry him on my own credit, but tied
by my word and protestation not to urge or move him to go;
So that, until this despatch came by my servant, I never
brake with him, but, as all men that were with me know, I
made full account that he went not ; only the want of shipping
at Chester for my horsemen, and the resolution to take the
first opportunity for mine own passing over, made me entreat
him to lie three or four days at Chester after me, to see the
troops orderly governed, whiles they stayed, and speedily sent
after me. But now, upon this letter which yesterday I re-
ceived, I sent for him hither, and imparted to him your LL.
letter ; upon sight whereof he resolves to go, though utterly
unprovided of all things necessary for such a journey, which
obedience he humbly tenders, and protesteth, that had I
sooner signified unto him the least implying of Her Maj.
pleasure, he would sooner have offered himself. But, my
LL., it must be all our devout prayers to God, and our
humble suit to Her Maj., that she will be as well served by
her vassals as obeyed ; and that when He grants not the
ability, she will not expect nor exact great performance. For
myself, if things succeed ill in my charge, I am like to be a
martyr for her ; but as your LL. have many times heard me
say, it had been far better for her service to have sent a man
favored by her, who should not have had these crosses and
discouragements which I shall ever suffer of your LL. I do
c 3
22 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
entreat that you will forget my person, and the circumstances
of it, but remember that I am Her Maj. minister in the
greatest cause that ever she had; that though to keep myself
from scorn and misery it shall be in mine own power, yet to
enable me to reduce that rebellious kingdom of Ireland to
obedience lies in Her Maj.; for if I have not inward comfort,
and outward demonstration of Her Maj. favor, I am defeated
in England; and so I commit your LL. to God's best protec-
tion, and rest, &c.
Helbry, the 5th April, 1599. ESSEX.
No. III.1
Essex to the Council.
My very good Lords, — My last was written from Mostyn,
over against Helbry, in which place I rested all Easter Sun-
day ; not that I would not have thought it a sabbath day's
work to have plied towards Ireland, but that the wind was
so contrary, and the mists so great, that all the pilots of
Christendom could not tell how to carry a ship out of the
river. On Monday I, seeing the wind still hang contrary,
agreed with the captains of Her Maj. pinnaces that they
should, if it did not overblow, tide up to Beaumaris, and that
myself would meet them there. To which resolution I was
forced, because we were so pestered aboard, that lying still
at sea, with a contrary wind and wet weather, would have
cast us all down. At Aberconway I was by sunset, when
the wind came fair, so that I feared lest the ships should have
been before me, and in regard thereof took post-horses, and
came over the mountains, the worst way and in the extremest
wet that I have endured. I arrived in this town in the dead
of the night, but the ships came not till this morning at ten
of the clock.
All this day the wind continues at north and to the west-
1 S. P, O.
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 23
ward, with which wind we cannot seize Dublin. I will,
to-morrow morning at full sea, ply towards Ireland if the
weather will permit, for by two despatches which I have
received, I find it more than time I were there. The one of
them shews the misery of the army, which is to be sustained
for this week only with all the means they have or can think
on. The other is the drawing of the troops into idle, mise-
rable journies, whereby I shall find them weak and unservice-
able when I come. The soldiers there already fall sick, and
if they be not fully supplied with all things necessary, Her
Maj. must make account that all those great preparations will
vanish into smoke, and the charge thereof be utterly lost.
o?
After some remarks respecting the victualling,
paying, and recruiting the army, he concludes,
Your LL. will yourselves pardon me, and in your honor-
able justice be my advocates with Her Maj., if I still write
in this kind of style. It is natural to my office to have cause
to speak this language. I had a natural antipathy against
this service, because I foresaw those necessities, and knew
how unpl easing they would be, not only to me the pro-
pounder, but much more to Her Maj. the hearer of them.
But jacta est alia ; I have the best warrant that ever man
had, and I go in the best cause. Compassion I myself shall
not greatly need, for whatsoever the success may be, yet I
shall be sure of a fair destiny. Only Her Maj. and your LL.
must and will, I doubt not, pity Ireland, and pity the army
under my charge, lest if you suffer your men in an out
ravelin to be lost, you be hardly afterwards able to defend
the rampier.
I must again crave pardon for this free kind of style, which
duty and zeal hath drawn from me. And to God's best pro-
tection I commit your LL., and rest, &c.
From Beauraaris, llth April, 1599.
c 4
24 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
The Earl of Essex arrived at Dublin on the 15th
April, " after as rough and dangerous a passage as
" had been known at that time of the year." The
same day he was sworn in, and received the sword :
and immediately called on the Council to report to him
the state of the country. On the 28th April1, a letter
was written to the Privy Council, signed by the Lord
Lieutenant and his Council, in which it is stated that
Essex was desirous to march against the rebels, but
was detained by the advice of the Council, whose
reasons for giving such advice are detailed.
The Privy Council, in their reply, dated the 8th
May, express their approval of these reasons for de-
ferring operations in the field.
This very delay was subsequently made the ground
for one of the gravest charges against the Earl of
Essex: some extracts are therefore given from the
above letter, which will afford a contrast to one
written by the same Council, and signed by a majority
of the same members in November, denying that they
had so advised Essex. " We have had frequent con-
" sultations in what sort Her, Majesty's army might
" be best employed against those overgrown rebels ;
" whereon, upon a proposition made by me, the Lieu-
;' tenant, to have the archtraitor Tyrone presently set
" upon in Ulster, and many difficulties and impedi-
" merits thoroughly debated to forbear that expedition
" for a time, it was at last resolved, that albeit those
" monstrous treasons took their first root there, and
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. I. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 25
u from thence have poisoned all the other provinces
" of the realm, and therefore requisite to have a main
" blow stricken at this root, the sooner to shake and
" scourge all the branches that are grown out of it ;
" yet for the difficulties, or rather impossibilities, oc-
" curring in the deliberation of this point, we of the
" Council having delivered our reasons and observa-
" tions, and weighing the inconveniences and dangers
" that might ensue, if the Lieutenant's proposition
" should be presently performed, did advise his Lord-
" ship that it was more expedient for Her Majesty's
" service, that the invasion of Ulster should be for a
" time respited, and a present prosecution put on
" first in Leinster, being the heart of the whole
" kingdom."
The reasons given why it was not possible at that
time to go into Ulster were, that there was no grass
or forage, nor would there be any until the summer
was further advanced ; that a sufficient number of
beeves could not be procured, and those few that
might be obtained at that season were so lean and
weak, that they could not be driven, and were hardly
fit for food ; that not half the number of draught
horses, necessary to carry dry provisions for the army
could be obtained in the country, and the proportion
to be sent from England had not arrived; and it
would not be possible to raise the number of garrons
before the time of the general hosting. That, con-
sidering all these difficulties, it was thought good,
" by universal consent in council," to forbear for a
while the Ulster enterprize. This letter is signed
26 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.!.
by Essex, Ad. Dublin, Cane.; Thomas Midensis1,
George Carew, Robert Gardener, Nicholas Walshe,
Conyers Clifford, George Bourchier, Henry Harring-
ton, Warhain St. Leger, Geff. Fenton.
On Wednesday the 10th May, the Lord Lieutenant
set out from Dublin, want of carriages for his provi-
sions having delayed his departure till that time.
The troops appointed for this expedition, consisting
of 3000 foot, and 300 horse, rendezvoused in the plain
between the town and bridge of Kilkullin, about five
miles from Naas, where his Lordship joined them.
The next day they marched to Tallacoury, where the
Earl of Ormonde joined with 700 foot, and well nigh
200 Irish horse. The Lords Mountgarret and Cahir
accompanying him to make their submission and ask
pardon, were committed to the custody of the Provost
Marshal. Continuing their march, the van-guard
took that part of Athy which lies on the south
bank of the Barrow, while the main body forded
the river a mile below, in order to attack the castle
on both sides at once : but as soon as the passage of
the river was effected, James Fitz Pierce, who held
the castle, delivered it and himself into the Queen's
hands.
Essex remained at Athy the 13th and 14th to re-
pair the bridge, and enable the provisions and ammu-
nition left at Naas to come up. Leaving a garrison
of 100 men in Athy, four days' provisions were issued
to every man to carry on his back ; and 350 men
1 Bishop of Meath.
CHAP, I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 27
being detached to Carlo w, and 750 under Sir Edward
Herbert to Ophaly, on the 15th Essex with the main
body marched to Stradbally, through the pass of
Blackford, which had been entrenched by the rebels,
but which they deserted at the approach of the army.
The next day, victualling and reinforcing the garrison
of Maryborough, he proceeded by Ballyknockan and
the park of Cashel, where he had a slight skirmish
with the rebels, to Rosconnel, and from thence to
Ballyraggett, the chief seat of Mountgarrett, which
he found so strong that he placed a garrison there.
From that place the army marched to Clonmel,
while he himself, accompanied by the Earl of Or-
monde, went to Kilkenny; whence he sent for the
President of Munster, Sir Thomas Norreys, to confer
with him, and made arrangements for the supply of
cattle and ammunition to the army.
His letter to the Council from this place shows the
guerilla tactics of the rebels, and the impossibility of
making any impression on them in the field with
regular troops.
No. IV.1
Essex to the Council.
My very good Lords, — By this journal, which herewith I
send, Her Maj. and your LL. may judge how, since my
coming from Dublin, I have spent my time. All that I
hope for is, that I shall approve myself to be no loiterer, but
that I put myself to as much as I can any way suffice unto ;
and when God sends me greater ability, Her Maj. may
1 S. T. O.
28 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.].
promise herself greater service. All that I can comment
upon this plain narration is, that this war is like to exercise
both our faculties that do manage it, and Her Maj. patience
that must maintain it ; for this people against whom we fight
hath able bodies, good use of the arms they carry, boldness
enough to attempt and quickness in apprehending any ad-
vantage they see offered them ; whereas our new and common
sort of men have neither bodies, spirits, nor practice of arms
like the others. The advantage we have is in our horse,
which will command all champaigns : in our order which those
savages have not : and in the extraordinary courage and spirit
of our men of quality. But to meet with these our helps,
the rebels fight in woods and bogs where horse are utterly
unserviceable ; they use the advantage of lightness and swift-
ness in going off when they find our order too strong for
them to encounter : and as for the least advantage, I protest
to your LL. it doth as much trouble me as help me, for my
remembering how unequal a wager it is to adventure the
lives of noblemen and gentlemen against rogues and naked
beggars, makes me take more care to contain our best men,
than to use their courage against the rebels. And had I not
in the last day's fight tethered them, and assigned them not
only their places, but their very limits of going on, doubtless
many of them would have been too far engaged, for I as-
sure your LL. greater forwardness and contempt of danger
could not have been shewed by any men, than was by the
Lords and other principal men of quality in the army, which
proved them to be such a treasure to Her Maj. as I must
husband them with all the care and industry I have.
I have here met with the President of Munster, who, in
conference with myself, with my L. of Ormonde, and the rest
of the Council here, hath persuaded us for a few days to look
into his government, where the rebels are strong and proud,
and where some places of good importance are newly fortified,
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 29
which, if they were gotten, would greatly both weaken them
and advance Her Maj. service; and himself professeth his
own inability to attempt them, as having too strong a force
to make head against him, besides the strength of the places
themselves. By this journey I hope to change the affairs of
Munster and Leinster, that against my return to Dublin,
finding means sent out of England for my northern journey,
I may with more strength and less distraction of mind follow
that main service.
And so hoping that Her Maj. and your LL. will allow of
my poor endeavours, which shall ever prcestare innocentiam,
si non meritam, I rest, humbly at your good LL. command-
ment,
Kilkenny, this 20th May, 1599. ESSEX.
(Recd. at Greenwich, 1st June.)
His next was from Clonmel, where he rejoined his
army on the 21st of May, on the state of the country,
from which I give some extracts.
No. V.1
Essex to the Council.
May it please your good Lordships, — After the writing of
my other letters, the same day that I ended them, here ar-
rived my servant H. Tracy with your LL. (letter) of the
14th of this present. To the which I would have made
present answer, but that some indisposition stayed on me,
and continued with me by reason of the extremity of the
weather, and my two nights' ill-lodging, till I came to this
town. Hither I came yesternight, and continue here all this
day, both for the refreshing of the troops after their foul
marches, and because I expect the coming of some victual,
1 S. P. O.
30 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
artillery, and munition, together with eight companies which
I have sent for from Waterford.
Now for answer to your LL. letters. I do humbly pray
your LL. to believe, that as I did ever conceive reverently of
your LL. affections to further this great service, so I take
great comfort in your LL. assurance of Her Maj. sending us
timely and liberal supplies, for without them all my industry,
care, and hazard will be fruitless ; and with them, by God's
mercy, and Her Maj. gracious favor, I shall either yield Her
Maj. a good account of my charge, or pay my ill success with
the price of my life. I will as faithfully and carefully
husband Her Maj. stores here as possibly I can, for proof
whereof I protest before God, I issue of mine own poor
means, an hundred pounds at a time, for the winning and
enabling of fit instruments for Her Maj. service here ; with-
out which course I find it impossible to effect any great
matter in this kingdom. News, I can send your LL. none
but that the pretended Earl of Desmond, and all the force of
the rebels of Munster are now within three miles of me, and
vow and swear to fight. I hear they are some 4000 men,
though they give themselves out to be of greater numbers.
I have with me near 2000 foot, and at least 200 serviceable
horse, and Sir Henry Norreys will reinforce me this night
with 1000 foot more. So that to-morrow, if they make good
their ford where they are, it shall be tried whether we be
better at forcing of a passage, or they at defending it. They
have consulted how to keep the castle of Cahir against me,
notwithstanding that Cahir himself is in my hands. But
I assure myself they dare not dispute it, since they know
I have the cannon here. Yet it is accounted the strongest
place in Ireland; and Cahir's wife and his brethren have
been consulting with Desmond and the White Knight how
to defend it ; and the news of my putting garrison into
Ballyraggett and all the strong places which are yielded to
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 31
Her Maj. doth so trouble them that they will do what they
dare. Your LL. will pardon this hasty confused manner of
writing, it being incident to one that hath many interruptions
and distracted thoughts. I humbly commend your LL. to
God's best protection, and rest, &c.
Clonmell, the 24th May, 1599. ESSEX.1
Having received the cannon and ammunition from
Waterford, he next proceeded to attack the castle of
Cahir. This was considered a place of great impor-
tance, as commanding the passes into Tipperary, the
White Knight's country, Clanwilliam, and Muskerry.
It was the chief stronghold of the rebels in those parts,
situated on an island in the river Suir, whose banks
were rocky, and was besides made strong by art.
Although the Lord Cahir was in the hands of the
Lord Lieutenant, his castle was obstinately defended.
The artillery of the army, consisting of one cannon
and one culverin, which, for want of draught horses,
had been dragged by men from Clonmel, being
brought up, "a trench was cast up within fifty paces
" of the castle, a platform made for the cannon, and
" gabions set up and filled to cover the gunners.
" The culverin was placed somewhat farther off, where
" it might see more of the flanks of the castle, and so
" beat down their sights. The next day, in the
" morning, as soon as the watch was discharged, the
" cannon and culverin began to play ; but the carriage
1 This letter is endorsed, "Received at Greenwich 1st June; his L.
had now received a letter of the 14th, which was to revoke the Earl of
Rutland, and another of the 16th May, which was the main despatch."
Neither of these letters is in the S. P. O.
32 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
" of the former broke at the second shot, and could
" not be repaired in a day and a half. The culverin
" was for some time clogged up with a bullet ; but
" being cleared, it shot that day some fifty shots, so
" that the rebels scarce durst keep in any tower, or fight
" on that side." Having, on the 20th May, passed a
body of men into an orchard in the island on which
the castle stood, and also cut off the garrison from
the opposite shore, the cannonade was continued until
two breaches were opened. Arrangements were made
for carrying the castle by storm the same night ; but
the garrison, considering the place untenable, and
finding that no terms would be given by the Lord
Lieutenant, attempted to make their escape by a
sally, but being immediately discovered, were all, ex-
cepting a very few who escaped by swimming, put to
the sword. The walls being repaired, the artillery
mounted, and the castles garrisoned with 100 men,
the Earl proceeded on his march.
On the last day of May, the army encamped near
the abbey of Cashel, while the bridge of Colam was
repaired, when it advanced to Tipperary, and on the
4th June arrived at Limerick. Hearing that the
Queen's castle of Askeaton was in distress, Essex
proceeded to Adare, from whence, in his march to
Askeaton, he had a skirmish with the rebels under
the Earl of Desmond, in which the latter were de-
feated, leaving 100 men on the field, while the loss
on the English side was but six men killed and
twenty wounded. The next day, while convoying
the waggons of provisions to Askeaton, the troops were
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 33
again harassed by the fire of the rebels from a great
wood on their flank. The Lord Lieutenant, who now
understood the nature of Irish warfare, met them
with skirmishers only until the convoy had gone by,
when, calling in his men, he made a feint of with-
drawing, in order to bring the rebels out of cover ;
his ruse succeeded, and the rebels coming on with a
great cry, he ordered a general charge in front, while
the horse were directed to charge along the skirt of
the wood from both flanks, and having driven back
the rebels with loss, he continued his march without
farther annoyance.
On the llth June they reached Kilmallock, where
a council was held as to the best course to be pur-
sued. The choice lay between three routes : by Tip-
perary, over the Colam bridge, the road by which
they had entered the county ; or through the White
Knight's country, called Clangibbon, thence to Aher-
low and Clonmel ; or through the country of Lord
Roche, and so by Conneigh, the pretended Earl of
Desmond's castle, to Lismore, from whence they
might either go over the mountains to Clonmel, or
by Dungarvon to Waterford.
The Lord Lieutenant chose the last, and the army
marched to Fermoy, while he went to the house of
the President at Mallow, and sent over to Cork for a
supply of ammunition.
Having rejoined the main body, he dislodged from
Fermoy on the 16th June, and proceeded to Conneigh,
where he intended to encamp, having some skirmish-
ing on the way. Receiving a convoy at Castle
VOL. II. D
34 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSFX. CHAP.!.
Lyons, the army forded the Blackwater about seven
miles from Dungarvon, on the 18th and 19th. The
President of Munster here took his leave, having
his force strengthened by the addition of 900 foot
and 100 horse, which the Lord Lieutenant left with
him.
On the 21st June, Essex was encamped three miles
from Waterford. Being ferried across from Passage,
they proceeded towards Enniscorthy, between Water-
ford and which place not a rebel was to be seen.
Thence to Arklow, on approaching which place they
had a sharp brush with the rebel forces of the Cava-
naghs, Byrnes, O'Tooles, and Mores of Leix ; these
were the same who had shortly before defeated Sir
Henry Harrington near Wicklow, which had so en-
couraged them, that they engaged on the open ground.
It is to this defeat that Essex refers in his letter
written from Waterford, and of which we shall hear
more on his arrival at Dublin. Some of the new
levies were seized with panic even under his own eye,
and he had the greatest difficulty in getting them
" to stand firm, to keep order, to forbear noises and
" speeches of fear and amazement."
No. VI.1
Essex to the Council.
May it please your Lordships, — As in my former des-
patch, sent by Sir Francis Darcy, I shewed the causes of
my looking into Munster, so by this your LL. shall be able
to inform both Her Maj, and yourselves of all my courses
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 35
and successes in this province. I am now hastening back to
Dublin, but will pass through the county of Wexford and
the Ranelagh, both to give order for those parts, and to seek
some revenge on those rogues who, in my absence, had the
killing of our base, cowardly, and ill-guided clowns. Of
which defeat, because I know your LL. are already particu-
larly informed from the Council at Dublin, I do spare to
write ; but at my return I purpose, by God's grace, to do
such justice as shall be for Her Maj. honor ; and make other
men hereafter know that the justice of a Marshal's court is
no less terrible than the fury of all the rebels in this
kingdom. And in my passage, if the rebels by this our
disaster be so much puffed up as I hear they are, I hope, by
God's favour, your LL. shall soon hear that their pride is
but a purgation to their greater ruin. I am advertised that
they have drawn to them, besides the forces of Donnell
Spaniaghe, and the Cavanaghs, and Feagh M'Hugh's
sons, and the mountain Galloglass, all the force of the
Moores and Conners, and of Tyrell with his bonnaughtes :
howbeit, though the companies here with me be both fewer
in number and weaker in strength than any time since I
went out, yet I assure your LL. I will neither be sought
by them, nor go out of my way to seek the champaign, but
take my course as it lies through the midst of their coun-
tries ; for surely this blow cannot so much appal our base
new men, as it doth inflame the hearts of our commanders
and gentlemen of quality, whose forwardness I shall have no
less labour to restrain, than to encourage and bring on the
meaner sort. And so hoping that -at my return to Dublin, I
shall find such liberal supplies of men, money, and victuals,
that I shall soon be provided for my journey into the North,
I commend your good LL. to God's merciful protection, and
rest your LL. humbly at command,
Waterford, the 22nd June. ESSEX.
D 2
36 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. I.
On the 25th June, the Lord Lieutenant wrote a
letter to the Queen on the state of the country ; the
prospects and the mode of reducing it to subordina-
tion. I may here remark, that the plan shadowed
forth in this very able document was that by which
Lord Mountjoy was enabled to reduce all the rebels
of Ireland to subjection.
No. VII.1
Essex to the Queen.
When this shall come to your Majesty's hands I know
not ; but whensoever it hath that honor, give it leave, I
humbly beseech your Majesty, to tell you, that having now
passed through the provinces of Leinster and Munster, and
been upon the frontiers of Connaught, where the governor
and the chief of the province were with me, I dare begin to
give your Maj. some advertisement of the state of this
kingdom ; not as before by hearsay, but as I beheld it with
mine own eyes.
The people in general have able bodies by nature, and
gotten by custom ready use of arms ; and, by their late
successes, boldness to fight with your Majesty's troops. In
their pride they value no men but themselves; in their
affection they love nothing but idleness and licentiousness ;
in their rebellion they have no other end but to shake off
the yoke of obedience to your Majesty, and to root out all
remembrance of the English nation in this kingdom. I say
this of the people in general ; for I find not only the greater
part thus affected, but that it is a general quarrel of the
Irish ; and they who do not profess it are either so few or
so false, that there is no account to be made of them. The
Irish nobility and lords of countries do not only in their
1 Birch, ii. 415.
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 37
i
hearts affect this plausible quarrel, and are divided from us in
religion, but have an especial quarrel to the English govern-
ment, because it limiteth and tieth them, who ever have been,
and ever would be, as absolute tyrants as any are under the
sun. The towns being inhabited by men of the same religion
and birth as the rest, are so carried away with the love of
gain, that for it they will furnish the rebels with all things
that may arm them or enable them, against the state or
against themselves.
The wealth of the kingdom, which consisteth in cattle,
oatmeal, and other victuals, is almost all in the rebels' hands,
who in every province till my coming have been masters of
the field. The expectation of all these rebels is very present
and very confident, that Spain will either so invade your
Majesty, that you shall have no leisure to prosecute them
here ; or so succor them, that they will get most of the towns
into their hands, ere your Majesty shall relieve and reinforce
your army. So that now, if your Majesty resolve to subdue
these rebels by force, they are so many, and so framed to be
soldiers, that the war of force will be great, costly, and long.
If your Majesty will seek to break them by factions among
themselves, they are covetous and mercenary, and must be
purchased ; and their Jesuits and practising priests must be
hunted out and taken from them, which now do solder them
so fast and so close together. If your Majesty will have a
strong party in the Irish nobility, and make use of them, you
must hide from them all purpose of establishing English
government, till the strength of the Irish be so broken, that
they shall see no safety but in your Majesty's protection. If
your Majesty will be assured of the possession of the towns,
and keep them from supplying the wants of the rebels, you
must have garrisons brought into them, able to command
them ; and make it a capital offence for any merchant in
Ireland to trade with the rebels, or buy or sell any arms or
D 3
38 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.!.
munition whatever. For your good subjects may have for
their money out of your Majesty's store, that which shall be
appointed by order, and may serve for their necessary defence ;
whereas, if once they be tradeable, the rebels will give such
extreme and excessive prices, that they can never be kept
from them.
If your Majesty will secure this your realm from danger
of invasion, as soon as those which direct and manage your
Majesty's intelligences give notice of the preparations and
readiness of the enemy, you must be as well armed, and
provided for your defence ; which provision consists in having
forces upon the coast enrolled and trained, in having maga-
zines of victual in your Majesty's west and northern ports
ready to be transported, and in having ships both of war
and transportation, which may carry and waft them both
upon the first alarm of a descent. The enrolling and
training of your subjects is no charge to your Majesty's
own coffers. The providing of magazines will never be any
loss ; for, in using them, you may save a kingdom ; and, if you
use them not, you may have your old store sold ; and, if it be
well handled, to your Majesty's profit. The arming of your
Majesty's ships, when you hear your enemy arms to the sea,
is agreeable to your own provident and princely courses,
and to the policy of all princes and states of the world.
But to return to Ireland again, as I have showed your
Majesty the dangers and disadvantages which your servants
and ministers here shall and do meet withal in this great
work of reducing this kingdom ; so I will now, as well as I
can, represent to your Majesty your strengths and ad-
vantages.
First, these rebels are neither able to force any walled
town, castle, nor house of strength, nor to keep any that
they get ; so that, while your Majesty keeps your army in
strength and vigor, you are undoubtedly mistress of all
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 39
towns and holds whatsoever. By which means, if your
Majesty have good ministers, all the wealth in the land shall
be drawn into the hands of your subjects ; your soldiers in
the winter shall be carefully lodged, and readily supplied
of any wants ; and we that command your Majesty's forces
may make the war offensive and defensive, nay, fight and
be in safety, as occasion is offered.
Secondly, your Majesty's horsemen are so incomparably
better than the rebels, and their foot so unwilling to fight,
in battle or gross, howsoever they be desirous to skirmish
or fight loose, that your Majesty may be always mistress
of the champaign countries, which are the best parts of this
kingdom.
Thirdly, your Majesty victualling your army out of Eng-
land, and with your garrisons burning and spoiling the
country in all places, shall starve the rebels in one year,
because no place else can supply them.
Fourthly, since no war can be made without munition,
and munition this rebel cannot have but from Spain, Scot-
land, or your own towns here, if your Majesty will still
continue your ships and pinnaces upon the coast, and be
pleased to send a printed proclamation, that, upon pain of
death, no merchant, townsman, or other subject, do traffic
with the rebel, or buy or sell in any sort any kind of munition
or arms, I doubt not but that in a short time I shall make
them bankrupt of their old store, and I hope our seamen
will keep them from receiving any new.
Fifthly, your Majesty hath a rich store of gallant colonels,
captains, and gentlemen of quality, whose example and
execution is of more use than all the rest of your troops ;
whereas the men of best quality among the rebels, which are
their leaders and their horsemen, dare never put themselves
to any hazard, but send their kerne and their hirelings to
fight with your Majesty's troops; so that, although their
i> 4
40 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.!.
common soldiers are too hard for our new men, yet they are
not able to stand before such gallant men as will charge
them.
Sixthly, your Majesty's commanders being advised and
exercised know all advantages, and by the strength of their
order will, in all great fights, beat the rebels. For they
neither march, nor lodge, nor fight in order, but only by the
benefit of their footmanship can come on and go off at
pleasure ; which makes them attend a whole day, still skir-
mishing, and never engaging themselves ; so that it hath
been ever the fault and weakness of your Majesty's leaders,
whensoever you have received any blow.
Now, if it shall please your Majesty to compare your
advantages and disadvantages together, you shall find, that
though these rebels are more in number than your Majesty's
army, and have, though I do unwillingly confess it, better
bodies and perfecter use of their arms, than those men
which your Majesty sends over, yet your Majesty com-
manding the walled towns, holds, and champaign countries,
and having a brave nobility and gentry, a better discipline,
and stronger order than they, and such means to keep from
them the maintenance of their life, and to waste the country
which should nourish them ; your Majesty may promise
yourself, that this action will in the end be successful, though
costly, and that your victory will be certain, though many
of us your honest servants must sacrifice ourselves in the
quarrel ; and that this kingdom will be reduced, though it
will ask, besides cost, a great deal of care, industry, and
time.
But why do I talk of victory or success ? Is it not known
that from England I receive nothing but discomforts and
soul's wounds ? Is it not spoken in the army, that your Ma-
jesty's favor is diverted from me, and that already you do bode
ill both to me and it ? Is it not believed by the rebels that
CHAP. I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 41
those whom you favor most, do more hate me out of faction,
than them out of duty and conscience ? Is it not lamented
of your Majesty's faithfullest subjects, both there and here,
that a Cobham or a Ralegh — I will forbear others for their
places' sakes — should have such credit and favour with your
Majesty when they wish the ill-success of your Majesty's
most important action, the decay of your greatest strength,
and the destruction of your faithfullest servants ?
Yes, yes, 1 see both my own destiny and your Majesty's
decree, and do willingly embrace the one, and obey the other.
Let me honestly and zealously end a wearisome life. Let
others live in deceitful and inconstant pleasures. Let me
bear the brunt, and die meritoriously. Let others achieve
and finish the work, and live to erect trophies. But my
prayer shall be that, when my sovereign loseth me, her army
may not lose courage, or this kingdom want physic, or her
dearest self miss Essex, and then I can never go in a better
time, nor in a fairer way. Till then, I protest before God
and his angels, I am a true votary, that is sequestered from
all things but my duty and my charge. I perform the utter-
most of my body's, mind's, and fortune's ability ; and more
should, but that a constant care and labor agrees not with an
inconstant health in an unwholesome and uncertain climate.
This is the hand of him that did live your dearest, and will
die your Majesty's faithfullest, servant.
From Arklow, the army, now reduced by the
garrisons and reinforcements left behind, and by sick-
ness, to a much less number than originally went
forth, returned direct to Dublin, where they arrived
one of the first days in July.
42 LIVES OF THE EAliLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
CHAPTER II.
LIFE OF EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
DISPLEASURE OF THE QUEEN AT SOUTHAMPTON'S APPOINTMENT.—
HIS DISCHARGE. — QUEEN EXPRESSES STRONG DISAPPROBATION
OP ESSEX'S PROCEEDINGS, WHILE CECYLL, IN LETTERS TO SIR
H.NEVILLE, APPROVES. — ON THE ALARM OF A SPANISH INVA-
SION, AND PREPARATION OF ARMAMENT, ESSEX ORDERED NOT
TO QUIT IRELAND. — TRIAL OF SHI H. HARRINGTON'S MEN.
DEFEAT AND DEATH OF SIR CONYERS CLIFFORD. ROYAL LETTER
OF REPROOF. ESSEX PROCEEDS TO ULSTER TO MAKE A RECON-
NOISSANCE. — THE COUNCIL PROTEST AGAINST AN ATTACK ON
TYRONE. — SKIRMISH. PARLEY. — TRUCE. — ANOTHER LETTER
OF DISAPPROBATION FROM THE QUEEN.
LET us now inquire, how the conduct of Essex, and
his journey into Munster, were received at Court.
To explain the next letters, it is necessary to
state, that the Earl of Southampton, who, in con-
sequence of his marriage, already related, fell into the
deepest disgrace, was appointed by Essex General
of the Horse in Ireland, which caused the following
correspondence.
No. VIII.1
The Lords of the Council to Essex.
Her Majesty having of late received certain knowledge
that your L. hath constituted the Earl of Southampton
General of the Horse in Her Maj. army under your charge,
1 S. P. 0.
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 43
with which she is much displeased, hath given us command-
ment to signify her mind in that behalf, and to let your L.
understand that she thinketh strange, and taketh it offensively,
that you would appoint his L. to that place and office, con-
sidering that Her Maj. did not only deny it, when she was here
moved by your L. to that purpose, but gave you an express
prohibition to the contrary, that he should not be appointed
thereunto. This commandment being by Her Maj. so pre-
cisely delivered unto you, and the same being now so publicly
manifested to the world to be broken, hath moved Her Maj.
to great offence in that respect. And therefore Her Maj.
pleasure is that you do not longer continue him in that place
and charge of General of the Horse, but dispose of it to
some other as you shall think good ; Her Maj. esteeming it
a very unseasonable time to confer upon him any so great
place, having so lately given her cause of offence towards
him. This being Her Maj. direction and commandment
unto us, we do deliver it by this our letter, as from herself,
wherein having discharged our duties, we are sorry for the
occasion. From the Court at Greenwich, the 10th of June,
1599.
To this letter Essex replied from Dublin on the
llth July.
No. IX.1
Essex to the Lords of the Council.
To come to that which I never looked should come to me (I
mean your LL. letter, touching the displacing of the Earl of
Southampton), your LL. say that Her Majesty thinketh it
strange, and taketh it offensively that I appointed the Earl
of Southampton General of the Horse, seeing Her Majesty
not only denied it when I moved it, but gave me an express
1 S. T. O., an extract.
44 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
prohibition to any such choice. Surely, my LL., it shall be
far from me to contest with your LL., much less with Her
Majesty ; howbeit, God and mine own soul are my witnessed
that I had not, in this nomination, any disobedient or irre-
verent thought. That I ever moved Her Majesty for the
placing of any officer, my commission fully enabling me to
make free choice of all the officers and commanders of the
army, I do not remember. That Her Majesty, in the Privy
Chamber at Kichmond, I only being with her, shewed a
dislike of his having any office, I do confess; but mine
answer was, that if Her Majesty would revoke my commis-
sion, I would cast both myself and it at Her Majesty's feet ;
but if it pleased Her Majesty that I should execute it, I
must work with mine own instruments ; and from this pro-
fession and protestation I never varied; whereas, if I had
held myself barred from yielding my Lord of Southampton
place and reputation someway answerable to his degree and
expense, no man, I think, doth imagine that I loved him so
ill as to have brought him over. Therefore, if Her Majesty
punish me with her displeasure for this choice, pcena dolenda
venit. And now, my LL., were it as then it was, that I were
to choose, or were there nothing in a new choice but my L.
of Southampton's disgrace and my discomfort, I should easily
be induced to displace him, and to part with him. But
when in obeying this commandment I must discourage all
my friends, who now see the days of my suffering draw near,
follow me afar off, and are some of them tempted to renounce
me; when I must dismay the army, which already looks
sadly upon me, as pitying both me and itself in this com-
fortless action ; when I must encourage the rebels, who,
doubtless, will think it time to hew upon a withering tree,
whose leaves they see beaten down, and the branches in part
cut off; when for ever I must disable myself in the course of
this service, the world now clearly perceiving that I either
I. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 45
want reason to judge of merit, or freedom to right it, dis-
graces being there heaped, when, in my opinion, rewards are
due ; give just grief leave once to exclaim, O miserable
employment, and more miserable destiny of mine, that makes it
impossible for me to please and serve Her Majesty at once I
Was it treason in my Lord of Southampton to marry my
poor kinswoman, that neither long imprisonment, nor no
punishment besides that hath been usual in like cases, can
satisfy or appease ; or will no kind of punishment be fit for
him, but that which punisheth not him, but me, this army,
and poor country of Ireland ?
The star of Essex was in its decline, and this
earnest apostrophe only drew forth fresh reproaches.
On the 19th July, the Queen wrote to Essex a letter,
of which part was a reply to the above.
" For the matter of Southampton, it is strange to
" us that his continuance or displacing should work
" so great an alteration, either in yourself valuing
" our commandments as you ought, or in the dispo-
" sition of our army, where all the commanders can-
" not be ignorant that we not only not allowed of
" your desire, but did expressly forbid it, and being
" such a one whose experience can be of no great
" use. It is therefore strange to us that you will
" dare thus to value your own pleasing in things un-
" necessary, and think by your private arguments
" to carry for your own glory a matter wherein our
" pleasure to the contrary is made notorious."1
It was now clear, whatever the cause, whether by
the workings of his enemies, or her own anger, Eli-
1 s. P. o.
46 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
zabeth would not suffer Southampton to retain his
appointment. It seems as if the purpose was to
discontent and disgust Essex through his friends :
first, Sir Christopher Blount refused, next South-
ampton displaced, and then the Earl of Eutland re-
called. His execution of the Queen's pleasure was
announced by Essex to the Council.
No. X.1
Essex to the Lords of the Council.
By your last letters I received a second signification of her
Majesty's pleasure for the dispatching of my Lord of South-
ampton from the charge of the government of the horse ; and
withal a letter sent by Her Majesty in confirmation of Her
Majesty's pleasure delivered by your LL. ; upon the receipt
of which despatch I did both signify to my Lord of South-
ampton, that he should not take upon him that place here-
after, and wrote to Mr. , to stay the entertainment,
and strike that office out of the list, so that Her Majesty's
order is duly and exactly performed.
Touching the propriety and policy of the journey
into Leinster and Munster ; although it excited, as
we shall see, great anger in the Queen, there is reason
to believe that course was at first approved ; and it
was only by the device of Cobham and Ealegh, who
led Elizabeth to expect vast results, and then detracted
from whatever advantage was gained, that she was
led to use such bitterly reproachful language to the
Earl of Essex. It was the custom of Queen Elizabeth
to reward the most active and zealous efforts of her
1 S.P.O.
CHAP. IT. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 47
servants with reproaches for not having effected
greater things.
Sir Robert Cecyll in his correspondence with Sir
Henry Neville, at this period ambassador in France,
reports the state of Irish affairs ; and as he cannot
be quoted as an authority in any degree influenced
by partiality for the Earl of Essex, his evidence
carries great weight. On the 23rd May, he writes
in answer to some premature reports that had reached
Paris, that Essex, u not having arrived in Ireland
" before the 17th April, must have wrought miracles
" to have settled and distributed an army of 16,000
"foot and 1300 horse, and to have accommodated
" them with all necessaries in a country full of misery
" and disorder, in a shorter time than he did; for
" the time of the year not serving to pass into
" Ulster to break the head of the rebellion till the
" month of June, within twenty days his L. began a
" journey into Leinster, and from thence intends to
" pass into Munster, with a purpose to secure those
" provinces, that thereby the main action of Ulster
" may be proceeded withal with less distraction."1
On the 14th July, " the Earl is by this time re-.
" turned to Dublin, and prepareth to go into the
" North ; he hath done as much as could be done by
" the sword, on the rebels in Munster and Leinster ;
" for he hath passed at his pleasure where he listed,
" notwithstanding all the plots they could use, either
" of force or stratagem. But the rogues shun fight,
1 Memorials of Affairs of State, by Sir Ralph Winwood. Lond. 1725,
i. 40.
48 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
" and so know how to spend us, and eat us out with
« time."1
Yet, on the 19th July, her principal minister
being clearly of opinion that good service had been
done, the Queen wrote a long and angry letter to
Essex, full of reproaches for his delay in proceeding
against Tyrone ; for the time he had wasted in the
Munster journey, without bringing in a capital
rebel ; and declaring that the taking of Cahir Castle
was only taking an Irish hold from a rabble of rogues,
and was no great matter, but what the President,
with a convenient addition to his numbers, might have
effected. " Then," says she, " must we not hide from
u you, that however we do esteem you for the good
" things that are in you, but that our honour hath
" dwelt too long in us to leave that point uncleared.
" That whosoever it be that you do clad with any
" honor or places, wherein the world may read the
" least suspicion of neglect or contempt of our com-
" mandments, we will never make dainty to set on
" such shadows as shall quickly eclipse any of those
" lustres."3 The letter continues with the reference
to Southampton already quoted.
The Queen wrote again on the 30th July, and after
some preliminary remarks on the victualling, and an-
other reprimand for his unseasonable journey into
Munster, whereby he broke the heart of the best
troops, desires him to lose no time in making his
expedition into the North against Tyrone ; and then
1 Memorials of Affairs of State, by Sir Ralph Winwood. London,
1725, i. 40.
* Copy in S. P. O., certified by Secretary Windebank.
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 49
continues, " because we know that on your continu-
" ance there doth now depend the order and conduct
" of all this important affair, and that by your return,
" until the Northern action be tried, many and great
" confusions may follow, our will and pleasure is,
" and so we do upon your duty command you, that
" notwithstanding our former license, provisionally
" given, whereby you have liberty to return and
" constitute some temporary governor in your absence,
" that you do now no ways take that liberty, nor ad-
" venture to leave the State in any person's govern-
" ment but with our allowance first had of him, and
" our pleasure first known to you, what order you
" shall leave with him. After you shall have certified
" us to what form you have reduced things in the
" North, what hath been the success, and whom you
" and the Council could wish to leave with that
" charge behind; that being done, you shall with all
" speed receive our warrant, without which we do
" charge you, as you tender our pleasure, that you
" adventure not to come out of that kingdom by
" virtue of any former license whatever."1
This lets us into the secret cause of Essex patch-
ing up his hasty and discreditable truce with Tyrone.
He at once suspected some plotting to keep him in
Ireland, and determined to hasten his return2, taking
1 S. P. O.
2 The reason of the Queen's giving this order appears to have arisen
from the apprehension of Cecyll, that as soon as Essex heard of a fleet
fitting against the Spaniards, he would hasten back ; while from his
letters (Winwood, i. 91.) it appears that the preparations were only
precautions, he " preferring the ways of safety before any matter of
charge."
VOL. II. E
50 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
advantage of the expression, "after the Northern
" action tried," to disobey all the spirit of the above
orders. Mistaken Essex ! the true way to have con-
quered his enemies, and silenced them, was to have
applied all his forces, all his energies, to the Northern
journey, and by one blow have brought the most
important rebel of all to the dust. The small lump
of leaven in his nature was now working, spreading,
corrupting his noble qualities, and blinding his judg-
ment, and gradually leading him towards the pitfall of
destruction, already prepared for him by his enemies.
It has been incidentally remarked, that an English
force, under Sir Henry Harrington, had been defeated
by the rebels near Wicklow. This unlucky affair
occurred on the 29th May. The force under Sir
Henry was 500 foot and 60 horse, and they were
defeated with great slaughter.
On the return of Essex to Dublin, and his inquiry
into the circumstances, it appearing that the troops
had behaved with cowardice, he resolved to make a
severe example, which he thus reports to the Council
on the llth July.
" On Monday last I called a Marshal's Court on
" the captains and officers who were under Sir H.
" Harrington, when our troops, having advantage of
" numbers, and no disadvantage of ground, were put
[< in rout, and many cut in pieces without striking a
" blow. In this court Pierce Walsh, Lieutenant to
" Captain Adam Loftus, for giving the first example
" of cowardice and dismaying to the troops, was
" condemned to die, and afterwards accordingly exe-
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 51
" cuted. The other captains and officers, though
" they forsook not their places assigned them, but
" were forsaken by their soldiers, yet because in such
" an extremity and disaster they did not something
" very extraordinary, both by their example to en-
" courage the soldiers, and to acquit themselves, were
" all cashiered, and are still kept in prison. The
u soldiers being before condemned all to die, were by
" me most of them pardoned ; and, for example's
" sake, every tenth man only executed. ; Sir H.
" Harrington, because he is a Privy Councillor in this
" kingdom, I forbear to bring to trial until I know
" Her Majesty's pleasure,
" Albeit the poor men that marched with me eight
" weeks together be very weary, and unfit for a new
" journey, and besides the horsemen so divided, that I
u cannot draw 300 to a head ; yet as fast as I can call
" these troops together, I will go look upon yonder
" proud rebel ; and if I find him on hard ground, and
"in an open country, though I should find him in
" horse and foot three for one, yet will I by God's
" grace dislodge him, or put the Council here to the
" trouble of chusing a Lord Justice." 1
Mr. Chamberlain again presents us with' the talk
of the town.
28 th June. — The Earl of Rutland is returned out of Ireland
upon commandment, and the Earl of Southampton said to be
either come or coming, his place of General of the Horse being
taken from him by commandment from hence; the Queen
nothing satisfied with the Earl of Essex' manner of proceed-
i S. P. O.
E 2
52 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
ing, nor likes anything that is done, but says she allows him
WOOL a day to go in progress.
1st August.— Men marvel Essex hath done so little; he
tarries yet at Dublin: hath made sixteen new knights, for
what service I know not, belike it is de bene esse. His deci-
mating Sir H. Harrington's company much descanted on, and
not greatly liked.
23rd August. — The Earl of Essex hath made many new
knights, but I cannot yet come by the bead-roll; marry for
a taste, you shall have as many as I can well remember : as
Sir Henry Lindley, Sir Henry Carey, that was Sir Francis
Vere's lieutenant, two Lovelaces ; Sir Ajax Harrington, Sir
Jack Heydon, Sir Dick Morrison, cum multis aliis, English
and Irish, to the number of fifty-nine in the whole, since his .
first arrival ^ it is much marvelled that this humour should
so possess him, that, not content with his first dozens and
scores, he should thus fall to huddle them up by half hundreds ;
and it is noted as a strange thing, that a subject, in the space
of seven or eight years, should, upon so little service and
small desert, make more knights than in all the realm besides ;
and it is doubted, that if he continue this course, he will
shortly bring in tag and rag, cut and longtail, and so bring
the order into contempt.
While preparing for the expedition into Ulster,
the Earl of Essex thought it necessary to give a
check to some of the rebels nearer Dublin ; the
O'Connors and O'Mores, in Leix and Ophaly, being
very troublesome. Leading 1500 men into Ophaly,
and sending Sir Christopher Blount with 1000 to
Leix, he dispersed them with ease.
Having received a supply of 1000 men from Eng-
land, he next prepared to march northward ; and in
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 53
order to divide the forces of Tyrone, directed Sir
Conyers Clifford, the governor of Connaught, to pene-
trate into Ulster from that province, and so create a
diversion. The force under Clifford was 1500 foot,
and 100 horse. On coming to the Curlew Moun-
tains, the baggage and ammunition were halted under
the protection of the horse, while the infantry made
good the passage. They had not gone far, their road
lying along a stony causeway, with woods and bogs
on either side, when the rebels under O'Eorke at-
tacked them vigorously, but were checked, until the
men, having nearly consumed their ammunition, and
being fatigued with their long march, were seized with
a panic, and took to flight : no effort of their leaders
could restrain them; Sir Conyers Clifford, and Sir
Alex. Ratcliffe, with 120 men, were killed on the field ;
and the whole would probably have shared the same
fate, had not the small body of horse, by repeated
charges, so occupied the enemy, that their com-
rades were enabled to retreat without further loss,
carrying their baggage with them to Boyle, and from
thence to Athlone.
An inauspicious commencement this to the North-
ern journey, especially when we find that the English
outnumbered the Irish on this occasion, by at least
three to one. It was supposed that the leading men.
having given way infected those behind with their
fears, and so threw the whole into disorder.
On the intelligence of this defeat arriving at Dub-
lin, the Lord Lieutenant called a general council of
war, to consider how the service was to be carried
E 3
54 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
out, and what could be done in Ulster. Their reso-
lution is given in full. Then follows a letter, in-
terceding for " poor Jack Kaddyffe," the brother and
heir of Sir Alexander.
At H. M. Castle of Dublin.
21 Aug. 1598.
We the Lords, Colonels, and Knights of the army, being
called to a council of war the day and year above written,
at what time the L. Lieutenant exponing to us his purpose of
invading Ulster, as well in regard of Her Maj. express com-
mandment, as also to pull down the pride of the arch traitor
Tyrone, to redeem the late scorn of the Curlews, and lastly
to hold up the reputation of the army, required us to deliver
our opinions in what sort a present journey hither might be
made; we who were then present, being thoroughly ac-
quainted with the state of Her Maj. forces, as having parti-
cular charge of them, some as colonels over regiments, and
some as captains over companies, after long debating, every
one of us having spoken in order, at last by common consent
resolved ; seeing the army so unwilling to be carried thither,
that some secretly run into England, others revolt to the
rebels, a third sort partly hide themselves in the country,
and partly feign themselves sick ; and seeing that there could
be no planting this year at Lough Foyle, nor assailing of the
North but one way, the Connaught army consisting of a great
part of old companies being lately defeated, and that our
army, which passeth not the number 3500, or 4000 at the
most, of strong and serviceable men, should be far over-
matched when all the forces of the North should encounter
them ; and sithence that it was a course full of danger, and
of little or no hope, to carry the army into their strengths,
where the rebels should be first lodged, and should be able to
bring 6000 shot to entertain fight with less than 2000 ; in
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 55
which places also our horse should never be able to serve or
succor our foot ; and further, forasmuch as we could place no
garrisons in the north, but such as consisted of very great
numbers, and great numbers we could not spare from so
small an army, with any likelihood of making a good retreat
with the rest ; to say nothing of the want of shipping, and
especially of victualling, caused by the great decay thereof,
and, lastly, sithence if we could spare a sufficient number
and could lodge them at Armagh and the Blackwater, it
would but tie the army to be ever busied in victualling them,
and, consequently, more incommodate us than trouble the
rebels, as it appeareth in the former plantations there in the
times of the Lord Burgh, Sir Will. Russel, and Sir John
Norreys. In regard of the premises we all were of opinion,
that we could not with duty to Her Maj., and safety to this
kingdom, advise or assent to the undertaking of any journey
far north. In which resolution, if any man suspected it pro-
ceeded of weakness or baseness, we will not only in all likely
and profitable service disprove him, but will every one of us
deal with his life, that we dissuaded this undertaking with
more duty than any man could persuade unto it.
This is signed by the Earls of Southampton and
Kildare; Lord Castle Connell; Sirs Edward Wingfield,
Oliver Lambert, Henry Power, Matthew Morgan,
Henry Docwra, Thomas Jermyn, Henry Davers,
Era. Darcy, Samuel Bagenall, Arthur Champernowne,
Robert Drury, Richard Wilmot, Edward Herbert,
and John Bolle.
K 4
56 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
No. XI.1
Essex to the Queen.
Too much of the unhappy province of Connaught I have
written to my LL. ; to your Maj. only this, that if your
Maj. be not gracious to poor Jack Radclyffe, in bestowing
his wardship on him, he that is heir of a brave race, and hath
lost his two elder brothers in your Maj. service, is utterly
undone : his last worthy brother, who did as much honour to
his name by his death as ever any young gentleman did, hath
so impaired the estate, as without your Maj. goodness it is
irrecoverable. The knowledge of which makes me be a re-
membrancer to your Maj. justice, though I dare not be in-
tercessor for any. But what do I with a pen in my hand ?
What words have I to offer to such a goddess ? Amazed
silence best will fit me, till I revenge or follow worthy Con-
yers Clifford. My prayers shall be that this world may yield
your Maj. as many joys as it doth torments to your Maj.
humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
On the 9th August, the Queen wrote a letter to
the Irish Council, reprimanding them for having
dissuaded the Lord Lieutenant from the Northern
journey on his first arrival, when he desired to
proceed on it; and for having again objected to it
on insufficient grounds. That the Earl did not
escape, we may guess from his reply.
No. XII.2
Essex to the Queen.
Madam, —I offend you often, and afflict myself, therefore
I ask of your Maj. justice this right, that I may be ad-
1 Hulton MSS. 2 Ibid.
.CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 57
judged by yourself a man worthy to serve you, and to have
my services graciously accepted ; or to have your Maj. leave
to retire for altogether ; for to spend my best time without
regard and encouragement, and to be subject every hour to
base and vile imputations, is as impossible for me as it is in-
tolerable. Your Maj. humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
Sir Robert Cecyll's notice of this defeat of Sir
Conyers Clifford is given to Sir Henry Neville on
the 17th August.1 " Out of Ireland, this day, is
" arrived very cross news ; Sir Conyers Clifford,
" the Governor of Connaught, is slain in an en-
" counter with O'Donnel, and with him Sir Alex.
" Ratcliffe and some 200 or 300 soldiers. This
" accident may much divert my Lord's journey into
" the North, which if it shall not be attempted at
" all, the best part of this year's expense is lost. I
" pray you use this with your accustomed discretion,
" for though I desire you may know all truth, yet
" the worse luck we have, the worse I know we
" are esteemed by the French."
The Irish were as much elated by their unusual
successes, as the English soldiers were dispirited. It
is probable that the Earl of Essex shared somewhat
in these feelings, and did not prepare for the
Northern journey with the alacrity he would have
shown against an enemy that was to be met in the
open field. What indeed could be more discouraging
to a man of his temper, than to lead his troops along
narrow causeways bordered by morasses and woods,
' Winwood, i. 91.
58 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
from which the unseen foe picked off his men as they
passed; who, even when discovered and pursued,
from their activity, the lightness of their equipments,
and familiarity with the fastnesses, had no difficulty
in evading the heavily armed, inexperienced English
soldier ? The Irish, far from showing symptoms of
submission, swore that if there were an Earl of Essex
on every churl who came over from England, they
should be fought withal.
Another source of disquiet to the Lord Lieutenant
must have been the constant rebukes and censures
he received from the Queen : we give another letter,
in which he endeavours to soften her.
No. XIII.1
Essex to the Queen.
I perceive by your Maj. two last letters, there are three
grounds of your displeasure against me ; the not displacing
of my Lord of Southampton ; the not sending the list of the
officers and commanders ; and the making of knights.
To the first I plead, that, in the very same hour in which
I received a commandment signed by your Maj. to displace
my L., I did obey it. To the second, that the treasurer,
who might more exactly make the certificate than myself,
took it upon him, and doth assure me he hath long since sent
it over. To the last, that if I could have found any other
means to give men of worth encouragement or reward, or by
any other circumstance could have kept life and spirit in this
army, I had been very sparing in bestowing this degree.
But except I had more credit to commend their suits into
1 Hulton MSS.
CHAP. II. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 59
England, or ability to reward their services here, I must
either use the liberty of your Maj. commission in that point,
or resolve to have no men of worth tarry with me, with
which I could be well content if I were free from this charge,
which would make you hear that the governor of this king-
dom was quit by his army, and no man can tell what is be-
come of him, as the governor of one of your provinces was
too lately. As the world is strangely altered with me, when
I receive letters of such bitter style, so the state and minds
of your people are strangely altered, when your army, which
never yet abandoned the body of any principal commander
being dead, doth now run away from their chief commander
being alone and in fight ; and that your people had rather
be hanged for cowardice, than killed or hurt in service.
Your Maj. may now assure yourself, you must either make
peace with all your enemies, and give satisfaction to all your
rebels, or not be known to forespeak and discountenance your
own actions.
For myself, I care not what happen to myself, for if a
kerne kill me not, sickness will ; but for your Maj., I sigh to
think when you shall be safe, when your people neither have
confidence in any one of your subjects, nor in themselves.
Whosoever hath most of your favour, I will most deserve it.
No man shall do you that service, nor no man bears in his
heart that working affection that you might have found in
your Maj. humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
In July and August there were serious alarms in
England that Spain projected another invasion ;
and a fleet and armament were collected in the
Downs under the Earl of Nottingham, Lord Mount-
joy, Lord Thomas Howard, and Sir Walter Ralegh.
The fear only lasted a month, but, as Sir Robert
60 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
Cecyll justly observed to Sir Henry Neville, he
preferred the ways of safety before the matter of
charge ; and, therefore, although he did not give
credit to the report, he prepared against it. Camden
asserts that the real object of this armament was
to prevent the Earl of Essex from bringing over
his army to drive his enemies from Court. Poor
Essex ! he had errors enough to answer for without
being falsely charged ; there was not an atom of
truth in this assertion of Camden.
One of his officers being desirous to offer his
services, Essex gave him the following letter re-
commending him to the Queen.
No. XIV.1
Essex to the Queen.
That any man should leave purgatory to go to paradise,
is not strange. This gentleman hath carried himself very
well in his service here, and is now desirous, upon the alarum
of attempts there, to render his service there. None is ban-
ished from the happiness of your presence, and barred of
striking a stroke for your defence, but your Majesty's ser-
vant, whose faith and sorrow shall have eternal being,
ESSEX.
In the beginning of September, Mr. Cuffe, secre-
tary to the Earl of Essex, arrived, having been
despatched by him with letters to England, when he
proceeded on his Northern journey, which the Queen
answered in the following letter.
1 Hulton MSS.
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 61
No. XV.1
Elizabeth to Essex.
Right trusty and well beloved cousin, and trusty and well
beloved, we greet you well. — Having sufficiently declared
unto you before this time, how little the manner of your
proceedings hath answered with our direction, or the world's
expectation ; and finding now by your letters by Cuffe, a
course more strange, if strange may be, we are doubtful
what to prescribe you at any time, or what to build upon
your writing to us in anything, for we have clearly dis-
cerned of late, what you have ever to this hour possessed
us with — expectation that you would proceed as we have
directed you ; but your actions always shew the contrary,
though carried in such sort, as we were sure to have no
time to countermand them. Before your departure, no
man's counsel was held sound, which persuaded not pre-
sently the main prosecution in Ulster, all was nothing with-
out that, and nothing was too much for that. This drew on
the sudden transportation of so many thousands to be carried
over with you, and when you arrived, we were charged with
more than the list, on which we resolved, by the number of
300 horsemen above the thousand, which was assented to,
which were only to be in pay during service in Ulster ; we
have been also put in charge ever since the first journey, the
pretence of which voyage appeared, by your letters, was to
do some present service in the interim, while that grew more
commodious for the main execution ; for which purpose, you
did importune with great earnestness, that all manner of
provisions might be hastened to Dublin against your return ;
of this resolution to defer your going into Ulster, you may
well think that we would have made stay, if you had given
us more time by warning, or if we could have imagined, by
1 Fynes Moryson, Itinerary, 39.
62 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
the contents of your own writings, that you would have spent
nine weeks abroad ; and your return, when the third part of
July was past, and that you had understood our mislike of
your former course, and made your excuse of undertaking it
only in respect of your conformity to the council's opinions,
with great protestations of haste to the north. Then we re-
ceived another letter of new reasons, to suspend that journey
yet awhile, and to draw the army into Ophaly, the fruit
whereof, at your home coming, was nothing else but new
relations of such miseries of our army, and greater difficulties
to perform the Ulster wars. Then followed from you and
the council, a new demand of 2000 men, to which, if we
would assent, you could speedily undertake what we had so
often commanded; when it was granted, and your going
onward promised by divers letters, we received by this
bearer new fresh advertisements, that all you can do is to go
to the frontiers, and that you have provided only twenty days
victuals. In which kind of proceeding we must deal plainly
with you and that council, that it were more proper for
them to leave troubling themselves with instructing us, by
what rules our power and their obedience are limited ; and
bethink them of the courses that have been only derived from
their counsel ; and how to answer this part of theirs, to train
us into a new expense for one end, and to employ it for
another, to which we never would have assented, if we could
have suspected it should have been undertaken before we
heard it was in action ; and, therefore, we do wonder how it
can be answered, seeing your attempt is not in the capital
traitor's country, that you have increased our list. But it is
true, and we have often said it, we were ever won to expense
by little and little, and by representations of great resolutions
in generalities, till they came to particular execution ; of all
which courses, whoever shall examine any of your arguments
used for excuse, shall find that your own proceedings beget
your difficulties, and that no just causes do breed the alter-
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 63
ations of lack of numbers. If sickness of the army be the
reason, why was not the action undertaken when the army
was in better state ? if winter's approach, why were the
summer months of July and August lost ? if the spring were
too soon, and the summer that followed otherwise spent ? if
the harvest that succeeded were so neglected, as nothing hath
been done, then surely we must conclude that none of the
four quarters of the year will be in season for you and that
council to agree of Tyrone's prosecution, for which all our
charge is intended. Further, we require you to consider
whether we have not great cause to think that your purpose
is not to end the war, when yourself have often told us, that
all the petty undertakings in Leix, Munster, and Connaught
are but loss of time, consumption of treasure, and, most of all,
our people, until Tyrone himself be first beaten, on whom
all the rest depend : do not you see that if this course be in
all parts, by his sinister seconding all places, where any at-
tempts be offered, that it is like to spend us and our kingdom
beyond all moderation, as well as the report of their success in
all parts hath blemished our honour, and encouraged others
to no small presumption : we know you cannot so much fail in
judgment, as not to understand that all the world seeth how
time is delayed, though you think that the allowance of your
council : how often have you told us that others that
preceded you had no judgment to end the war, who often
resolved us, until Lough Foyle and Bealsliman were planted,
there could be no hope of doing service on the capital rebels ;
we must therefore let you know, as it cannot be ignorance,
so it cannot be want of means ; for you had your asking, you
had choice of times, you had power and authority more ample
than ever any had, or ever shall have ; it may well be judged
with how little contentment we seek this and other errors,
but how should that be hid which is so palpable.
And therefore, to leave that which is past, and that you
may be prepared to remedy matters hereafter, rather than to
64 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
fill your paper with impertinent arguments being in your
general letters, savoring still in many points of humors that
concern the private of you our Lord Lieutenant, we do tell
you plainly, and you that are of our council, that we wonder
at your indiscretion to subscribe to letters which concern our
public service, when they are mixed with many matters
private and directed to our council table, which is not wont
to handle things of so small importance.
To conclude, if you say that our army, being in list 19,000,
that you have them not, we answer then to you our treasurer,
that we are evil served, and that there needs not so frequent
demands of full pay : if you will say that the muster-master
is to blame, we much muse then why he is not punished.
We say to you our General, if we would ex jure proprio judi-
care, that all defects by musters, yea, though never in so re-
mote garrisons have been affirmed to us, to deserve to be
imputed to the General ; for the small proportion you say you
carry with you, of 3500 foot, when lately we augmented
you 2000 more, it is past comprehension, except it be that
you have left too great numbers in unnecessary garrisons,
which do increase our charge, and diminish our army ; which
we command you to reform, especially since, by your con-
tinual report of the state of every province, you describe
them all to be in worse conditions than ever they were before
you put foot in that kingdom.
Then desiring to be informed how the rest of the
year is to be passed, and how the army is to be dis-
posed, the letter concludes with the following reference
to the opinion of the principal officers given on the
21st August: —
We have seen a writing, in manner of a catalogue, full of
challenges, that are impertinent, and of comparisons that are
needless, such as hath not been before this time presented to
CHAP. II. EGBERT, -EARL OF ESSEX. 65
a state, except it be done more with the hope to terrify all
men from censuring your proceedings ; had it not been
enough to send us the testimony of the council, but that you
must call so many of those that are of ,so slender judgment,
and none of our council, to such a form of subscription ;
surely, howsoever you may have warranted them, we doubted
not but to let them know what belongs to us, to you, and to
them. And thus expecting your answer, we end at our
manor of Nonsuch, the 14th Sept. 1599.
Ireland was then, as now, the great difficulty of the
English Government, and but little known ; the very
letter of Essex on the state of the country, which
we have already given, shows how ignorant he was
previous to his going over, his former opinions being
now brought up as witnesses against him. With
regard to the delay of the Ulster journey, no doubt
it was impracticable at his first arrival, and that
the advice of the Council which he followed, and
which they subsequently disowned, was perfectly
good. Had it not been so, Mount] oy, with this ex-
ample before his eyes, would scarcely have acted as
he did the next year, when he followed the footsteps
of Essex so exactly that he went into Munster first,
and did not attempt Ulster until the end of May.
That journey into Munster filled advantageously the
interval before marching against Tyrone, and afforded
an opportunity of exercising, disciplining, and accus-
toming to field service, the raw recruits of which a
very large proportion of the army was composed.
There is another consideration, — how far blame is
due to the Queen, for sending on a service which she
&
VOL. II. F
66 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
and her Council well knew required the greatest
patience and perseverance on the part of its head,
one so impetuous and hasty as the Earl of Essex.
As it was not his fault that he was chosen, so we
cannot blame him for not having put on a new nature.
Whatever opinion may be formed of the policy of such
an appointment, there can be but one respecting his
subsequent ' treatment ; never had General less fair
play shown him ; almost from the hour of his landing
in Ireland, the royal despatches were filled with re-
proaches, that the rebels were not already vanquished.
I now proceed to relate the crowning act of this
campaign.
The Lord Lieutenant had notified in his letters sent
by Cuife, that the troops were so unwilling to go into
Ulster that many of them deserted, many feigned
sickness, and therefore he could not muster more
than 4000 men ; that Tyrone had at least 6000 well
entrenched and supported by bogs and woods ; that
the Connaught army being defeated, no plantation
could be made at Lough Foyle, nor any conclusive
result be expected from a campaign against Tyrone.
It was therefore resolved that with what force he had,
and provisions for twenty days, he should make a
demonstration on the borders of Ulster.
He collected for this purpose a force of between
3500 and 4000 foot, and 500 horse, which were
directed to rendezvous between Navan and the Kells,
and on the 28th August left Dublin with an escort
of 100 horse, for Ardbracken, a house belonging to
the Bishop of Meath, situated between those two
Lowns.
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 67
From Dublin he wrote a short note to the Council
announcing his departure, and from Ardbracken an-
other to the Lords, and one to the Queen. The latter
is touching, from the depth of wretchedness and
despair which seems to have filled the writer's mind.
No. XVI. *
Essex to the Council.
My Lords, — I am even now putting my foot into the stir-
rup to go to the rendezvous at the Navan ; and from thence I
will draw the army as far, and to do as much, as duty will
warrant me, and God enable me.
And so commending your LL. to God's best protection, I
rest at your LL. commandment,
Dublin, the 28th of August. ESSEX.
No. XVII.2
Essex to the Council.
My Lords, — I do send by this bearer a list of the army I
carry into the field, as also of all the rest of Her Maj. forces
in the kingdom, and of the offices set down in both the
establishments. I have also sent such letters as are come to
my hands, of the successes of Her Maj. troops in several
quarters. If in all particulars my despatches do not satisfy
Her Maj. and your LL., I must pray your LL. to consider
what small assistance I have, how infinite my cares must be,
and how little should be expected from a man that hath no
constant health, and no comfort from thence.
I have dismissed the poor marshal, maimed, fit now to
serve Her Maj. with his prayers, his limbs being gone, and his
service in council forbidden by Her Maj. I have with me
1 S. P. O. 2 Ibid.
F 2
68 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
none fit to succeed him, but must myself do his office and
mine own.
The charge of Leinster in mine absence I have committed
to my Lord°of Ormonde, who might have had more men of
me, if he had not thought the army too weak which I go
withal.
I hear even now that Tyrone is coming into the Brenny,
and hath sent for all that he can make in the world, bragging
that he will do wonders. But if he have as much courage
as he pretendeth, we will on one side or the other end the
war.1 I commend your good LL. to God's best protection
and rest.
Ardbracken, the 30th August. ESSEX.
No. XVIII.2
Essex to the Queen.
From a mind delighting in sorrow; from spirits wasted
with travail, care, and grief; from a heart torn in pieces
with passion ; from a man that hates himself and all things
that keep him alive, what service can your Maj. reap?
Since my services past deserve no more than banishment
and proscription into the most cursed of all countries, with
what expectation or to what end shall I live longer ? No,
no, the rebel's pride and successes must give me means to
ransom myself, my soul I mean, out of this hateful prison
of my body. And if it happen so, your Maj. may believe
that you shall not have cause to mislike the fashion of my
death, though the course of my life could not please you.
From your Maj. exiled servant,
Ardbracken, the 30th August. ESSEX.
1 There is a marginal note in Cecyll's handwriting to this sentence :
— " Here was no sign of a parley toward."
8 Hulton MSS.
CHAP. II. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 69
The whole of the troops did not come in till the
31st, and he was then compelled to wait another
day for the provisions from Drogheda. This interval
was passed by the Lord Lieutenant in examining the
Lord Dunsany's country. Having commenced his
march on the 2nd September, he encamped on the
3rd at Ardoif, from whence, at a distance of a mile
and a half, Tyrone's camp was visible, a river and a
wood lying between the two armies. 500 foot and
two troops of horse were sent out to protect the
parties cutting wood for fire and huts, which was
only to be procured in the wood lying between them
and Tyrone : some skirmishing occurred between
the parties, without hurt on either side. The next
day Essex marched through the plain to the mill of
Louth ; Tyrone marching through the woods on his
flank, and encamping in the next wood, the outposts
being in sight of each other. Here a council of war
was held, which protested against Essex's proposal
to attempt an attack on Tyrone, his army being
both more numerous and advantageously posted.
On the 5th September, Henry Hagan, a man much
favoured and trusted by Tyrone, came to desire, on
his master's part, a parley with the Earl of Essex,
which was refused ; but Essex told him that he
should be the next morning on the hill, and if Tyrone
desired to speak with him he should find him at the
head of the troops.
The next morning Essex having left a guard over
the camp and baggage, drew up on the first hill he
came to in order of battle ; then marched to another
F 3
70 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
hill, on which a body of Tyrone's horse was posted,
which retired at his approach. He continued there
till three o'clock in the afternoon, during which time
T3^rone's foot never showed outside the wood : there
was some skirmishing between the horse, in which the
only hurt on the English side was to a French gen-
tleman in the service of the Earl of Southampton.
After this skirmish, one of Tyrone's horsemen
called to one of ours, and delivered a message from
his master, — that Tyrone would not fight, nor draw
out of the wood, but desired to speak with the Lord
Lieutenant, but not between the two armies, on which
the English returned to their camp, leaving a garri-
son of 500 men under Sir Christopher St. Lawrence in
a fort at "Ne wrath.
The next morning the army dislodged, and marched
to Drumconragh ; but before they had marched a
mile, Henry Hagan came again to the Lord Lieu-
tenant, and in the presence of the Earl of South-
ampton, Sir George Bourchier1, Sir "Warham St.
Leger2, and others, delivered a message to the fol-
lowing effect, — that Tyrone desired Her Majesty's
mercy, and that the Lord Lieutenant would hear
him, which if his Lordship would agree to, he would
gallop round and meet his Lordship at the ford of
Bellaclinthe, in the river Lagan. On this, two gen-
1 Third son of John Bourchier, second Earl of Bath.
2 Second son of Sir Anthony St. Leger, Deputy of Ireland in Henry
VIII.'s reign; he served with distinction in Ireland; in January, 1600,
meeting a body of rebels under Maguire, chief of Fermanagh, near Cork,
the two leaders entered into single combat, and both were slain. Sir
Warham was ancestor to A. B. St. Leger, Esq.
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX, 7 1
tlemen were sent with Hagan to view the place.
There they found Tyrone, but the water so much
out that they thought it an unfit place to speak in :
on which Tyrone exclaimed, u Then I shall despair
ever to speak with him ; " but knowing the ford, he
rode in up to his horse's belly, where the Earl,
standing on the other bank, might hear him. Then
the Earl came down, and seeing Tyrone alone, left
his escort at a distance, and conversed with him for
half an hour, after which they returned to their
camps.
A second meeting took place, when six principal
men of each side accompanied their chiefs. Those
who went with Essex were the Earl of Southampton,
Sir George Bourchier, Sir Warham St. Leger, Sir
Henry Davis, Sir Edward Wingfield, and Sir William
Constable. Tyrone and his companions stood in the
water up to their horses' bellies, while the Lord Lieu-
tenant with his party kept the hard ground. Tyrone
spoke a good while bareheaded, saluting with much
respect those who came with the Lord Lieutenant.
After half an hour's conference it was agreed that
commissioners from both sides should meet the next
morning. The Earl of Essex sent Sir Warham St.
Leger, Sir William Constable, Sir William Warren,
and his secretary, Henry Wotton. By them a truce
was concluded for six weeks, to continue from six
weeks to six weeks, until May-day, and not to be
broken without fourteen days notice on either side.
Tyrone also agreed that such of his confederates as
would not agree to this truce should not be assisted
F 4
72 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
by him against the Lord Lieutenant ; that restitution
of all spoils should be made within twenty days after
notice given ; and that, for the performance of this
covenant, Essex should pledge his word, Tyrone his
oath.
This being concluded, on the 9th September Essex
dispersed his army, and went himself to Drogheda
to take physic : Tyrone retired into the heart of his
country.
Had Essex agreed to this cessation of arms during
the summer, when, according to the Queen's expect-
ations and his own expressed intention, he should
have marched against Tyrone, we should have been
ready to exclaim, Oh, vain and impotent conclusion ;
but it is not at all clear that at this time, when the
expedition was professedly but a demonstration, it
was not politic to make this truce, and preserve the
borders of the Pale from inroad during the winter.
But to effect this result it was unquestionably ne-
cessary that he should have remained at his post.
We shall not, therefore, learn with any surprise
that, shortly after his return to England, Tyrone
again broke out into open rebellion.
Essex now received that letter of the 14th Sep-
tember from the Queen, from which some extracts
have been given : his despatch, enclosing a journal
of the expedition into Tyrone's country, from which
this account is taken, reached the Queen by the
hands of Captain Lawson on the 16th. The very
next day the Captain was sent back with an answer,
of which the most important portions follow.
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 73
No. XIX.1
The Queen to Essex.
Eight trusty and right well beloved counsellor, we greet
you well. By the letter and the journal which we have
received from you, we see a quick end made of a slow
proceeding, for any thing which our forces shall undertake
in those quarters, which you pretended to visit, and therefore
doubt not but that before this time you have ended the
charge of the last two thousand which we yielded for other
purposes, and of the three hundred more destined only for
Ulster service.
It remaineth, therefore, that we return you somewhat of
our conceits upon this late accident of your interview with
the rebels. We never doubted but that Tyrone, whensoever
he saw any force approach either himself or any of his
principal partisans, would instantly offer a parley, specially
with our supreme general of that kingdom, having often
done it with those of subaltern authority ; always seeking
these cessations with like words, like protestations, and upon
such contingents as we gather these will prove, by your
advertisement of his purpose to go consult with O'Donnell.
And, therefore, to come to some answer for the present.
It appeareth by your journal that you and the traitor spoke
half an hour together without any body's hearing ; wherein,
though we that trust you with our kingdom are far from
mistrusting you with a traitor, yet both for comeliness,
example, and your own discharge, we marvel you would
carry it no better ; especially having in all things since your
arrival been so precise to have good testimony for your
actions, as whenever any thing was to be done to which our
commandment tied you, it seemed sufficient warrant for you
if your fellow councillors allowed better of other ways,
1 Cott. MSS. Titus B. xiii. 544.
74 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. II.
though your own reason carried you to have pursued our
directions against their opinions; to whose conduct, if we
had meant that Ireland, after all the calamities in which
they have wrapped it, should still have been abandoned, then
it was very superfluous to have sent over such a personage as
yourself.
You have dealt so sparingly with us in the substance,
by advertising us, at first, of the half hour's conference
only, but not what passed on either side by letting us also
know you sent commissioners, without shewing us what
they had in charge, as we cannot tell, but by divination,
what to think may be the issue of this proceeding. Only
this we are assured of, that you have prospered so ill for us
by your warfare, as we cannot but be very jealous lest you
should be as well overtaken by the treaty. If this parley
shall not produce such a conclusion as this intolerable charge
may receive present and large abatement, then hath the
management of our forces not only proved dishonourable
and wasteful, but that which followeth is like to prove
perilous and contemptible. Consider then what is like to
be the end, and what will be fit to build on.
To trust this traitor upon oath is to trust a devil upon
his religion. To trust him upon pledges is a mere illusory;
for what piety is there among them that can tie them to
rule of honesty for itself, who are only bound to their own
sensualities, and respect only private utility.
And, therefore, whatever order you take with him,
yet unless he yield to have garrisons planted in his own
country to master him — to deliver O'Neale's sons, whereof
the detaining is most dishonourable — and to come over to
us personally here, we shall doubt you do but piece up a
hollow peace, and so the end prove worse than the beginning.
And, therefore, as we do well approve your own voluntary
profession, wherein you assure us you will conclude nothing
CHAP. II. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 75
till you have advertized us, and heard our pleasure, so do
we absolutely command you to continue and perform that
resolution. — Pass not your word for his pardon, nor make
any absolute contract for his conditions, till you do par-
ticularly advertize us by writing, and receive our pleasure
hereafter for your further warrant and authority in that
behalf.
Given under our signet at Nonsuch, the 17th day of
September, 1599, in the forty-first year of our reign.
76 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
CHAPTEK III.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
ARRIVAL OF ESSEX AT NONSUCH, ON THE MORNING OF MICHAELMAS
EVE. HIS RECEPTION BY THE QUEEN HE IS COMMITTED TO
THE LORD KEEPER'S CUSTODY AT YORK HOUSE. — THE QUEEN
EXASPERATED. HIS SUBMISSIVE LETTERS. HE FALLS ILL.
LADY ESSEX'S GRIEF. — POPULAR FEELING IN HIS FAVOUR. —
THE QUEEN ORDERS A CONSULTATION OF PHYSICIANS. — SHE
VISITS HIM, BUT REFUSES HIS NEW YEAR'S GIFT. HE IS RE-
MOVED TO ESSEX HOUSE. — LADY ESSEX ALLOWED TO VISIT
HIM IN THE DAY. — HIS OCCUPATIONS. HE IS SENT BEFORE
AN IRREGULAR COURT AT YORK HOUSE. PROCEEDINGS THERE.
HIS BEHAVIOUR. THE CENSURE. HE IS RELEASED, BUT
ORDERED NOT TO APPROACH THE PRESENCE.
WHEN the Queen wrote the letter, with which the
last chapter closes, she was not aware that the truce
had been concluded, and therefore was ignorant of
the terms of it. Whether her displeasure at his
proceedings, so far as she knew them, led him to
resolve on going over in person, that he might excuse
himself; or whether any report brought him by
Cuffe, who was the bearer of Elizabeth's letter of the
14th, induced him to form that resolution ; or whether
the truce itself was so hastily concluded to enable
him to leave the country, seems problematical. The
only thing we are certain of is, that the moment he
received the letter of the 17th, he determined to go,
and assuredly lost no time ; for on the 24th he swore
CHAP. III. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 77
in Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Dublin, and Sir
George Carew, as Lords Justices ; appointed the
Earl of Ormonde to command the army, instantly
embarked, and arrived at London on the morning of
the 28th September.
Coming post to Westminster, he crossed in a
boat to Lambeth, where he took such horses as he
found waiting for their owners. Sir Thomas Gerrard,
whose horses were coming over in the ferry boat,
shortly overtook him, and learning that Lord Grey
de Wilton was in front, rode on and told him that
the Earl of Essex was a little behind, if he would
speak with him. " No," said Lord Grey, " I have
" business at Court." " Then, I pray you," rejoined
Sir Thomas, " let my Lord of Essex ride before,
" that he may bring the first news of his return
" himself.'7 " Doth he desire it ?" 'asked Lord Grey.
" No," answered Sir Thomas, " nor will he, I think,
" ask anything at your hands." " Then," said his
Lordship, " I have business ; " and with that rode on
harder than before, and arriving a quarter of an hour
before the Earl, went up to Sir Robert Cecyll's room
and acquainted him with it, but no other person
knew of his approach. The account of his reception
by the Queen is given very fully by Mr. Rowland
White.1
" On Michaelmas eve, about ten o'clock in the
" morning, my Lord of Essex lighted at court gate in
" post, and made all haste up to the presence, and so to
1 Sidney Mem. " R. W. to Sir Robert Sidney, from Nonsuch, Michael-
mas day at noon."
78 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
" the privy chamber, and staid not till he came to the
" Queen's bed-chamber, where he found the Queen
" newly up, the hair about her face ; he kneeled unto
" her, kissed her hands, and had some private speech
" with her, which seemed to give him great con-
" tentment; for, coming from Her Majesty to go shift
" himself in his chamber, he was very pleasant, and
" thanked God, though he had suffered much trouble
" and storms abroad, he found a sweet calm at home.
" 'Tis much wondered at here that he went so boldly
" to Her Majesty's presence, she not being ready, and
"he so full of dirt and mire that his very face was
" full of it. About eleven he was ready, and went
" up again to the Queen, and conferred with her till
" half an hour after twelve. As yet all was well, and
" her usage very gracious towards him. He went to
" dinner, and during all that time discoursed merely
" of his travels and journies in Ireland, of the good-
" ness of the country, the civilities of the nobility that
" are true subjects, of the great entertainment he had
" in their houses, of the good order he found there.
" He was visited frankly by all sorts here, of Lords
u and Ladies and Gentlemen ; only strangeness is ob-
" served between him and Mr. Secretary, and that
" party. As he was going from dinner he spied me,
" and very honourably took me by the hand ; very
" kindly taking me apart, he demanded of me how
" your Lordship did, and when I heard from you.
" I answered, that you were well, but that you had
" suffered much here. He desired me to com-
" mend him very heartily unto you. Then he went
CHAP. in. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 79
" up to the Queen, but found her much changed in
" that small time, for she began to call him in
" question for his return, and was not satisfied in the
" manner of his coining away, and leaving all things
" at so great hazard. She appointed the Lords to
" hear him, and so they went to Council in the
" afternoon ; Lord Chamberlain, Lord North, Mr.
" Secretary, and Mr. Comptroller ; and he went with
" them, where they sat an hour. But nothing was
" determined, or yet known. Belike it is referred to
" a full council, for all the Lords are sent for to be
" here this day. It is mistrusted that, for his dis-
" obedience, he shall be committed ; but that will
" be seen either this day or to-morrow.
" The manner of his departure was thus. An
" hour before he came away he called the Council at
" Dublin before him, and acquainted them with his
" resolution ; committed the sword to the Lord Chan-
" cellor and the Treasurer, and the command of the
" army to the Earl of Ormonde. There are come
" over with him the most part of his household, and
" a great number of Captains and Gentlemen. My
" Lord Southampton, my Lord Dunkellin1, and others
" are at London, but not come hither yet."
That night, between ten and eleven, the Earl re-
ceived the Queen's command to keep his chamber.
The next day, the Council sat in the forenoon, and
continued till two o'clock, when Mr. Smith was sent
to bring the Earl of Essex. When he came, the
1 Son of the Earl of Clanrickarde ; he succeeded his father, 1602.
9
80 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
Lords rose and saluted him, and then reseated them-
selves, Essex standing uncovered at the head of the
table.
His examination was so privately conducted, that
even the clerks were excluded, and it lasted till five
o'clock, when Essex returned to his apartments, and
the Council proceeded to the Queen to report their
proceedings.
She replied that she would pause and consider his
answers.
The temper, gravity, and discretion with which
the Earl was reported to have replied to the matters
laid to his charge, could not be surpassed. The
charges were, that he had contemptuously disobeyed
Her Majesty's will and letters by returning ; that he
had written presumptuous letters from Ireland ; that
his proceedings there were contrary to those pre-
viously resolved on ; his rash manner of coming
away; his overbold going to Her Majesty's bed-
chamber ; his making so many idle knights.
The Court divided openly into two parties ; the
Earls of Shrewsbury and Nottingham, the Lords
Thomas Howard, Cobham, and Grey, Sir Walter
Ralegh, and Sir Greorge Carew, went to dinner with
Sir Robert Cecyll ; while Essex was accompanied by
the Earls of Worcester1 and Rutland, Lords Mount-
joy, Rich, Henry Howard, Lumley, Sir Edward Dier,
1 Edward Somerset, fourth Earl, born, 1555; he succeeded Essex as
Master of the Horse ; married Elizabeth, daughter of Fras. Earl of Hun-
tingdon ; and died, 1627. Charles Howard, Lord Effingham, was the
eldest son of the Earl of Nottingham.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 81
Mr. Comptroller, and many knights. Lord Effingham
was often with him, professing friendship. Lord
Henry Howard, however, was held " a ranter, and not
" to be trusted ;" and R. White cautions Sir R.
Sidney against him.
On the 1st October, the Queen committed Essex to
the custody of the Lord Keeper ; and he removed to
York House 1, none of his friends being permitted to
accompany him.
Sir Robert Cecyll had written to Sir Henry Neville
on the 18th September, that he conceived affairs in
Ireland would soon draw to a conclusion, and that
Essex would be recalled ; for if peace followed, he need
not remain, and, for a winter war, so great a general
need not.2 On the 8th October he again wrote, that
the manner of the Earl's coming before the Queen
knew of his intention, displeased her much ; for, not
two months before, when the Spanish alarm was very
hot, Her Majesty doubting that his desire might
bring him over, whereby the service he was on might
be prejudiced, wrote to him, absolutely commanding
him not to come over till he had her warrant for his
return. Notwithstanding which order, on finding his
agreement with Tyrone was not likely to be well re-
ceived by her, he had done so. His " sour relation,"
1 Built by the Archbishop of York, 1557, but inhabited during this
and the following reign by the Lords Keepers ; subsequently by the Duke
of Buckingham ; by the last of whom, of the Villiers family, it was sold.
The purchasers pulled it down, and built on the site, the streets called
George, "Villiers, Duke, Buckingham Streets, and Of Alley. — See Hand-
book of London.
2 Winwood, i. 105,
VOL. II. G
82 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
added to the breach of her orders, had so exasperated
her, that she had committed him to the Lord Keeper's
custody; " a matter which must have an end, and
" will have shortly ; though, for example's sake, Her
" Majesty hath kept this form with him."1
Mr. Eowland White, having received from Sir Robert
Sidney an assurance that he would burn -his letters,
which fortunately was not kept, he promised to leave
no circumstances unwritten concerning my Lord of
Essex's disgrace : from his letters2, therefore, we shall
continue the narrative.
3rd October. — My Lord of Essex in durance at York
House, only attended on by Wiseman and another. A house
is kept at Essex House, for my Lord and Lady Southamp-
ton, and the family.
6th October, Saturday at night. — On Friday, the Lord
Keeper, Lord Treasurer, and Mr. Secretary were with my
L. of Essex, from eight in the morning till near eleven.
What is truly handled against him is not known, but to
them who gravely and wisely govern here under Her Majesty.
My Lady Walsingham, — I mean the old lady, — made
humble suit to Her Majesty, that she would be pleased to
give the Earl leave to write to his Lady, who was newly
delivered ; Lady Essex was brought to bed of a daughter, on
the 30th September, and extremely troubled that she neither
saw him nor heard from him ; but at first it was not granted,
neither do I know if it be yet or no : this shews Her Ma-
jesty's heart is hardened towards him. It is said he is very
ill, and troubled with a flux. No man goes to him, nor he
desirous to see any."
He did not omit, by submissive letters, of which
1 Wimvood, i. 118. * Sidney Mem. vol. ii.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 83
the following is apparently the first, to endeavour to
appease the Queen.
No. XX.1
Essex to the Queen.
Receive, I humbly beseech your Maj., the unfeigned sub-
mission of the saddest soul on earth. I have offended in pre-
sumption, for which my humble soul doth sigh, sorrow,
languish, and wish to die. I have offended a sovereign whose
displeasure is a heavier weight upon me than if all the
earth besides did overwhelm me. To redeem this offence,
and recover your Maj.'s gracious favour, I would do, I pro-
test, whatsoever is possible for flesh and blood ; and for proof
of my true sorrow, if your Maj. do not speedily receive me,
I hope you shall see the strong effects of your disfavour in
the death and destiny of your Maj.'s humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
He had been desired to state the condition in
which he left Ireland, which he did in the following
paper2; which, with the answers he gave on his
examination, were so satisfactory to the Council, and
through their report, to the Queen, that his release
was daily expected. Sir Robert Cecyll told him he
was glad to see that the Queen was well pleased
with his conduct ; and that he would do any thing
to further his good and contentment, for which my
Lord thanked him.
1 Hulton MSS.
2 This paper is in the handwriting of Lord Essex, and is endorsed by
Sir R. Cecyll, "20 Sept. 1599. A relation of the manner of govern-
ment of the kingdom of Ireland as the Earl of Essex left it, and hath now
delivered it under his own hand."
G 2
84 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
I left with the Justices, as also with the Earl of Ormonde,
order to keep this cessation precisely, and yet to stand upon
their guard in every quarter, and in this cessation to see all Her
Maj. forts and garrisons victualled for six months, they being
most of them victualled for a good time already, and they
having means left for the present supply to that proportion
expressed. The authority of the Justices is expressed in the
commission, whereof I here send a copy. It was drawn by
Sir K. Napper and Sir. A. St. Leger, according to the very
words of the warrant. The authority of the Earl of Ormonde
is the same that was before my going into Ireland, though he
have no new commission ; but as while I was present he was
mv Lieut. General, so now he commands the wars in chief.
I used in the treaty with Tyrone, Sir W. St. Leger, who
is now sent into Munster ; Sir Wm. Warren, whom I sent
to Tyrone at my corning away, the copy of whose instruc-
tions is among my papers, and the original was shewed to
the Justices ; Sir Wm. Constable and H. Wotton my secre-
tary, who both are come over with me ; and H. Wotton hath
both the articles of cessation signed by Tyrone, and the in-
structions I gave to them, and is best able to deliver all circum-
stances, the whole business being chiefly left to Sir Warham
St. Leger and him. The conditions demanded by Tyrone
I was fain to give my word that I would only verbally de-
liver, it being so required of him before he would open his
heart ; his fear being that they should be sent into Spain,
as he saith the letter with which he trusted Sir John Norreys
was. I already told Her Maj. and the Lords where the knot
is, which being loosed he hath protested that all the rest
shall follow. But with those that have heretofore dealt with
him, he protested he would not deal in this free manner, nor
by his will in any sort whatsoever, since he had no confi-
dence that they could procure him that which only would
satisfy him, or performance of all that was agreed on.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 85
The chief commander in Connaught is Sir Arthur Savage,
in Munster Sir H. Poore, in Ulster Sir Sam. Bagenall, in
Leinster Sir Oliver Lambart, but all whom account to the
Earl of Ormonde, and to use the advice of such Colonels and
principal Captains as were their assistants in their several
charges.
The government of Connaught I have assigned to Sir H.
Docwra, but would not place him in it, but brought him over
to be confirmed or otherwise bestowed as shall please Her
Maj. Munster is governed by a commission to the principal
Council, to which I added Sir Warham St. Leger ; anong my
papers there are copies of all those directions.
To make a more full declaration of all things without help
of my papers I am not able, being in that state of body that
this which I have written is painfully set down. But I
promised to send over daily advises and directions as soon as
I had spoken with Her Maj. and the LL., and to give direc-
tions also and comfort to such of the Irishry as were principal
instruments for Her Maj. in that kingdom, and to return with
all expedition. If only by my coming away and Tyrone's
perfidiousness any disaster had happened, I would have
recovered it, or have lost my life : for I have a party there
for Her Maj. besides her army. But now, when they shall
hear of my present state, and shall see no ne\v hopeful
course taken, I fear that giddy people will run to all
mischief.
Rowland White writes on the llth October : —
The Ladies Southampton and Rich were at Essex House,
but are gone to the country to shun the company that daily
were wont to visit them in town, because it gave offence to the
Court. His very servants are afraid to meet in any place to
make merry, lest it might be ill taken. At the Court, my Lady
G 3
86 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
Scrope1 is only noted to stand firm to him; she endures
much at Her Majesty's hands, because she doth daily do all
the kind offices of love to the Queen in his behalf. She
wears all black, she mourns and is pensive, and joys in
nothing but in a solitary being alone. And 'tis thought, she
says much that few would venture to say but herself. My
Lord Southampton and my Lord Rutland came not to the
Court ; the one doth but very seldom ; they pass away the
time in London merely by going to plays every day.
16th October. — Sir Christopher St. Lawrence at an ordi-
nary took a cup, and drank to the health of my Lord of
Essex, and confusion to his enemies : he was called in ques-
tion for it before my Lord Treasurer, where he did not deny
his words, but did justify them, if any enemy of my Lord
Essex did find fault with him.
There was a muttering of unkindness between the Earl
and Countess of Northumberland, on which they are parted ;
she came late last night to Essex House. My Lady Essex's
daughter was christened by the Earl of Southampton, the
Lady Cumberland, and Lady Rutland, without much cere-
mony.
The speedy release of the Earl was now antici-
pated, when a letter came from Tyrone to him,
expressing surprise at his sudden departure from
Ireland, and saying that he could riot get his con-
federates to observe the truce. The Council also
reported that peace was not likely to be of long
continuance. Essex refused to receive any letters
from Ireland, which were therefore delivered to the
Queen. This intimation roused afresh her subsiding
1 Philadelphia Gary, daughter of Henry, Lord Hunsdon, wife of
Thomas, Lord Scrope of Bolton.
CHAP. III. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 87
anger, and she asked if there were not good reason
for committing the Earl. She informed Lord Mount-
joy of her intention to send him to Ireland, from
which he endeavoured to excuse himself.
On the 21st October the Council recommended the
Queen to enlarge the Earl, his reasons for his pro-
ceedings in Ireland being so good1, and his submission
to Her Majesty for his offence in returning so humble :
she angrily replied that such a contempt ought to be
publicly punished. An attempt was made to re-
concile Cecyll to Essex : the former expressed unwil-
lingness, saying there was no constancy in the Earl's
love, and he was too violent in his passions : that if
he became a suitor to the Queen for the repairing his
estate, and was denied, he would be jealous of him,
Cecyll, who indeed would not move the Queen in
such a cause. He said also that he had seen Essex's
letters to the Queen, and heard of his language, full
1 The Irish Council endeavoured, by a paltry quibble, to clear them-
selves of the charge of having advised the first proceedings of Essex in
Ireland. " It appeareth," they write, "in one clause of Her Majesty's
letter, that Her Majesty hath been informed that the Lord Lieutenant's
journey into Munster grew by our consent and advice, contrary to his
Lordship's own proposition and desire ; whereby a great part of the
summer was lost, and the flower of the army so tired, as it was accounted
honor enough to bring them back again ; for our parts we were utterly
ignorant of his Lordship's purpose to go into Munster, the same being not
so much as once spoken of in council, nor any of our advices or consents
demanded. Though in this matter we could write more liberally in our
own defence, yet we hope his Lordship will do us the right to purge us, to
whom our clearness is best known, and upon that confidence we have
been thus long silent, awaiting still that his Lordship would free us from
all imputation that way." It will be recollected that they had advised a
ourney into Leinster, and, because Munster was not named, now en-
deavoured to ignore the whole proceeding.
a 4
88 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
of unfriendly expressions towards him, but he would
show no malice.
kth November. — Yesterday, the Earl being in great extre-
mity, Her Majesty gave Mr. Comptroller and Dr. Brown1
leave to go to him, and this day Sir John Fortescue is per-
mitted : he is infinitely troubled with the Irish looseness.
Some lightning of grace and favor appears in Her Majesty
towards him, for, besides her yesterday's favor, she is pleased
he shall have the liberty of the garden ; but Sir Walter
Ralegh is fallen sick upon it.
Leave is granted to the Ladies Northumberland and Rich
to come to Court to be suitors for him. The French ambas-
sador had instructions to deal with the Queen for the Earl's
liberty, but he found her very short and bitter on that point.
Sir Robert Cecyll either is married, or to be married,
which the Queen is offended withal, affirming he promised
never to marry ; but he denies it, and says he only promised
to forbear it three years.
My Lady of Essex is a most sorrowful creature for her
husband's captivity ; she wears all black of the meanest
price, and receives no comfort in any thing.
29th November. — On Sunday, in the afternoon, the
Countess of Essex came to Court all in black ; all she wore
was not valued at 51. She came to the Countess of Hun-
tingdon's chamber, who came not to her ; but by a second
means her desire was made known, that she would move Her
Majesty to give her leave to go see the Earl of Essex, who she
heard the night before had been in great extremity. Answer
was returned, she must attend Her Majesty's pleasure by the
Lords of the Council, and come no more to court. The
Earl of Essex is extreme ill of the stone, stranguillon, and
1 Dr. Brown was the Queen's physician, whom Essex had desired to
see some ten days before, when the Queen refused to permit the visit.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 89
grinding of the kidneys, which takes from him his stomach
and rest."
Sir John Harrington, the Queen's godson, returned
from Ireland about this time: the Queen was very
angry with him, accusing him of having gone for
his knighthood.1 Her fury was spent on all who
had accompanied the Earl : Sir John has given
us an account of his reception. He had been de-
sired to keep a journal in Ireland. " On coining
" into the presence, she chafed much, walked fastly
" to and fro, looked with discomposure in her
" visage, and, I remember, catched at my girdle
" when I kneeled to her, and swore, by God's son
" I am no Queen. That man is above me. Who
" gave him command to come here so soon. I did
" send him on other business." She then bid Har-
rington go home ; he " did not stay to be bidden
" twice. If all the Irish rebels had been at my
" heels, I should not have made better speed."2
After reading the journal she swore they were all
idle knaves, and the Lord Deputy worse.
The storms raised in the royal atmosphere by the
name of Essex, and the sight of any of his com-
panions, were probably aggravated by what took place
without. Not only did the popular voice speak
loudly in his favour, but the severity of the Queen
was blamed ; the clergy from the pulpit preached
in his vindication, and even prayed for him by name ;
pamphlets were published, papers were found on the
1 He was one of the knights made by Essex in Ireland.
2 Nug. Ant. i. 357.
90 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
walls, and scattered about the chambers of the palace,
lauding him, and libelling his supposed enemies.
This was the reason the Council urged the Queen
to end the persecution, for, from the manner in which
Essex was treated, it can be called by no other
name; this was the reason that she obstinately re-
fused to listen to a word in his behalf.
In order to put an end to the public demonstrations
in his favour, a court of Star Chamber was held on
the 29th November, at which, after a public decla-
ration of the cause of the Earl's imprisonment, and
a recapitulation of his alleged offences, it was com-
manded that none should busy themselves with affairs
of state which did not concern them. And if any
person should thereafter know the authors of any
libels, and not reveal the same, they should incur
the like penalties with the authors themselves. Our
authority says that the Lords " spoke so softly, and
" the throng and press were so mighty," that he could
not hear what they all said.
A slight amelioration in his treatment followed
soon afterwards, for we find on the 13th December,
that —
My Lady of Essex had leave yesterday to go to him, and so
she did, but found him so weak, as, when he was removed
out of his bed, he was laid on sheets, his own strength being
decayed and gone, little hope there is of his recovery. The
Earl of Essex received again the communion on Sunday;
sent unto Her Majesty his two patents of the Horse and the
Ordnance, which Her Majesty sent back again ; that of the
Marshal he keeps, and will during his life.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 91
I5t/i December. — On Thursday last, by Her Majesty's
command, hearing that the Earl of Essex was desperately
sick, eight physicians of the best experience assembled, and
consulted what might speedily recover him to health, who
sent in writing their opinion to Her Majesty, — that salus
magis optanda quam speranda fuit ; that these three things
were required : to have his mind quieted, that he might take
rest, that he might have recreation, that he might change the
air; for they found his liver stopped and perished, his en-
trails and guts exulcerated, that they could not tell what
now to minister but gentle glysters to keep him clean
within.
This report seems to have awakened a spark of her
old tenderness, for the letter goes on to state —
Her Majesty, very graciously understanding the state
he was in, was very pensive and grieved, and sent Dr. James
unto him with some broth. Her message was, that he
should comfort himself, and that she would, if she might
with her honor, visit him ; and it was noticed she had
water in her eyes when she spoke it. Some comfort is
brought to the Earl, but it is feared and thought that
it comes very late, for nature is decayed, and he is so
feeble, that to make his bed he is removed on sheets and
blankets. This afternoon a general opinion is that he
cannot live many days, for he begins to swell, and he scours
all black matter, as if the strength of nature were quite gone.
Mr. White reports as he was informed ; but it is
a very remarkable fact, that the Que^n did actually
visit Essex at York House. The authority is so
good, and the report so circumstantial, that it cannot
be doubted that Elizabeth paid this visit so secretly
as to be unknown to the world. I can hardly
92 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
suppose that any gentle feeling actuated her; per-
haps she desired to be convinced that Essex really
was as ill as represented, and hence the consultation
related by White.
No. XXI.1
William Trew to his Wife at Chartley.
My G. S. M., — I did write to you by Edward Master-
gent of Utceter, since when we have lived here in doubtful
expectation, having a good day and a bad. Upon Monday
and Tuesday last, the rumour was all over that my Lord was
gone to the Tower, amongst those which ken not ; and
amongst us that he should go that day. It was so lamented
generally, as I never saw the like. Upon Tuesday at night
there was a letter found upon a pair of stairs in the Court,
directed to Her Majesty, for the safety of Her Majesty and
her estate ; this letter she had and read, being two sheets of
paper, and not acquainting any with the contents in it,
locked it up in her closet. Thereupon there was a great
stir in the Court that night, and some of the guard that gave
out they must wait upon my Lord to the Tower, had their
coats plucked off. Yesterday being Wednesday, all went
well on our side : at 4 o'clock, the Queen, my Lady
Warwick, and the Earl of Worcester went privately to
York House to my Lord. What is done this night I know
not, but we hope well. When the Sheriffs were to be
prickt, my Lord Keeper spoke for my brother to be spared ;
but the Queen answered that she heard he was an honest
man like his father, and therefore was sorry she had spared
him so long. My Lord Rich deals badly with me, but I
have good words of Sir Gilly Meyrick and Sir Harry
Lindley. Upon Saturday the Ladies came to Essex House to
1 Blithfield MSS. Trew was son-in-law to Mr. Bagot, and was in
the service of the Earl of Essex.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OY ESSEX. 93
lie there ; they are weary of the country. Let nobody know
the news but my brother. Commend me to all. Farewell,
your loving husband,
St. Andrew's even, 1599. WILLIAM TREW.
On the 5th January, 1600, Essex had sufficiently
recovered to sit up and eat at table. The Countess
came to him every morning at seven, and staid till
six, to which hours her access was limited ; neither
his son, his sisters, nor Lady Walsingham were yet
allowed to see him.
He sent a rich new year's gift to the Queen, which
was not accepted. Lady Rich, who was warmly
attached to her brother, and of a high and resolute
spirit, never ceased to importune the Queen for leave
to visit him. Her letters 1 were read, her presents
accepted, but no leave granted. Lady Leicester sent
the Queen a rich new year's gift, which was very
well received.
In February, Essex was to have been brought
before the Star Chamber : this was prevented by Sir
Robert Cecyll's means, who prevailed on Essex to write
a letter of submission to the Queen. All his friends
were now again in daily expectation of his release ;
when somebody telling her that it was reported the
Star Chamber proceedings were stopped, because they
could prove no offence against the Earl, which was
probably the true reason, she became again furious,
1 There Is one letter of Lady Ricli to the Queen, of such celebrity that
scarcely any large collection of MSS. wants a copy. It begins, " Early
did I hope this morning to have had mine eyes blessed with your Majesty's
beauty." It is printed in Birch, ii. 442.
94 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
and his liberty seemed as distant as ever, while Lady
Essex's access to him was limited from nine till four,
and his son went back to Eton without seeing his
" lord and father." This petty tyranny went so far
that his mother, Lord Southampton, and others of his
friends, having gone into a house that overlooked
York Garden, that they might salute him from the
window, great offence was taken at it, while Lady
Kich was ordered to confine herself to her house.
Poor Lady Rich lost her lover also at this moment ;
Lord Mountjoy started for Ireland in the beginning
of February.
Mr. Chamberlain gives a different version : —
February, 1600. — You left us with so fair weather,
and so confident an opinion that all should go well with my
Lord of Essex, and that we should see him a cockhorse again,
that I know it will be strange news to you to hear, that all
was but a kind of dream, and a false paradise that his friends
had feigned to themselves, giving their hopes and discourses
liberty to outrun their wit; for the bright sunshine that
seemed so to dazzle them was indeed but a glimmering light
that was suddenly overshadowed again, and the sky as full
of clouds as before ; and though they thought they saw a
reconciliation between him and Mr. Secretary, whereupon
they built many idle fancies and liberal discoursings, yet
either their eyes were not their own, or else they had false
spectacles, that made every thing that was done seem more
than double, for Mr. Secretary never spake with him since
he was committed, but only carried his letter of submission
that kept him from the Star Chamber ; so that my Lord
continues where he was, and, for aught I hear, is like enough
to tarry there still. The Lady Kich hath been called coram
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 95
again about her letter, but she excused herself by sickness,
and, as the Scottish man says, did not compeare.
Last of February. — My Lord of Essex hath been some-
what crazy this week. The Lord Keeper was sent for
yesterday to the Court, whereupon his followers feed them-
selves fat with hope in this lean time of Lent.
5th March. — Babington, Bishop of Worcester, preaching
at Court on Sunday last, made many proffers and glances in
his (Essex's) behalf, as he was understood by the whole audi-
tory, and by the Queen herself, who presently calling him to
a reckoning for it, he flatly foreswore that he had any such
meaning.
We now return to Rowland White.
Wth March. — By Her Majesty's express command, Lady
Leicester, Lord and Lady Southampton, Mr. Greville, Mr.
Bacon, are all removed from Essex House ; and this day my
Lord of Essex is looked for there, to remain with two keepers,
Sir Drue Drury and Sir Richard Barkely, and none to come
to speak with him but by Her Majesty's leave. Whether
my Lady shall remain with him, or come in daytime to him
as she now doth, is not yet known.
On Maunday Thursday, 19th March, about eight o'clock
at night, he was removed to Essex House; Sir Richard
Barkely having all the keys, and his servant being porter ;
nobody to be admitted without leave; and Lady Essex only
in the day. At the end of March, Lady Leicester obtained
leave to see him.
These slight symptoms of returning kindness, or
at least of decaying anger on the part of Elizabeth,
together with the return of spirits with his restoration
to health, induced Essex once more to try the effect
of his pen in moving the Queen to still greater
indulgences ; he accordingly addressed her in one of
96 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
those exaggerated and flattering epistles which so
gratified her vanity.
No. XXII.1
Essex to the Queen.
That I presume now again, most dear and most admired
Sovereign, to send mine humble letters unto your Majesty,
these are the true causes. The experience of your Majesty's
gracious, princely, and divine nature ; the oppression of
mine own heart-breaking, soul-fearing, and incomparable
sorrow ; the threatening of my obstructed body to fail me of
his wonted ability to do your Majesty service, if it long con-
tinue in this course of life ; and the warrant of mine own
conscience, that I neither prize nor desire life itself, or any
circumstance that belongs unto it, for other respect than for
to expiate my former offences, to recover your Majesty's
more than most precious favor, and to prove unto your
Majesty that you have revived a servant whose humble and
infinite affection cannot be matched ; no, though all the men
in the world had but one heart, or the hearts of all men had
but one affection. To mediate for me to your Majesty, I
neither have nor would have any ; but to encourage me to
be an unfortunate petitioner for myself, I have a lady, a
nymph, or an angel2, who, when all the world frowns upon
me, cannot look with other than gracious eyes ; and who, as
she resembles your Majesty most of all creatures, so I know
not by what warrant she doth promise more grace from your
Majesty than I without your own warrant dare promise to
myself. And therefore, if my importunity be presumptuous,
your Majesty sees out of what root grows the presumption
of your Majesty's humblest vassal,
4th April, 1600. ESSEX.
1 S. P. O,
2 This evidently refers to some image of the Queen : it may be the
ring !
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 97
On the 12th we find he had a little more liberty in
his own house, being no longer closely attended by
Sir Kichard Barkely. Lady Essex was a suitor for
permission to live in the house with her husband, as
Lady Walsingham was going to Barnelms. He
often walked on the leads, and in the garden with
his wife, reading alternately one to the other. Lady
Essex was an accomplished person, and had a refined
taste in literature : her society therefore, during this
long period of confinement and anxiety, must here
have afforded the greatest consolation to her hus-
band ; not a little increased by her capability of
reading arid enjoying with him the works of those
authors who, during his stirring and exciting career
of the last few years, had been neglected though not
forgotten. On St. George's Day, Essex had leave to
celebrate the feast by himself at his own house.
On the 10th May, however, Lady Essex's petition
had not been granted ; and she had gone to her
mother at Barnelrns, rather than take a lodging near
Essex House, which might give offence to the Queen.
He continued, as before, playing now and then at
tennis, and walking on the leads and in the garden.
He was much troubled also that, without his sanc-
tion, somebody printed his apology about the peace,
which he had written two years before ; and he sent
to the Archbishop of Canterbury, earnestly request-
ing him to suppress it. Of course this was a scheme
of his enemies to keep alive the Queen's anger — Sir
Walter Ralegh's, probably, who always appears the
most active among them, and who, as we learn
VOL. II. H
98 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
from R. White, always fell sick when any new in-
dulgence was granted to the Earl. Continued bad
accounts of the state of Ireland tended to irritate
the Queen. His next letter was probably intended
to appease her.
No. XXIII.1
Essex to the Queen.
Before all letters written in this hand he banished, or he
that sends this enjoin himself eternal silence, be pleased, I
humbly beseech your Majesty, to read over these humble
lines. At sundry times, and by sundry messengers, I re-
ceived these words as your Majesty's own, that you meant to
correct, and not to ruin ; since which time, when I languished
in four months sickness, forfeited almost all that I was able
to engage, felt the . very pangs of death upon me, and saw
that poor reputation, whatsoever it was that I enjoyed
hitherto, not suffered to die with me, but buried, and I alive, I
yet kissed your Majesty's fair correcting hand, and was confi-
dent in your royal word ; for I said to myself, between my
ruin and my Sovereign's favor there is no mean, and if she
bestow favor again, she gives it with all things that in this
world I either need or desire. But now the length of my
troubles, and the continuance, or rather increase, of your
Majesty's indignation, have made all men so afraid of me, as
mine own poor state is not only ruined, but my kind friends
and faithful servants are like to die in prison, because I
cannot help myself with mine own. Now, I do not only feel
the weight of your Majesty's indignation, and am subject to
their malicious insinuations that first envied me for my
happiness in your favor, and now hate me out of custom ;
S. P. O., a copy : as he complains in this of his letters being rejected,
it is very probable the original was sent back to him.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 99
but as if I were thrown into a corner like a dead carcase, I
am gnawed on and torn by the vilest and basest creatures
upon earth. The prating tavern haunter speaks of me what
he lists ; the frantic libeller writes of me what he lists ; already
they print me and make me speak to the world, and shortly
they will play me in what forms they list upon the stage.
The least of these is a thousand times worse than death.
But this is not the worst of my destiny, for your Majesty
that hath mercy for all the world but me, that hath pro-
tected from scorn and infamy all to whom you ever avowed
favor but Essex, and never repented you of any gracious
assurance you had given till now ; your Majesty, I say, hath
now, in this eighth month of my close imprisonment, as if
you thought mine infirmities, beggary, and infamy too little
punishment, rejected my letters, and refused to hear of
me, which to traitors you never did. What therefore re-
maineth for me ? only this, to beseech your Majesty, on the
knees of my heart, to conclude my punishment, my misery,
and my life all together, that I may go to my Saviour, who
hath paid himself a ransom for me, and whom, methinks, I
still hear calling me out of this unkind world, in which I
have lived too long, and ever thought myself too happy.
From your Majesty's humblest vassal,
12th May, 1600. ESSEX.
During the time of Essex's confinement, the
Queen had frequently consulted Francis Bacon re-
specting his case, who had hitherto made many
efforts to persuade Elizabeth to relax the severity of
her treatment. He endeavoured to dissuade her
from the declaration in the Star Chamber in Novem-
ber, telling her that the Earl possessed the pity of
the people, and that such a course would lead them
H 2
100 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III..
to say, that ray Lord was wounded in the back, and
that Justice had her balance taken from her, which
consisted ever in an accusation and defence. He
advised her to restore the Earl to his former attend-
ance. This advice was rejected ; but, after Easter, she
told Bacon that she found his words were true ; that
the proceedings in the Star Chamber, instead of doing
good, had only kindled factious fruits ; and that she
was therefore determined now to proceed against
the Earl in the Star Chamber by information,
although what she did should not be ad destructionem,
but only ad castigationem ; not to render him unable
to serve her hereafter. Here was a dilemma for
Bacon. Was he to take a part against his generous
and unflinching friend and patron, who had in mis-
fortune a double claim to his services ; or was he by
refusing to forfeit the Queen's favour and his hopes
of advancement ? A man, I will not say of high
principle, but a man possessing an ordinary sense of
the claims of gratitude and honour, would not have
hesitated an instant in deciding in favour of the
unfortunate ; I need scarcely inform the reader
that Bacon, to his eternal shame, chose the other
course. It is true he wrote a letter to the Queen,
asking her, if she pleased, to spare him in my Lord
of Essex's cause ; but he took care to add, that, if
she did not please, he was ready to serve her.
On the 5th June, 1600, the Earl of Essex was
brought before an unconstitutional and novel tribunal
at York House. The Court was composed of eighteen
commissioners : — the Archbishop of Canterbury, the
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 101
Lord Keeper Egerton, the Lord Treasurer Buck-
hurst, the Lord Admiral Nottingham ; the Earls of
Worcester, Shrewsbury, Cumberland, Huntingdon,
Derby ; Sir William Knollys, Sir Robert Cecyll, Sir
John Fortescue ; Lords Chief Justices Sir John Pop-
ham, Sir Edmund Anderson ; Lord Chief Baron Sir
William Periam ; Justices Gawdy and Walmesley.
They sat from eight in the morning till nearly nine
at night, in chairs at a long table, the upper end of
which was left clear for the Earl. There was an
auditory of about 200 persons, almost all men of
quality, but of every kind and profession.
At the Earl's coming in, none of the Commissioners
stirred cap, or gave any sign of courtesy. He knelt
at the upper end of the table for a long time, without
even a cushion : at length the Archbishop moved
the other Commissioners, and he was allowed a
cushion, but still continued on his knees until the
end of the Queen's Serjeant's speech, when he was
permitted to stand ; and at a later period, at the
instance of the Archbishop, was allowed a chair.
He had a bundle of papers, which he sometimes held
in his hand, sometimes laid in his hat, that was on
the ground by him.
The Lord Keeper having stated the cause of their
assembly, called upon the Queen's Serjeant, Christo-
pher Yelverton, to open the information against him.
His speech was a very short one; declaratory of the
Queen's care and provision for Ireland, and her
gracious dealings with the Earl before his going
there, and especially now in this mode of procedure.
H 3
102 - LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
He was followed by Attorney General Coke, who,
in a characteristic speech, of great insolence and
severity, laid open the substance of the charges. Of
these there were five specially made against the Earl :
that he had made the Earl of Southampton General
of the Horse, in disobedience to the Queen's expressed
command ; that he went into Leinster and Munster,
instead of prosecuting a journey against Tyrone,
thereby wilfully and contemptuously disobeying the
Queen ; that he made so many knights ; that he
entered into conference with Tyrone on equal terms,
which was dishonourable to Her Majesty, suspicious
towards himself, and shameful in the conclusion ; that
he returned out of Ireland, contrary to Her Majesty's
express command, which was also exceedingly dan-
gerous, for he left the army in such a state that, but
for God's providence, the whole kingdom had been
ruined. These accusations were heightened by the
free use of the bitter expressions of which the
Attorney General was so great a master. Nor did
he confine himself to these points : he considered
the letter of Lady Rich to the Queen, which he
characterised as insolent, saucy, and malapert, to
be an aggravation of the offence ; and at the end of
his speech declared that Essex, notwithstanding all
his vaunting letters and speeches, never intended to
fight Tyrone.
To him succeeded Solicitor General Fleming, who
pointed out the unhappy events that had followed the
Earl's departure ; by which it appeared how little
good he had done there ; that the traitor was grown
CHAP. HI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 103
stronger, more confident, and more insolent than
before.
Mr. Francis Bacon concluded the accusations.
After considering the Earl's journey into Ireland, he
pressed two points not spoken of before. The first
of these was the Earl's letter to the Lord Keeper in
1598 ; which letter, containing very bold and pre-
sumptuous passages, derogatory to Her Majesty, had
been published. Those which he particularly insisted
on were these : " There is no tempest to the passionate
" indignation of a prince," as if Her Majesty were
devoid of reason, and carried away by passion ; and
" Her Majesty's heart was obdurate," by which he
compared her to Pharoah, which was very odious.
The other point of his accusation was the Earl's
patronage of Hayward's book of Henry IV., he only
writing a formal letter to the Archbishop, coldly
desiring him to call in the book after it had been
published a week.
All the Lords admired the carriage of the Earl,
who showed no emotion at any thing said against
him, but heard all with patience ; and when the
Counsel had finished, he began to speak, kneeling, to
this effect, using great discretion and mildness. " That
" ever since the Queen had changed the course of pro-
" ceeding against him, he had resolved to give up all
" attempt to justify himself, but to acknowledge, with
" grief and contrition, whatever faults of error, negli-
" gence, or rashness, it pleased Her Majesty to impute
" to him." This first part of his speech being uttered
with great passion, and very well and forcibly ex-
H 4
104 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
pressed, drew tears from part of the audience, who
lamented to see the minion of Fortune reduced to so
great misery and humiliation.
The Attorney General having however charged
him with disloyalty in the expression he used, Eegina
vidit, consul vidit, senatus vidit, hie tamen vivit he said
that he was forced to alter the determination with
which he came, not to justify himself. But now that
his honour and loyalty were called in question, " I
" shall do God great wrong," said he, " and my own
" conscience, if I do not justify myself an honest man ;
" and this hand shall pull out this heart, when any
" disloyal thought shall enter it." He was then pro-
ceeding to clear himself of any suspicion of disloyalty,
when the Lord Keeper interrupted him, saying, that
he need not fear the charge of disloyalty, as the
course taken against him might show, that he was
only accused of contempt and disobedience; that
if he desired to persuade them that he had indeed
disobeyed, but without a purpose of disobeying, that
was frivolous and absurd.
The Lords then commenced their censures. First
the Lord Treasurer, who, clearing the Earl from all
suspicion of disloyalty, refused to entertain divers of
his other excuses.
Sir Eobert Cecyll, by reason of his office, spoke
next, who showed more courtesy to the Earl than
any other, and gave him due credit. He said, the
whole fault of the bad success in Ireland lay in that
ominous journey into Munster ; that the Earl in all
his journeys did nothing but make circles of errors,
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 105
which were all bound up in the knot of his disobedient
return.
The Archbishop asked a question about the tole-
ration in religion said to have been promised to
Tyrone. The Earl thanked his Grace for moving that
point, which was indeed a thing that had been men-
tioned by Tyrone, but never yielded by him ; to whom
he had plainly said, " Hang thee up, thou carest for
" religion as much as my horse."
In answer to a remark of the Lord Admiral, Essex
said that he returned, hoping for the Queen's pardon,
as she had formerly pardoned the Earl of Leicester,
who came out of Holland contrary to her letter.
Cecyil denied that any such letter had ever been
written to the Earl of Leicester.
Justice Walmesley remarked, " Prisoners at our
" bars are more graceless ; they will not confess their
" faults." He compared " my Lord his coming home,
" to a shepherd leaving his flock to the care of a dog."
Then the Lord Keeper summed up in a long and
eloquent speech, ending thus: u If this cause had
" been heard in the Star Chamber, my sentence must
" have been so great a fine as ever was set upon any
" man's head in that Court, and perpetual imprison-
" ment in that place which belongeth to a man of his
" quality, that is, the Tower ; but now we are in
" another place, and in a course of favour, my censure
" is, that he is not to execute the office of a councillor,
" nor to hold himself for a councillor of estate, nor
" to execute the office of Earl Marshal of England,
" nor of Master of the Ordnance, and to return to his
106 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
" own house, there to continue a prisoner as before,
" till it shall please Her Majesty to release both this
" and all the rest."
The rest all followed in like manner, except only
the Earl of Worcester, who cited these two verses :
Scilicet a superis etiam fortuna luenda est,
Nee veniam, Iceso numine, casus habet.
Even for our fortune Gods may cast us down,
Neither can chance excuse, if a God frown.
The Earl of Cumberland said, that if he thought
that censure would stand, he would crave more time,
for he thought it somewhat heavy, seeing how easily
a General might incur the like ; but, in confidence of
Her Majesty's mercy, he would concur.
Lord Zouch would, however, give no other censure
than that which he thought the Earl would lay on
himself; to refrain from executing his offices, and
remain in his house until Her Majesty released all.
They all appeared to entertain a confident assurance
that the Queen would speedily release him from this
censure. However, it was a month before his keeper
was removed from him.
Besides the printed accounts from which the above
is chiefly taken, we have a letter to Walter Bagot,
which shows what was thought of Bacon's conduct,
and likewise informs us that Sir Walter Ralegh was
in disgrace at this time.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 107
No. XXIV.1
Ralph Adderley to Walter Bagot.
Sir, — On Thursday last my Lord of Essex was at York
House before the Lords of the Council and other Lords, as
four Earls, two Barons, two Serjeants at Law, the Queen's
Attorney, and Bacon, who shewed himself a pretty fellow ;
and answered them all, wholly without any touch2, but only
in some disloyalty towards Her Majesty. They would
have had him to have confessed those articles which
are aggravated against him in the Star Chamber, but my
Lord yielded to nothing, but only submitted himself to
Her Majesty. It is doubtful he shall lose his offices some
of them ; but they would have all stand, as yet stand, at Her
Majesty's pleasure, and he is at his own house, as he was
before. There were some that said they would move Her
Majesty for my Lord's liberty, and that was Mr. Secretary ;
and he said he did not doubt but to bring a discharge before
it were long, which God grant it may be ; I doubt he spake
not as he meant. My Lord is merry, and in health, thanks
be to God ! He was at York House from eight of the clock
in the morning until almost nine at night, without either
meat or drink. He kneeled two hours by the clock. They
would have had him to have stood, but he would not, so long
so as the matter was in talk betwixt Her Majesty and him.
The Lord Grey is gone over into the Low Countries.
Ralegh is gone into the country with bag and baggage, as
wife and children ; and Her Majesty called him worse than
cat and dog. I pray you impart some of this news to my
cousin Trew ; I would have written, but the messenger
would not stay ; so with my hearty commendations to your-
self, your bedfellow, aunt, cousin Okeover, with Lettice,
1 Blitbfield MSS. Walter Bagot was the eldest son of Richard Bagot.
2 Peevishness, or irritability.
108 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP, III.
Mrs. Mary, Mrs. Trew, and Mr. Anthony, I leave you to
the protection of the Almighty. London, in haste, this 9th
of June, 1600. Assuredly yours,
RALPH ADDERLEY.
Mr. Adderley does not appear to trust much to the
sincerity of Sir Robert Cecyll. I am not able to decide
the question, whether he was in secret the promoter
of the scorns and degradations which were driving
the unhappy Essex to madness ; but it is fair to give
the Secretary any evidence we have in his favour.
There is among the Harl. MSS. a letter, said to be
written by Sir Robert Cecyll to one Squire, a servant
of the Earl of Essex, containing " advice for the latter,
" being in the Queen's disgrace in anno 1600, 42 Eliz."
He says of Essex, " To wish him to change from one
" humour to another, were but as if for the cure of a
" man in pain, one should advise him to lie upon the
" other side. If from a sanguine delightful humour
" of love, he turn to the melancholy retired humour
" of contemplation, or a turbulent boiling humour of
" war, what doth he but change tyrants. Contem-
" plation is a dream, love is a trance, and the humour
" of war is raving. For his love let it not so disarm
" his heart within that it make him too credulous of
" favour, nor too tender in unkindness, nor too apt
" to depend on the heart he knoweth ; yea, in his
" demonstration of love, let him not go too far.
" These silly lovers, when they profess such infinite
" affection and obligation, they tax themselves at so
" high a rate, as they are ever under arrest : it makes
" their service seem nothing, and the least cavil a
" great imputation.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 109
" In his counsel let him not be confident, for that
" will make him obnoxious to success. But let him
" follow the wisdom of oracles, where this was uttered,
" that might apply to the event ; and ever rather let
" him take the side which is likeliest to be followed,
" than the soundest, least every thing should seem
" to be carried by his direction."
Here must be mentioned the last letter that has
come under my observation from Anthony Bacon to
Essex. It is said to be written after 4th June, 1600,
and is a letter of friendly advice to Essex not to
despair ; arguing that the Queen was forced by the
reports that he was condemned unheard, to adopt
the harsh measures against him that she had taken ;
he hints, also, that the " piquant letter " of Lady
Rich to the Queen was another cause for the severity
of his treatment. He says that his brother Francis
Bacon, who, he thinks, "is too wise to be abused, and
" too honest to abuse," assured him with " great
" asseveration," that both days, both that of the Star
Chamber and that at the Lord Keeper's, "were
" wound from the Queen merely upon necessity and
" points of honour, against her inclination ;•" and
urges him not to despair, but, next to God, to trust
in Her Majesty's favour.
Essex replies to this letter. He says that Anthony
Bacon's letter " persuades that which he wishes
" strongly but hopes weakly ; " that Bacon's argu-
ments only make him despair t he more ; for the
fact of the Queen having done against him that which
she did not wish, only shows the power of others.
110 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
He thanks God that they " who can make Her Majesty
" believe I counterfeit with her, cannot make God
" believe I counterfeit with Him ; " for his brother
Francis, he assures him, he thinks no worse of him
for what he had done against him, than of my Lord
Chief Justice : "yourself," he adds, "I know, have
" suffered more for me than any friend I have." '
The next letter from Essex to the Queen refers to
the late trial, which took place on a Thursday.
No. XXV.2
Essex to the Queen.
If I had lost no more but liberty, health, the sinews of my
private state, and offices that give anxiety and reputation in
the world, most dear and most admired Sovereign, I should
pass the remnant of my wearisome life in silence. But I
have lost more than I could heretofore tell how to prize, or
any man hereafter will be worthy to enjoy. I sustain more
weight than the law lays upon him who refuseth to answer
law ; for that outward weight lies upon the body a short
time, and frees the soul for ever : the sense I have of the
inward weight of your Maj.'s indignation is above all bodily
pains, and yet suffereth me to live ; who now having heard
the voice of your Maj.'s justice do humbly crave to hear your
own proper and natural voice of grace, or else that your
Maj. in mercy will send me into another world. It is not
restitution of anything that Thursday took from me that I
long after, for Domina dedit, Domina abstulit, fiat voluntas
DomincB ; but after the end of the life, or the punishment of
your Majesty's humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
1 Add. MSS. 4130. f. 50. 2 S. P. O.
CHAP. IK. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. Ill
" The verses made by the Earl of Essex in his
" trouble," is the title of one of the many similar
effusions with which the noble prisoner may have
endeavoured to while away the tedious hours of
solitude and confinement.
The ways on earth have paths and turnings known, ^
The ways on sea are gone by needle's light,
The birds of heaven the nearest ways have flown,
And under earth the moles do cast aright :
A way more hard than those I needs must take,
Where none can teach, nor no man can direct,
Where no man's good for me example makes,
But all men's faults do teach her to suspect.
Her thoughts and mine such disproportion have ;
All strength of love is infinite in me ;
She useth the advantage time and fortune gave
Of worth and power to get the liberty.
Earth, sea, heaven, hell, are subject unto laws ;
But I ! poor I ! must suffer and know no cause.1
R. White informs us, that Sir Robert Cecyll con-
tinued to use his good offices with the Queen, although
no reconciliation had taken place between him and
the Earl, nor was desired by either. Mr. Chamber-
lain's letters give us more particularly the proceedings
which were continued against Essex after the meeting
at York House, by which the Queen endeavoured
" to break his proud spirit."
23rd June, 1600. — I was yesterday at the Star Chamber
upon report of some special matter that should be determined
1 Bibl. Reg. MS. Brit. Mus. 17. B. L.
112 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
touching my Lord of Essex, when the Lord Keeper made
a very grave speech in nature of a charge to the Judges, to
look to the overgrowing idle multitude of justices of peace :
to maintainers and abettors of causes and suits : to solicitors
and pettifoggers : to gentlemen that leave housekeeping and
hospitality, and hide themselves in cities and borough towns :
to the vanity and excess of women's apparel : to forestallers
and regrators of markets : to drunkards and disorderly per-
sons: to masterless men and other companions, that make
profession to live by their sword and by their wit : to dis-
coursers and meddlers in princes' matters : and, lastly, to
libellers : on occasion whereof he fell to a digression how
mercifully Her Majesty had dealt with the Earl of Essex, in
proceeding with him so mildly, and by a private hearing;
whereas, if he had been brought to that place, he could not
have passed without a heavy censure, the avoiding whereof
must only be imputed to God and Her Majesty's clemency,
upon an humble letter that he wrote the night before he was
to appear, that she should be pleased to let that bitter cup
pass from him ; but yet to satisfy the world, and to stop the
slanders that gave out he was condemned causa inaudita, she
was to justify her proceedings, and call him before her
Council, and others of her ancient nobility, to answer his
contempt and misgovernment ; where he behaved himself so
wisely and so humbly, confessing his errors with tears, and
saying that the tears of his heart had quenched all the
sparkles of pride that were in him, that it was great satisfac-
tion to the assistance, and no doubt would procure Her
Majesty's further favour towards him.
This was the substance, and in part the very words, of
that delivered more at large; so that now we look every
day when he shall have the liberty of Barnelms, for I
think his first step will be no farther, whatever he do after-
ward.
CHAP. UI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 113
1st July. — The Queen was very vehement the last week
to degrade some of my Lord of Essex's Irish knights,
specially such as were made after a certain letter she wrote,
that he should make no more, which arise to some thirty-
nine1, and would touch some of our friends' freehold: it
should have been done by way of a proclamation, which was
signed on Wednesday last ; but Mr. Secretary made great
means to dissuade Her Majesty from that course by many
reasons, but specially that she should wrestle with the Great
Seal of England, and bring the authority thereof in question ;
whereupon it was suspended, and lies still in the desk, and so
like to lie ; for I hear my L. of Essex is gone to my Lord
Keeper's at York House, to appear before him, the Lord
Treasurer, and Mr. Secretary, and there to be discharged of
his keeper, but yet to keep his own house, and to have no
more access than of his own people.
Rowland White to Sir Eobert Sidney, on the 5th
July, says, that Essex is sick of an ague, and sees
nobody but Lady Essex ; and had, by order, dismissed
Sir Gilly Meyrick and Sir Harry Linley. His sister,
Lady Eich, was also confined to her house ; while the
Countess of Northumberland was constantly at Court,
and very graciously received.
Essex now earnestly prayed for permission to retire
into the country, either to Grafton, or to Grays, the
house of his uncle, Sir William Knollys, in Oxford-
shire.
The next letter is that which he wrote, thanking
the Queen for having released him from the custody
of his keeper.
1 The list of knights made in Ireland has eighty-one names. S. P. O.
VOL. II. I
1 14 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
No. XXVI.1
Essex to the Queen.
Kather think him dead, most dear and most admired Sove-
reign, that since Tuesday, at four of the clock, hath sent you
no acknowledgment of your goodness, grace, and mercy, than
that his duty and thankfulness could take days, yea, or admit
hours or minutes, of delay. But violent fever possesseth your
Maj. servant every other day, groweth still upon me, and
leaveth me in charge to such pains in my weak head, as
neither will my brains undertake to indite, nor mine eyes
willingly assent to any light which shall direct my hand in
writing. Therefore, dear and gracious Lady, I must be silent,
though my heart boils within me for lack of an interpreter
to deliver the most lowly, zealous, faithful, and matchless
thankfulness of your Majesty's humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
In the month of July, the Queen intended making
a progress, during which she was to visit Tottenham,
the seat of the Earl of Hertford. Essex renewed his
applications to obtain his perfect freedom before her
departure, and wrote, as we are told, "now and then "
to the Queen. The two next letters belong to this
period of suspense.
No. XXVII.2
Essex to the Queen.
In this long trance, most dear and most admired Sovereign,
I must sometimes move, look up, and speak, that your Ma-
jesty may know your servant lives. I live, though sick in
spirit unto the death, yet moan not for impatience, as com-
1 S. P. O. 2 Ibid.
CHAP. III. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 115
monly sick men do. I look up to your Majesty, on earth
my only physician ; yet look for no physic till you, in your
deepest wisdom and gracious favor, shall think the crisis past,
and the time fit for a cure. I speak not the words of my
lips, but the words of my heart, yet cannot utter that which
most concerns me, and should give my full heart the greatest
ease. Therefore, I say to myself, lie still, look down, and
be silent ; your Majesty never buried alive any creature of
your favour, and hath past your princely word, that your
correction is not intended for the ruin of your Majesty's
humblest vassal, pining, languishing, despairing,
26th July, 1600. ESSEX.
No. XXVIII.1
Essex to the Queen.
Pardon, oh I pardon, most dear and most admired Sove-
reign, the freedom of this speech, for passion speaks, and I
have no longer power to strive against it. If your Majesty
dismiss me into the country, as banished from your presence
again, company, health, yea, life itself, will be, nay, shall be,
hateful to me. I receive no grace, your Majesty shews no
mercy. But if your Majesty will vouchsafe to let me once
prostrate myself at your feet, and behold your fair and gra-
cious eyes, though it be unknown to all the world but to him
that your Majesty shall appoint to bring me to that paradise;
yea, though afterwards your Majesty punish me, imprison
me, or pronounce the sentence of death against me, your
Majesty is most merciful, and I shall be most happy. That
house will make your Majesty remember what I was; and
this favour shall make your Majesty know both what I am,
and what I will be : for your Majesty shall find that, by my
fall, I am come to know both good and evil.
i S. P. O.
i 2
ju«~V
116 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. III.
Pardon, oh ! pardon, most dear Lady, for my words are, as
my thoughts, confused. But if your Majesty will be pleased
to assign me to any man, I will commit myself unto him ;
and upon my life I will pass to the place which he shall ap-
point me, and from thence afterwards to Ewelme Lodge,
without discovery. And your Majesty's answer is .....
or mortifying to your Majesty's humblest vassal,
ESSEX.
On the 26th August, Essex had been called up to
York House before the Lord Keeper, Treasurer, and
Secretary, who signified to him the Queen's pleasure
that he should have his liberty. This letter, there-
fore, was written immediately after that event, and is
his first effort towards obtaining the next important
step, admission to the royal presence. Her reply to
this, however, was, that though she had given him his
liberty, he still remained under her indignation, and
was, on no account, to presume to approach the
Court. He consequently retired to Ewelme Lodge in
the beginning of September ; Lady Rich being at the
same time released, went to Lees, her husband's seat,
to attend him, who was at the time dangerously ill.
As she had borne children to Lord Mountjoy, with
whom her connection had been notorious for some
years, this conduct shows how remarkably easy Lord
Rich's sense of honour was; or what would be yet
more contemptible and disgraceful, that he sanctioned
his wife's liaison, and now, during Mountjoy's absence,
gave her welcome home. No wonder she rewarded
sucn vile complaisance with the deepest scorn.
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 117
CHAPTER IV.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
FRANCIS BACON ENDEAVOURS TO EXPLAIN HIS CONDUCT. — ESSEX'S
REPLY. — VAIN ENDEAVOURS TO OBTAIN ACCESS. — CONSIDERATION
OF HIS CONDUCT IN IRELAND. — RENEWAL OF HIS LEASE OF SWEET
WINES REFUSED. HIS LAST LETTER, THREATENING TO ENTER
THE ROYAL PRESENCE IN ARMOUR. — ESSEX HOUSE THROWN
OPEN. DAILY PREACHINGS. HIS FRIENDS HOLD MEETINGS AT
DRURY HOUSE. IMMEDIATE CAUSE OF THE INSURRECTION.
THE LORD KEEPER GOES TO ESSEX HOUSE, — VAIN ATTEMPT TO
RAISE THE CITY. — ESSEX HOUSE IS INVESTED. ESSEX SUR-
RENDERS, AND WITH HIS PRINCIPAL FRIENDS IS SENT TO THE
TOWER.
LET us pause here for a few moments to consider
the conduct of Francis Bacon before the Lords at
York House, where he had seized upon some impatient
expressions in Essex's letter to the Lord Keeper, and
the dedication of Hayward's book concerning Henry
IV., and endeavoured to aggravate them into griev-
ous offences. Soon after the Earl was relieved from
the custody of Sir Richard Barkely he received the
following letter from Bacon ; his reply to which
merits particular attention, so dignified, so gentle,
so free from reproach, or rather in its very gentle-
ness so full of reproach, it appeals infinitely more
to our feelings in favour of Essex, than those ex-
aggerated passionate letters which he addressed to
the Queen.
i 3
118 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
No. XXIX.1
Francis Bacon to Essex.
My Lord, — No man can expound my doings better than
your Lordship, which makes me need to say the less ; only I
humbly pray you to believe that I aspire to the conscience
and commendation of bonus civis and bonus vir, and that
though I love some things better, I confess, than I love your
Lordship, yet I love few persons better, both for gratitude's
sake, and for virtues which cannot hurt but by accident. Of
which my good affection, it may please your Lordship to
assure yourself of all the true effects and offices that I can
yield ; for, as I was ever sorry your Lordship should fly with
waxen wings, doubting Icarus' fortune ; so for the growing
up of your own feathers, be they ostriches or other kind, no
man shall be more glad ; and this is the axletree whereupon
I have turned and shall turn. Which, having already sig-
nified unto you by some near means, having so fit a messenger
for mine own letter, I thought good to redouble also my
writing. And so I commend you to God's protection. From
Gray's Inn, July 19. 1600, &c.
FRA. BACON.
No. XXX.2
The Earls Reply.
Mr. Bacon, — I can neither expound nor censure your
late actions, being ignorant of all of them, save one; and
having directed my sight inward only, to examine myself.
You do pray me to believe that you only aspire to the con-
science and commendation of bonus civis and bonus vir; and
I do faithfully assure you that, while that is your ambition,
though your course be action and mine contemplative,
1 Works, xii. 24. 2 Ibid. 111.
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 119
yet we shall both convenire in eodem tertio, and convenire
inter nos ipsos. Your profession of affection, and offer of
good offices, are welcome to me ; for answer to them, I will
say but this, that you have believed that I have been kind
to you; and you may believe that I cannot be other, either
upon humor or mine own election. I am a stranger to all
poetical conceits, or else I should say somewhat of your
poetical example. But this I must say, that I never flew with
other wings than to desire to merit, and confidence in my
sovereign's favor ; and when one of these wings failed me, I
would light no where but at my sovereign's feet, though she
suffered me to be bruised with my fall. And till Her Ma-
jesty, that knows I was never bird of prey, finds it to agree
with her will and her service that my wings should be imped
again, I have committed myself to the mew. No power but
my God's and my sovereign's can alter this resolution of
your retired friend,
ESSEX.
The Earl of Essex continued his prayers to the
Queen for permission to kiss her hand. Francis
Bacon, who had constant access to her during this
period, says that he constantly took and gave occa-
sions "for my Lord's redintegration in his fortunes;"
but the Queen used to say, that he had long tried her
anger, and she must have farther proof of his hu-
mility. Sir Henry Neville, writing from London on
the 9th September, tells Mr. Win wood that there are
many arguments that the Queen begins to relent
towards him, and to wish to have him near her.
Two of Essex's letters to Elizabeth at this time are
worth laying before the reader.
i 4
120 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
No. XXXI.1
Essex to the Queen.
Haste paper to that happy presence, whence only unhappy
I am banished ; kiss that fair correcting hand which lays new
plasters to my lighter hurts, but to my greatest wound ap-
plieth nothing. Say thou comest from pining, languishing,
despairing,
ESSEX.
No. XXXII.2
Essex to the Queen.
Words, if you can, express my hearty thankfulness ; but
press not, sue not, move not, least passion prompt you, and I
by you both be betrayed. Report my silence, my solita-
riness, my sighs, but not my hopes, my fears, my desires ;
for mine uttermost ambition is to be a mute person in that
presence where joy and wonder would bar speech. From
the greatest lady's, in favour and goodness, humblest, mute
Sept. 9. 1600. ESSEX.
Sometimes he cheered his solitude and banishment
(for, as Sir Robert Cecyll observed, he walked forth
alone without greeting from his summer friends) by
addressing himself to the Muses, as in these lines : —
Happy were he could finish forth his fate
In some enchanted desert, most obscure
From all society, from love, from hate
Of worldly folk, then would he sleep secure ;
Then wake again and yield God ever praise,
Content with hips and haws and bramble-berries,
> Add. MSS. 9828. f. 6. « Ibid f> 5 Qrig
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 121
In contemplation passing still his days,
And change of holy thoughts to make him merry ;
And when he dies his tomb may be a bush,
Where harmless robin dwells with gentle thrush ;
Quoth Robertus Comes Essexia3.1
Before we dismiss the Irish service and its results,
it will be proper to consider how far the conduct of
the Earl of Essex deserved the bitter reproaches, the
severe punishment, and the humiliations to which it
had been the Queen's pleasure to subject him.
If conduct in^n enterprise is to be measured solely
by its success, then assuredly Essex deserved all, for
with large means he had made no greater progress
towards the subduing to order and obedience the in-
habitants of Ireland than had any of his predecessors
in the same office. But as it appears that both physi-
cally and morally it was a task impossible to achieve
in so short a time, we must acquit him of blame
merely for his want of success. What possibility
was there, by any means in his power, to instil loyalty
into the breasts of an entire population, who, from
the noble to the kerne, hated the yoke of English
rule; and if they submitted in the presence of superior
strength to acknowledge the Queen of England as
their sovereign, never failed, the instant the pressure
was removed, to relapse into rebellion or sedition.
What were 16,000 soldiers, or double that number,
to achieve against an enemy that never appeared in
the open field, except under most favourable con-
ditions, or accidentally ? What were troops trained
1 Bodl. Libr. Tanner MSS. 79.
122 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
to act in bodies, heavily loaded with arms and pro-
visions, to achieve against a horde of enemies, who,
scarcely clothed, lightly armed, and unburthened,
never left the shelter of their woods and morasses ;
but from a hole in a peat bog, or from behind a tree,
would watch the favourable moment for harassing
and annoying them, and cutting off a straggling man
or cart of provisions. No wonder the raw levies were
discouraged ; no wonder the patience of their im-
petuous general was exhausted.
Commanded as he was to listen to the advice of
his Council, he was not to be blamed for deferring
the Ulster journey ; ignorant of the country, he could
not be aware that the reasons given by them to
induce him to go were untrue or exaggerated ; and,
indeed, the delay was approved of by the Queen's
Council in their letter of the 8th May. But, un-
questionably, his conduct in treating with Tyrone
was a great fault ; having been warned in his in-
structions that it was probable the traitor would
desire, as he had before, to be received as a good
subject; and directed in that event only to receive
him " on simple submission " to the Queen's mercy ;
although, in the subsequent part of the same instruc-
tions, his power to deal with the rebel was enlarged ;
there is no excuse for the haste with which he patched
up a truce, and, dismissing the army, quitted the
government without any guarantees that the peace
would be observed.
Then, again, his obstinacy about the Earl of South-
ampton must have been personally offensive to the
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 123
Queen ; he had been ordered to be circumspect in
the use of his power of creating knights, and made
the extravagant number of eighty-one: he had re-
ceived an order not to come over to England without
license ; though of this act of disobedience, as the
prohibition was only meant to refer to the period
of alarm about a Spanish invasion, we do not think so
much ; but all were handles which he himself made
for the use of his enemies.
Yet these errors and offences would never have
been visited with that severe treatment, had he not
lost his place in the heart of the Queen. That this
was the cause there can be no doubt, from the caprice
and personal acrimony which was exhibited towards
him. How this occurred is not so easy of explana-
tion. Queen Elizabeth was haughty and imperious,
jealous, selfish, and vain ; whether she had at length
become tired of the violent methods which Essex
used to gain his ends with her, and resolved to shake
off his influence ; whether she dreaded and disliked
his popular reputation, and was resolved to pull him
down ; or whether she had discovered that the warmth
of his attachment to her person, and his admiration of
her beauty, were simulated ; or whether all these
feelings and passions were mingled, and kept con-
stantly alive by the arts of his enemies ; it is quite
certain that personal feeling had, at least, an equal
share in his treatment with public motives.
In fact, the conduct of Elizabeth with regard to
Essex during this period was rather that of a vengeful
woman than of a justly incensed Queen. It is quite evi-
124 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
dent, by retaining him in the place which brought him
into close personal attendance on her, that his ultimate
restoration to favour was in her mind ; yet so com-
plete was her ignorance of his character, that, pushing
her rigour one step too far, she deeply wounded that
haughty spirit, and brought his fiery and ungovern-
able passions to the aid of the mischievous and evil
counsels, which speedily wrought his ruin.
As he had not been excluded from performing the
duties of his office of Master of the Horse, both
Essex and his friends entertained confident hopes
that he would -soon be restored to favour. He
accordingly continued to write to the Queen in the
most humble strain, that he kissed her fair hands,
and the rod with which she had corrected him ; that
he would retire into a country solitude, and say with
Nebuchadnezzar, " Let my dwelling be with the
" beasts of the field ; let me eat grass as an ox,
" and be wet with the dew of heaven, till it shall
" please Her Majesty to restore me to my under-
" standing." With this the Queen was much
pleased, and said that she hoped his words and deeds
would agree ; that he had long tried her patience,
and she had reasonably tried his humility ; but yet
she did not grant the desired audience.
The monopoly of the importation of sweet wines
which had been granted to Essex at the death of the
Earl of Leicester, expired at Michaelmas in this
year l ; by the renewal or refusal of this patent,
Essex resolved to determine whether the Queen
1 1600.
CHAP. IV. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 125
intended to restore him to her favour, or to reduce
him to degradation and poverty. This was the
turning point of his fate ; unhappily for him the
Queen, whose severe temper caused her to listen
favourably to the insinuations of his enemies, that he
had not yet been sufficiently humbled, first deferred,
then refused to renew his patent. Her speech to
Francis Bacon shows by what feelings she was
actuated ; that my Lord had written her some very
dutiful letters, and that she had been moved by
them ; but when she took it to be the abundance of
his heart, she found it to be but a -preparation to a
suit for the renewing of his farm of sweet wines.
On receiving his application, she first said that she
would see what it was ; that such good turns were
not to be bestowed blindfold ; again, that the more
one feeds corrupt and diseased bodies, the more one
hurts them ; and, lastly, she declared, that the un-
governable beast must be stinted of his provender ;
and informed him that she intended to reserve that
farm for her own use.
The letter which follows contains the suit of the
Earl for the renewal of his patent.
No. XXXIII.1
Essex to the Queen.
If conscience did not tell me, that, without imploring your
Majesty's goodness at this time, most dear and most admired
Sovereign, I should not only lose the present support of my
poor estate, but the hope of any ability to do your Majesty
1 S. P. O.
126 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
future service, and not that alone, but the means of satis-
fying a great number of hungry and annoying creditors,
which suffer me in my retired life to have no rest ; I would
appear still before your Majesty as a mute person. But
since this day se'night, the lease which I hold by your
Majesty's beneficence expireth, and that farm is both my
chiefest maintenance and mine only means of compounding
with the merchants to whom I am indebted ; give me leave,
I humbly beseech your Majesty, to suit that canon to your-
self which I received from yourself, your Majesty's courses
tend ad correctionem, non ad ruinam. If my creditors will
take for payment many ounces of my blood, or the taking
away of this farm would only for want finish my body, your
Majesty should never hear of this suit. For in myself I find
no boldness to importune, and from myself I can draw no
argument to solicit. The only suit which I can make wil-
lingly, and must make continually unto your Majesty is,
that you will once again look with gracious eyes upon your
Majesty's humblest, faithfullest, and more than most devoted
vassal,
22nd Sept. 1600. ESSEX.
There are other letters of this period, in which
Essex prays only for admission to the presence ; of
which the following is one.
No. XXXIV.1
Essex to the Queen.
If I should as often present your Majesty, most dear and
most admired Sovereign, with mine humble lines, as mine
oppressed spirit would disburthen itself, I should be pre-
sumptuous and importunate ; if I should as seldom write as
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 127
your Maj. gives me encouragement, I should be dumb and
desperate ; and I am confident that your Maj. inseparable
justice in both kinds pleadeth for me. When you say, Why
is Essex silent ? your Maj. answers yourself, His infinitely
affectionate heart is overawed with duty. When your Maj.
saith, How dare he write now? you likewise answer, His
present fear is overcome by passion. By passion I say,
tyrannous to me, but reverent to your Maj. Out of that
passion my soul cries out unto your Maj. for grace, for ac-
cess, and for an end of this exile. If your Maj. grant this
suit, you are most gracious, whatsoever else you deny or take
away. If this cannot be obtained, I must doubt whether
that the means to preserve life, and the granted liberty, have
been favours or punishments ; for till I may appear in your
gracious presence, and kiss your Majesty's fair correcting
hand, time itself is a perpetual night, and the whole world
but a sepulchre unto your Majesty's humblest vassal,
18th Oct. 1600. ESSEX.
In October, Mr, Chamberlain wrote twice to Mr.
Carleton, that the " Earl continued in London and at
" Barnelms ; that his friends were sanguine of his
" speedy restoration to favour, which (says he) you
" may believe as much of as you list, but I ne'er
" a whit : for till I see his license for sweet wines
" renewed, that expired at Michaelmas, or some other
" substantial favour answerable to it, I shall esteem
" words as wind and holy water of courts."
Essex did not yet resign all hope ; and we have a
letter of the 17th November, the anniversary of the
Queen's accession, in which he makes a last earnest
effort to be received by her.
128 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
No. XXXV.1
Essex to the Queen.
Vouchsafe, dread Sovereign, to know there lives a man,
though dead to the world, and in himself exercised with
continued torments of mind and body, that doth more true
honor to your thrice blessed day, than all those that appear
in your sight. For no soul had ever such an impression of
your perfections, no alteration shewed such an effect of your
power, nor no heart ever felt such a joy of your triumph.
For they that feel the comfortable influence of your Ma-
jesty's favor, or stand in the bright beams of your presence,
rejoice partly for your Majesty's, but chiefly for their own,
happiness.
Only miserable Essex, full of pain, full of sickness, full
of sorrow, languishing in repentance for his offences past,
hateful to himself that he is yet alive, and importunate on
death, if your sentence be irrevocable, he joys only for your
Majesty's great happiness and happy greatness ; and were the
rest of his days never so many, and sure to be as happy as
they are like to be miserable, he would lose them all to have
this happy seventeenth day many and many times renewed
with glory to your Majesty, and comfort of all your faithful
subjects, of whom none is accursed but your Majesty's hum-
blest vassal,
ESSEX.
I shall offer to my readers but one more letter
from our unfortunate Earl. It is an undated, but an
original letter ; and extremely remarkable, as pointing
plainly to that course which brought his head to the
block — the entering by force into the royal presence.
There is a difficulty presented by his reference to
1 Birch, ii. 462.
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OE ESSEX. 129
having seen the Queen, which may be thus explained.
After his release from confinement, the Countess of
Warwick, a lady of great influence at Court, and a
fast friend to Essex, had advised him to take an
obscure lodging at Greenwich ; and watching an oc-
casion when the Queen should go forth in good
humour, of which she would give him notice, to
present and humble himself before her. This advice
is said to have sunk deep into the mind of the
Earl, who had resolved to follow it, but was dissuaded
by Cuffe, who assured him he was only preparing
additional disgrace and humiliation for himself. It
is, however, possible that he may have presented
himself and have been spurned, and, in the absence
of dates, I adopt this idea.
No. XXXVI.1
Essex to the Queen.
This is but one of the many letters which, since I saw
your Maj., I wrote, but never sent unto you ; for, to write
freely to a Lady that lies in wait for all things that I do or
say, were too much hazard : to write in a plausible style,
when I have so discontented a heart, were baseness, if not
falsehood. To be silent, and to put myself suddenly into a
new course of life, might be thought lightness, too much
melancholy, and I know not what. By this description your
Maj. seeth the state of my mind, full of confusion and con-
trariety. I sometimes think of running, and then remember
what it will be to come in armour triumphing into that pre-
sence, out of which both by your own voice I was com-
1 Hulton MSS
VOL. II. K
130 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
manded, and by your hands thrust out. But God knows
this is no sudden accident. You may tell those that thirst
and gape after my ruin, that you have now an advantage,
that, being in passion, I spake rashly. It is well you have
that you looked for, and so have I. In holding me as you
have done of late, you pleased nobody. In making this con-
clusion of my fortune, you shall please those you seem to
favor most. But siste calame, plura de extremis loqui, pars
ignava est, et incusare deos vel homines, ejus qui vivere velit.
From this moment Essex resigned all hope • of
regaining the Queen's favour, and gave himself up to
rage and despair. Sir John Harrington says, " he
" shifteth from sorrow and repentance to rage and
" rebellion so suddenly, as well proveth him devoid
" of good reason as of right mind. In my last
" discourse he uttered strange words, bordering on
" such strange designs, that made me hasten forth
" and leave his presence. Thank heaven, I am safe
" at home, and if I go in such troubles again, I
" deserve the gallows for a meddling fool. His
" speeches of the Queen become no man who hath
" mens sana in corpore sano. He hath ill-advisers,
" and much evil hath sprung from this source. The
" Queen well knoweth how to humble the haughty
" spirit; the haughty spirit knoweth not how to
" yield, and the man's soul seemeth tossed to and fro,
" like the waves of a troubled sea." l
How well these words depict the distracted state of
mind, bordering on insanity, to which Essex was re-
duced. 'He had humbled himself in a manner which
1 Nugse Ant. 179
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 131
must have been gall and bitterness to his proud
heart, and all in vain ; his most passionate and pa-
thetic appeals were repulsed with harsh words, or con-
temptuously left unanswered. Those fiery passions,
which had been with difficulty restrained for a time,
now burst through all control, and he gave vent to
his feelings in such wild and threatening language,
with such insulting expressions touching the Queen
herself, as alarmed all his friends ; while, by his
enemies, they were carefully collected, to be made use
of in the furtherance of their own designs. Sir
Walter Ralegh, than whom no one can offer better
testimony on this point, said, that the expression of
Essex, that the Queen was cankered, and that her mind
had become as crooked as her carcass, cost him his
head ; which his insurrection had not cost him but
for that speech.1
In order to arrive at a clear understanding of the
origin of the intrigues which led to so miserable
an end, we must go back to the period when Essex
was first consigned to the custody of the Lord Keeper
in the autumn of 1599. He committed the care
of his interests at that time to his two most dear
and intimate friends, the Earl of Southampton and
Lord Mountjoy. When he was threatened with com-
mittal to the Tower, and trial in the Star Chamber,
these noblemen were anxiously considering how to re-
lieve him from the excessive severities with which he
was menaced. Several plans were considered, among
1 Prerogative of Parliaments, Ralegh's works.
K 2
132 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
others, that he should make his escape into France :
that he should call for the assistance of his friends in
Wales : that he should take possession of the Court,
to enable him to gain access to the Queen. It was
at last resolved, that the first was the most advisable
course for Essex to follow ; and Southampton found
means to convey this decision to him, with an offer
that he and Sir Henry Davers would accompany
him, and share his fortunes in a foreign land. But
this advice Essex absolutely refused to follow, saying
that he would rather run any danger than live the
life of a poor fugitive.
During the previous summer, while Essex was in
Ireland, Mountjoy had sent an agent to Scotland, to
assure King James that Lord Essex entertained none
of those ambitious views which his enemies had
ascribed to him, but was most desirous that his
Majesty should be declared successor to Queen
Elizabeth during her life. When Mountjoy was
appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland, being unwilling
to leave Essex in the dangerous position in which he
believed the Queen's death would place him, and
being earnestly pressed by Essex to take some steps
to relieve him, it was resolved to send again to King
James, and propose that he should call upon Eliza-
beth to declare his right to the succession ; that, to
support his demand, Mountjoy would leave Ireland
defensively guarded, and with 4000 or 5000 men
come to his assistance ; while Essex should make
head with his party. The King's answer was, that,
until the garrison was settled at Lough Foyle, he
should not be prepared to entertain that course,
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 133
and with this temporizing answer the matter dropped
for the time.
Towards the end of April, 1600, Southampton went
to join Mountjoy in Ireland ; by him Essex sent letters
to Mountjoy, pressing him to proceed to the execution
of the above arrangement, but to bring his forces
over into Wales instead of carrying them to Scotland.
Lord Mountjoy, however, did not think it lawful to
enter into that course except with the approbation of
the next in succession to the Crown ; and, now the
life of Lord Essex was no longer in danger, he would
not venture on any enterprise merely to restore his
fortune. In August, Southampton having returned
from Ireland, went into the Low Countries. Essex,
released from the surveillance of Sir Richard Barkely,
was then listening to the dangerous advice of Henry
Cuife, who advised him to renew his intrigue with
James of Scotland, through whom he persuaded him
he could do many things for his advantage.
Essex next sent, by Sir Charles Davers, to inform
Mountjoy what his plans were : that he relied on
him and Southampton as his best friends, and would
follow their advice in all things : that his lease of
sweet wines expiring at Michaelmas, he should be
able to judge, by the renewal or refusal of it, what
were the Queen's intentions towards him: that a
Parliament would be called about that time, and if
he was not kept from attending it by his confine-
ment, he and his friends would propose some things
for the good of the state — meaning a declaration
of the successor to Elizabeth : that if he was unable
134 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
to attend the Parliament, he did not rightly know
what to do ; but that he was resolved, by means of
his friends, to present himself to the Queen ; to which
end he desired Mountjoy would write him a letter,
complaining of misgovernment in the state, and
calling on him to do something towards redressing it.
To this Mountjoy replied, that he did not approve
of the project ; but recommended the Earl to have
patience, and endeavour to regain the Queen's favour
by submission to her will. That, when he returned
home, he would act for him as a friend, but that he
would write no letter that he could not justify.
Before Mountjoy 's answer arrived, Essex had given
up this plan ; and an agent was sent to the Scotch
King, to urge him again to send ambassadors to
Elizabeth, to demand an immediate recognition of his
right to the succession ; and all other measures were
deferred until the arrival of his reply, or of the am-
bassadors.
In the mean time, Essex House was thrown open ;
and Sir Gilly Meyrick, the Earl's steward, entertained
all comers. The result was a constant assemblage of
discontented persons, adventurers of all sorts, and
soldiers out of employ. The most eminent Puritan
divines preached daily at Essex House, to hear whose
sermons the citizens flocked in great numbers. The
extreme heedlessness of such conduct is almost in itself
a refutation of the charge of any treasonable plotting
being then carried on, which would have required the
utmost secresy to disarm the suspicions so certain to
be excited by this mode of proceeding. The Puritans
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 135
were in the habit of justifying resistance to authority,
and one of the preachers at Essex House went so far
as to say, that the great magistrates of the kingdom
had power, in case of necessity, to control and restrain
the Sovereign.
We may as well state here, that King James, who
was very suspicious of the Secretary, Sir Robert
Cecyll, at once embraced the proposal sent him, to
demand of Elizabeth a declaration of his right to the
succession: the Earl of Mar and Bruce of Kinloss
were appointed ambassadors ; but unforeseen accidents
having caused the outbreak of the Earl of Essex
before their departure from Scotland, their ostensible
business was altered to one of congratulation to the
Queen on her escape from the late conspiracy. 1 But
Dr. Birch has extracted from papers in the Advocate's
Library at Edinburgh, the King's private instructions
to the envoys ; by which it appears that they were to
take part in it, or lie still, according as his friends in
England thought best ; that if they resolved on action,
and only required a head, his envoys had full powers
to declare him ready to supply that place, — with the
sole reservation that the Queen's person was to be
safe ; that if all were over before they arrived there,
they were to use every means to strengthen his party.
The last clause in these instructions was the only
one that remained for them to execute, which they
did with such success, as to obtain assurances from
all the principal noblemen and councillors, that on
1 Birch, ii. 509. 10.
K 4
136 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
the death of Elizabeth, James should be proclaimed
King of England. Among these was Sir Robert
Cecyll, who from this time kept up a correspondence
with the Scots King by means of Lord Henry Howard.
In this correspondence Lord Henry gave the King
particular accounts of the state of the English Court,
recommending him to place his whole dependence on
the Secretary ; and prejudicing him against the Earl
of Northumberland, Lord Cobham, arid Sir Walter
Ralegh, whom he describes as men without principles
of religion or morality, a triplicity, who deny the
Trinity. Of Northumberland, whom he calls also a
very contemptible man, he relates the following
anecdote. That he had told his Countess, to whom,
after two years7 separation, he had lately been recon-
ciled, that he had rather the King of Scots were
buried than crowned, and he and his friends would
lose their lives, rather than her brother's great god
should reign in England. To which the Countess
answered with great spirit, if not much delicacy, that
rather than any other King should reigri in England,
she would eat all their hearts in salt, though she
were brought to the gallows immediately after.
The preachings and concourse at Essex House
excited so much attention, that, about Christmas, the
Earl's friends feared that he would be committed to
confinement ; and seeking safety by flight was more
thought of than any thing else.
It is said by Thuanus, that a young man of good
family, a domestic of the Earl, who had been educated
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 137
with him1, and was so much trusted by him, that, in
his hearing, he discussed his most secret designs, at
this time turned informer, and revealed to the Secre-
tary every thing that passed at Essex House. The
name of this traitor is not given, and we have no
means of knowing the truth of the assertion ; but
there is no doubt the Government had full knowledge
of all the proceedings of the Earl and his friends.
In the beginning of January, 1601 , a committee of
the principal partisans of the Earl of Essex began to
hold meetings at Drury House 2, the residence of the
Earl of Southampton. These were, Southampton
himself, Sir Charles Davers, Sir Ferdinando Gorges,
Sir John Davis, and Mr. John Lyttelton of Frankley,
in Worcestershire. The list of names of persons sup-
posed to be attached to Essex numbered 120 earls,
barons, knights, and gentlemen.
The points submitted by the Earl of Essex for
their consideration, with a view to secure his access
to the Queen in such a manner as could not be
resisted, were these : whether it would be necessary
to possess the Tower, as a check upon the city, should
their seizure of the Court be disliked; in what
manner the enterprise at the Court should be ex-
ecuted ; whether both attempts should be made at
once ; what numbers would be requisite for both or
1 As Anthony Bagot was pardoned for his share in the insurrection,
Gabriel Montgomery is the only person who appears to fulfil these con-
ditions.
2 The Olympic Theatre occupies the site of Drury House.
138 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
either ; what persons should be employed ; and
where they should assemble.
It appears that the city being considered friendly,
it was not thought necessary to seize the Tower ; and
for the Palace, it was resolved that Sir Christopher
Blount should seize the outer gate, Sir Charles Davers
the Guard Chamber and Presence Chamber ; and Sir
John Davis the Great Hall ; that being done, the
Earl should come out of the Mews, make his way to
the Queen, and humbly entreat her to remove his
enemies from her person, and call a Parliament.
Nothing, however, was to be finally settled until
the arrival of the Scots ambassadors, which was im-
patiently expected.
An unforeseen event hastened the catastrophe.
On Saturday, the 7th February, Secretary Herbert
was sent from the Council to desire Essex to appear
before them, their professed intention being to ad-
monish him to make a temperate use of his liberty.
He excused himself on the plea of ill-health. Very
shortly after this visit he received a note from an
anonymous writer, warning him to provide without
delay for his own safety.
He immediately called a council of his friends.
They deliberated whether they should at once seize
the palace, or first try the feelings of the city, and
with the aid of the citizens attempt the palace ; or
whether they should abandon their projects, and
seek safety in immediate flight. The first plan
was thought impracticable on account of their want
of men, it being reported that the guards at the
CiiAi>.IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 139
Court had been doubled. While debating the second,
a person came in who pretended to have been sent
from the city, and promised all assistance against the
enemies of the Earl, who was assured that Sheriff
Smith, with 1000 men of the trained bands, was
ready to support them. This encouraged Essex at
once to declare against the third alternative of flying
the kingdom. Blinded by despair, and by the vain
idea of his popularity bringing him support from
the city, he resolved on one of the maddest enter-
prises ever attempted by a man of sound mind.
What could be expected for a handful of men, unsup-
ported even by a good cause, in an attempt to over-
turn a long-established, vigorous, wise, and popular
government, but defeat, destruction, and disgrace ?
The Earl's plan was this : the next day, Sunday,
the 8th February, he was to enter the city at the
head of 200 men, so as to arrive at Paul's Cross
a little before the end of the sermon ; after which he
was to acquaint the Aldermen and Common Council
with the reasons for his coming, and demand their
assistance. If they afforded it, he would instantly
force his way to the Queen ; if they objected, he would
immediately escape to another part of the kingdom.
The night was passed in summoning all his friends
to Essex House. In the morning there were assembled
the Earls of Rutland and Southampton, Lords Sandys
and Monteagle, and many knights and gentlemen with
their followers, amounting in all to some 300 persons.
Essex informed them that Lord Cobham and Sir Wal-
ter Ralegh designed to take away his life ; that the city
140 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
of London being on his side, he meant to retire into
it, and thence make his way to the royal pre-
sence, and demand revenge for the injuries his ad-
versaries had inflicted on him. The gates of Essex
House were closed, no person admitted who was un-
known, and none suffered to go out, except Sir Ferdi-
nando Gorges, who was allowed to go to Sir Walter
Ralegh, who was waiting in a boat to speak with
him.
Information of these persons flocking into Essex
House had been conveyed to the Queen, who de-
spatched orders to the Lord Mayor to see that all the
citizens were in readiness to obey orders, and at the
same time sent four of her great officers to Essex
House, to inquire into the cause of the assemblage,
and thus prevented the execution of the plan.
The original declaration of the Lord Keeper, Lord
Chief Justice Popham, and the Earl of Worcester,
signed by them, being the most authentic account of
what passed at Essex House, is presented entire to the
reader.1
One can scarcely understand the infatuation which
possessed Essex : the only chance left for him under
the circumstances was to dismiss his followers, and to
have sought safety in flight ; no overt act of treason
or violence had been committed ; his followers would,
therefore, have been unmolested. Sir Charles Davers
advised him, either to treat with the Lord Keeper, or
else make his way through the gate of Essex House,
1 s. P. o.
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 141
and then haste away to Highgate, and so to Northum-
berland, and thence to the King of Scots ; under his
protection they might make their peace ; if they failed,
the Queen was old, and could not live long. This
good counsel passed unheeded.
Upon Sunday, the 8th February last past, about ten of the
clock in the forenoon, the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, the
Earl of Worcester, Sir Wm. Knollys, Comptroller of H.M.
household, and the Lord Chief Justice of England, being
commanded by direction from the Queen's Majesty, did
repair to the late Earl of Essex house, and finding the gate
shut against them, after a little stay they were let in at the
wicket, and as soon as they were within the gate, the wicket
was shut upon them, and all their servants kept out. At
their coming thither, they found the court full of men as-
sembled together in very tumultuous sort. The Earls of
Essex, Rutland, and Southampton, and the Lord Sandys,
Master Parker, commonly called Lord Monteagle ; Sir Chris-
topher Blount, Sir Charles Davers, and many other knights
and gentlemen, and other persons unknown, flocked together
about the L. Keeper, &c. ; and thereupon the L. Keeper
told the Earl of Essex that they were sent from Her Maj. to
understand the cause of this their assembly, and to let them
know, that if they had any particular cause of grief against
any persons whatsoever, it should be heard, and they should
have justice ; hereupon the Earl of Essex, with a very
loud voice, declared that his life was sought, and that he
should have been murdered in his bed ; that he had been
perfidiously dealt with ; that his hand had been counter-
feited, and letters written in his name ; and that there-
fore they were assembled there to defend their lives, with
much other speech to like effect. Hereupon the Lord
Chief Justice said unto the Earl, that if they had any such
142 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
matter of grief, or if any such matter were attempted or pur-
posed against him, he willed the Earl to declare it, assuring
him that it should be truly related to Her Maj., and that it
should be indifferently heard, and justice should be done,
whomsoever it concerned. To this the Earl of Southampton
objected the assault made upon him by the Lord Grey ;
whereunto the Lord Chief Justice said, that in his case
justice had been done, and the party imprisoned for it.
And hereupon the Lord Keeper did eftsoons will the Earl
of Essex, that whatsoever private matter of offence he had
against any person whatsoever, if he would deliver it unto
them, they would faithfully and honestly deliver it to the
Queen's Majesty, and doubted not to procure him honorable
and equal justice, whomsoever it concerned ; requiring him
that if he would not declare it openly, that he would impart
it unto them privately, and doubted not but they would
satisfy him in it. Upon this there was a great clamor
raised amongst the multitude, crying, "Away, my Lord,
they abuse you, they betray you, they undo you, you lose
time." Whereupon the Lord Keeper put on his hat, and said
in a loud voice, " My Lord, let us speak with you privately,
and understand your griefs; and I command you all, on your
allegiance, to lay down your weapons and to depart, which
you ought all to do, being thus commanded, if you be good
subjects, and owe that duty to the Queen's Maj. which you
profess." Whereupon they all brake out into an exceeding
loud shout and cry, crying, " All, all, all." And whilst the
Lord Keeper was speaking, and commanding them upon their
allegiance, as is before declared, the Earl of Essex and the
most part of that company did put on their hats. And so
the Earl of Essex went into the house, and the Lord Keeper,
&c. followed him, thinking that his purpose had been to
speak with them privately, as they had required ; and as they
were going, some of that disordered company cried, "Kill
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 143
them ;" and as they were going into the great chamber some
cried, " Cast the Great Seal out of the window ;" some other
cried then, " Kill them ;" and some other said, " Nay, let us
shop them up." The Lord Keeper did often call on the
Earl of Essex to speak with them privately, thinking still
that his meaning had been so, until the Earl brought them
into his back chamber, and then gave order to have the
further door of that chamber shut fast ; and at his going forth
out of that chamber, the Lord Keeper pressing again to have
spoken with the Earl of Essex, the Earl said, " My Lords,
be patient a while, and stay here, and I will go into London
and take order with the Mayor and Sheriffs for the city, and
will be here again within this half-hour ;" and so departed
from the Lord Keeper, &c. leaving the Lord Keeper, &c.
and divers of the gentlemen prisoners in that chamber,
guarded by Sir John Davis, Francis Tresham, and Owen
Salisbury, with musket shot, where they continued until Sir
Ferd. Gorges came and delivered them about four of the
clock in the afternoon. In the mean time, we did often
require Sir John Davis and Francis Tresham to suffer us to
depart, or at the least to suffer some one of us to go to the
Queen's Majesty, to inform her where and in what sort we
were kept ; but they answered that my Lord, meaning the
Earl of Essex, had commanded that we should not depart
before his return, which they said would be very shortly.
THOS. EGERTON, C. S.
All this I heard also, saving only the words, "Cast the Seal
out of the window," and the words the Earl said touching his
going to the Lord Mayor and settling the city, which I heard
not, being somewhat before my Lord Keeper; but in the
chamber where the books were, I moved the Earl that he
would cause his company to depart, that we might have some
private speech with the Earl : the Earl answered, he would
144 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
not cause them to depart, for that they should not think he
had betrayed them.
J. POPHAM.
The most part of these words uttered by my Lord Keeper
and my Lord Chief Justice, I do very well remember ; but
the throng was so great as I was cast behind at their going
into the chamber, but recovering their company, 1 heard my
Lord Keeper, as I take it, say, that if they stay us, they must
keep us as prisoners, otherwise we would depart to Court ;
whereunto the Earl, as I take it, replied, and said, that if his
Lordship and the rest would have patience until his return,
both he and they would go together, and lay himself and his
causes at the foot of Her Majesty. And so the rest cried
out, "My Lord, you lose time," and so they departed, and left
us under guard. For the words, " Cast the Seal out at the
window," I did not hear myself, but by report ; but many
gave their censures, some saying, "Kill them;" some, "Keep
them as prisoners ;" some, " Let them be pledges until their
return."
E. WORCESTER.
On quitting the Lord Keeper, Essex, leaving his
house in the charge of Sir Gilly Meyrick, went out
immediately with a company of about 200 men.
In the street he was joined by the Earl of Bedford,
Lord Cromwell, and their followers.
He proceeded at once to the house of Sheriff
Smith, near Fenchurch, crying out as he went:
" For the Queen ! for the Queen ! a plot is laid for
" my life :" the streets were empty, and there was no
sermon at Paul's Cross in consequence of the message
from the Queen : the citizens, all amazed at the
unusual outcry, came to their doors to see what
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 145
caused the noise, but not a man took up arms for
him. On his approach, the Sheriff, upon whose
support he had depended, made his escape by the
back-door to the Lord Mayor. On arriving at the
Sheriff's house, Essex is said to have been in such a
profuse perspiration from his agitation of mind and
body, that he was obliged to " shift himself."
In the mean time, Thomas, Lord Burghley, ac-
companied by Garter King-at-Arms, and the Earl of
Cumberland, with Sir Thomas Gerard, Knight Mar-
shal, proclaimed the Earl and his adherents traitors
in different parts of the city.
Hearing this, and finding there was no hope of
assistance from the citizens, he resolved to return to
Essex House, send his submission to the Queen by
the Lord Keeper, and endeavour to obtain some terms.
At Ludgate, a company of soldiers was posted under
Sir John Leveson, who refused to let them pass.
Essex ordered a charge, but his disheartened fol-
lowers, and now diminished numbers, for many had
slipped away, were repulsed. In the skirmish, Essex
was shot through the hat, Sir Christopher Blount
wounded and taken ; a young gentleman named
Tracy, " dear to the Earl," and two or three citizens
killed.
Retreating to Queenhithe, they there took boat,
and gained Essex House. Here another disappoint-
ment awaited him : Sir Ferdinando Gorges, who left
him in the city, had come to Essex House, released
the Lord Keeper and his fellow prisoners, and accom-
panied them to the palace.
VOL. II. L
146 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IV.
On his return he burnt all his papers, among
which was one he called a history of his troubles,
saying they should tell no tales of his friends.
During the day the alarm had been excessive at
Court; all the gates were closed and fortified,
the passages blocked up with carriages and chains.
The Queen alone displayed the courage and firmness
which had formerly so endeared her to the hearts 'of
her people. She alone talked of going to meet the
insurgents, declaring that not one of them would
dare to meet her eye, but would fly at her approach.
The return of the Lord Keeper brought the in-
telligence of the insurgents having been discomfited
in the city, and of their return to Essex House. The
Lord Admiral was sent to invest it before the in-
mates had time to strengthen its defences. The
Earls of Cumberland and Lincoln, Lords Thomas
Howard, Grey, Burghley, and Compton took post on
the land side ; the Lord Admiral, his son, Lord
Effingham, Lord Cobham, Sir John Stanhope, Sir
Robert Sidney, and Fulke Greville, in the garden,
and on the river side. Before storming the house,
Sir Robert Sidney was sent to summon the besieged.
Southampton appeared on the roof, and asked to
whom they should yield ? To their enemies ? that
would be giving themselves up to destruction. To
the Queen ? that would be confessing themselves
guilty. But if the Lord Admiral would give hos-
tages for their safety, they would present themselves
before the Queen ; otherwise they determined to die
in their own defence.
CHAP. IV. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 147
The Lord Admiral returned for answer that he
would make no terms with rebels; but he gave an
hour's delay to allow Lady Essex, Lady Rich, and
other women to leave the house.
Essex now showed the most remarkable irreso-
lution : he was but half a rebel, and already regret-
ting the excesses to which he had gone, could resolve
on nothing. First, he determined to sally out ; in
which he was encouraged by Lord Sandys, a man
advanced in years, who declared the boldest course
to be the safest, and that it better became men of
their rank to die sword in hand than by the hands of
the executioner. Soon changing his mind, the Earl
declared he would surrender on conditions. The
Lord Admiral refused to listen to them. On this
Essex said he did not insist on prescribing terms,
and made but these three singular requests ; that they
should be civilly treated ; that their cause should be
justly and lawfully heard ; and that Mr. Ashton, his
chaplain, might attend him in prison for the comfort of
his soul ; which being agreed to, the Lords and Gen-
tlemen in Essex House, on their knees, surrendered
their swords to the Lord Admiral.
Thus an enterprise, begun in madness and folly,
was weakly and ignominiously ended.
The Earls of Essex, Southampton, and Rutland,
Lords Sandys, Cromwell, and Monteagle, Sir Charles
Davers, and Sir Henry Bromley, were sent to the
Tower: the other prisoners were distributed among
the public prisons.
L 2
1 48 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CIIAP. IV.
On the 9th the Queen issued a proclamation,
thanking the citizens of London for their loyal con-
duct, and warning them to be careful of the peace of
the city, as the extent of the conspiracy was not yet
known.
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 149
CHAPTEK V.
LIFE OF ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
WESTMINSTER HALL AT THE TRIAL OF ESSEX AND SOUTHAMPTON.
THEIR ARRAIGNMENT. CONFESSIONS OF THEIR COMPANIONS.
— BACON'S SPEECH AND BEHAVIOUR. — ESSEX'S SPEECH, AND
CONDEMNATION. MR. ASHTON OBTAINS A CONFESSION. — CHAM-
BERLAIN'S ACCOUNT. — LADY ESSEX'S LETTER TO CECYLL, WHO
RELENTS. — RALEGH'S LETTER, URGING THE DEATH OF ESSEX. —
THE STORY OF THE RING CONSIDERED, WITH THE SUBSEQUENT
REGRET OF ELIZABETH. THE QUEEN*S INDECISION. — ORDER OF
EXECUTION SENT. LAST HOURS AND DEATH OF ESSEX.
THE 19th February, 1601, was appointed for the
arraignment of the Earls of Essex and Southampton.
For their trial a court was made in Westminster
Hall : a raised platform, about two yards high and
six yards square, was erected at the upper end of the
hall ; the seat of the Lord Steward on the west side
towards the King's Bench ; on each side seats covered
with green cloth for the Peers ; in the middle a
table covered with green cloth, after the manner of
the Exchequer, with seats round it for the Judges
and Counsel ; on the north side a little square space
was cut for the Serjeant of the Mace ; at the east end
was the bar where the prisoners stood.
Lord Buckhurst, the Lord High Steward for the
time being, preceded by the King of Arms bearing
the white staff, and accompanied by seven Serjeants
L 3
150 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
with maces, having taken his seat, the Constable and
the Lieutenant of the Tower produced the prisoners,
who were preceded by a porter bearing the axe,
with its edge turned from them. On meeting at the
bar the Earls kissed each other's hands, and embraced
cheerfully.
Silence having been proclaimed, the Clerk of the
Crown read the commission, and the precept contain-
ing the names of the Peers of Robert, Earl of Essex,
and Henry, Earl of Southampton. Proclamation being
then made that all Earls, Viscounts, and Barons
summoned do answer to their names, the Lords were
called as follows : —
Edward, Earl of Oxford. Thomas, Lord Grey de
Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury. Wilton.
William, Earl of Danby. Thomas, Lord Lumley.
Edward, Earl of Worcester. Henry, Lord Windsor.
George, Earl of Cumberland. William, Lord Chandos.
Robert, Earl of Sussex. Robert, Lord Riqh.
Edward, Earl of Hertford. Thomas, Lord Darcy.
Henry, Earl of Lincoln. George, Lord Hunsdon.
Charles, Earl of Nottingham. Oliver, Lord St. John of
Thomas, Viscount Bindon. Bletsoe.
Thomas, Lord De la Warr. Thomas, Lord Burghley.
Edward, Lord Morley. William, Lord Compton.
Henry, Lord Cobham. Thomas, Lord Howard de
Henry, Lord Stafford. Walden.
The Judges were the Lord Chief Justices Popham,
and Anderson, L. C. Baron Sir William Periarn,
Justices Gawdie, Fenner, Walmesley, Warburton,
Kingsrnill, and Mr. Baron Clarke.
Essex asked the Chief Justice whether, like any
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 151
common person, they might challenge those of the
Peers whom they knew to be their professed enemies :
being answered in the negative, he said he was con-
tented : when the Lord Grey was called, he pulled
Southampton by the sleeve arid laughed.1
They were then ordered to hold up their hands
while the indictment was read : the Earl of Essex
first cast up his hand with a bold countenance, and
said, " I have held it up to a better purpose, and
" thought to have done so again." During the
reading of the indictment, • to which he paid great
attention, " he did very often show divers gestures
" with much smiling in countenance, and often whis-
" pering to his companion ; acting also a vehement
" passion of admiration, with holding up his hands
" and shaking his head, blessing himself, as it were,
" at the strangeness of those accusations, though
" silent the whole time, not uttering one word of in-
" terruption."
Serjeant Yelverton opened the prosecution in a
speech of great moderation, showing that whoever
is guilty of rebellion is guilty of an intention to seek
the death of the Prince, which is treason, and that
the punishment of treason is death. He ended his
1 Lord Grey had been committed to the custody of the Marshal, while
in Ireland, for having given some orders to a colonel of horse, without
permission of Southampton, General of the Horse. This bred a quarrel ;
but the Queen prevented a duel, and commanded them not to meddle
with each other ; notwithstanding which Grey set upon Southampton in
the Strand, one day in January, 1600 ; the former having many followers,
the latter only a footboy, who lost his hand in the encounter ; nevertheless
Southampton contrived to defend himself till succour arrived. For this
Lord Grey was committed to the Fleet.
L 4
152 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
speech with a prayer, that God might long preserve
Her Majesty, and guard her from her enemies ; to
which Essex and Southampton replied, " Amen, and
" God confound their souls that ever wished other-
" wise to her sacred person."
The Attorney General, Sir Edward Coke, suc-
ceeded, who, in his usual coarse and brutal style,
endeavoured to aggravate the offence of the pri-
soners.
The declaration of the Lord Keeper, Lord Chief
Justice, and Earl of Worcester, was read and at-
tested by the two latter, and the examination of one
Henry Witherington, who had accompanied the Earls
into the city, and left them there, was also proved.
Essex said that they were charged by the Attorney
with having dealt with Papists : he desired to assure
their Lordships that Papists had been hired and
suborned to bring him into danger, and that his
handwriting had been counterfeited with the like
purpose. The last assertion referred to the following
circumstance. While Essex was in the custody of
the Lord Keeper, the Countess gave a casket of
letters (for purpose of concealment in case her hus-
band's papers should be seized) to the wife of one
John Daniel, who had been her gentlewoman, to keep
them for her.
Jane Daniel says1, that about the 18th October,
1 In a MS. book written by Jane Daniel, and entitled " Daniel's Dis-
asters," which has lately been discovered in the Chapter House, Westmin-
ster, with a privy seal attached, authorising the printing of the said book,
in the reign of James I., it appears that Jane Daniel was the daughter of
Franc;ois Kethulle, Lord of Ryhove, in Flanders, Governor and Highbailiff
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 153
1599, the Countess of Essex committed to her charge
a " casket of a reasonable bigness," keeping the key
herself, and saying there were only letters therein.
About the 7th January, 1600, Lady Essex sent for
the casket again : " the next day after the casket
" was delivered, her L. came to my house and told
" me that she missed some of her letters out of it ;
" and being answered by me that I never touched
" any of her letters, my husband was called forth of
" his bed, and after some conference between them,
" she desired that we would make some search in the
" house among the servants ; and went away de-
" livering some expressions of discontent against my
" husband." On the 24th February, Lady Essex
wrote to Mrs. Daniel, that she understood her hus-
band had the letters, adding, " let him bring them to
" me, and my Lord and I will be better and more
" kind to him than ever we were;" and, in a post-
script, desires her to use her best endeavour with
her husband : which, says she, " I did, but, if the
" depth of this matter were well known, I recJved
" the like success that Yolumnia had in persuading
" her son Coriolanus to raise the siege from Kome,
" for he whom I persuaded to shun Scylla fell upon
" Charybdis." Daniel was at the time on duty at
the Court in some post which doubtless was obtained
for him by the master he was betraying. He wrote
of Ghent and Dendermond, who, meeting with misfortunes, partly on
account of his religion, died in poverty, and his daughter was taken into
the service of Lady Essex, at that time wife to Sir Philip Sidney ; and
remained with her until she became the wife of John Daniel, of Deeres-
bury, or Dewsbury, in Cheshire, who was in Essex's service.
154 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
thus to his wife : " Jane, I am glad that the Countess
" of Essex made you acquainted where her letters
" are, which I was loth to have done. But now I
" think good to let you know, that my decayed estate
" is more than I was willing you should be partaker
" of; and although I meant to have delivered the
" Countess' letters to Her Majesty, yet if I can re-
" cover myself by them that have wrought my decay,
" I will, for your sake, forbear my purpose; hoping
" the Countess will deal well with me, and recom-
" pense all my losses sustained by her and her Lord,
" then I will willingly satisfy her request in that
" behalf; otherwise I will deliver her letters to the
" Queen, as I was before determined, and so do bid
" you heartily farewell. From the Court at Rich-
" mond, the last of February, 1600."
Daniel was a great scoundrel, and fully deserved to
fall upon the Charybdis he made for himself. It ap-
pears he demanded 3000/., a sum that Lady Essex
was not able to pay, but by the sale of her jewels she
contrived to make up 1720^., which Daniel consenting
to take, he was paid by Sir Edward Dier and Mr.
William Lylle ; and gave up to them, not the original
letters, but forged duplicates he had obtained.
Peter Bales, a schoolmaster, who was employed
by Daniel to copy the letters, made a declaration
of the circumstances attending his employment.1
He says that he suspected there was treason in
the letters, from some secrcsy contained in one,
1 Chapter House, Westminster.
CHAP.V. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 155
beginning " Frank, — I send unto you Cuffe, my man,
" whom you may believe in what he saith ; " and
about the middle of the letter, "the Queen's corn-
" mandment may break my neck, but mine enemies at
" home shall never break my heart : " and in the end
of the letter he saith, " when your belly shall be laid,
" I will provide for your being here ; " which letter
was from the Earl in Ireland to his Countess in
England, dated in August before his coming over.
If we cannot like the schoolmaster discover trea-
son in these expressions, we at all events learn one
remarkable fact, which refutes many an accusation
against Essex, of treasonable plans for returning
from Ireland at the head of his army ; for in August
he had so little intention of leaving that country,
that he looked forward to his wife joining him there
after her confinement, which took place the 30th of
September. It is probable the letters contained per-
sonal allusions to the Queen, of a nature which made
it very desirable they should not be seen by her.
Mr. Daniel, however, does not seem to have en-
joyed his plunder very long. The declaration of
Peter Bales was made in July, 1600. Daniel was
sentenced in the Star Chamber to perpetual imprison-
ment, to pay a fine of 3000/., of which 2000/. were to
be returned to the Countess, and to stand with his
ears nailed to the pillory, and this inscription — "A
wicked forger and impostor"
To return from this digression to the trial.
Sir Ferdinando Gorges was examined, whose evi-
dence was to the same effect as the others ; but being
156 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
particularly pressed, both by the peers and the pri-
soners, to disclose anything further of any intention
against the Queen's person, he said, that by the oath
he had taken, he never knew or heard of any thought
or purpose of hurt or disloyalty intended to Her
Majesty's person by my Lord of Essex.
Essex accused Sir Robert Cecyll of having said, that
the Infanta of Spain was the right heir to the Crown of
England. The Secretary, who had been concealed, in
the anticipation, as it seems, of some such charge,
stepped forth on this being said, and desiring to speak,
insisted that Essex should produce his authority, who
only replied, that Southampton had heard it as well
as himself. Cecyll then conjured the latter, by his
duty to God, his Christianity, and their ancient
friendship, to name the councillor to whom he was
reported to have made this speech. Being told it was
Mr. Comptroller, the Secretary fell on his knees, desired
that Sir William Knollys might be sent for, and sent
a message to the Queen, vowing to God, that if she
would not allow Sir William to come, he would die
rather than ever serve her again. It appeared that a
book, treating of the succession of the Infanta, had
been read in his presence, and some remarks made on
it, but that Sir Robert Cecyll had never used such an
expression to the Comptroller. Doubtless it was one
of the stories propagated and exaggerated by an
enemy of Cecyll, to make it palatable to the Earl of
Essex ; although, from the extreme agitation evinced
by Sir Robert, it is probable he had some secret
correspondence which he dreaded might become
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 157
known, though of any intention of advocating the
interest of the Infanta we must acquit him.
When Sir Walter Ralegh was called and sworn,
Essex exclaimed, " What booteth it to swear this
fox ? "
The confessions of some of the principal followers
of Essex and Southampton were next put in. The
Earls were totally unaware of this, and it must have
been a severe shock to find those matters confessed,
of which, otherwise, there had been no proof; as of
the meetings at Drury House, and what passed at
their consultations. What means were used to induce
those unhappy men to confess, we know not ; it availed
them but little. These confessions were all taken on
the 18th, the day before the trial of the Earls.
Sir John Davis confessed that they met at Drury
House, the Sunday se'nnight before the outbreak, for
the first time : the object of the meetings was to
consult how my Lord should possess himself of the
Court ; and they had two meetings.
Sir Charles Davers made a similar confession, the
substance of which is contained in our account of the
projected enterprise. He said that Cuffe had always
been of opinion that the Earl should go to Court after
that fashion.
Sir Christopher Blount's was to the same effect ;
and in reply to a question, whether he did not expect
toleration for his religion should the Earl come to
the chief power, he said he should be wrong to
deny it.
The Earl of Rutland knew nothing before he went
158 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
to Essex House on Sunday morning ; whither he went,
resolved to live and die with the Earl of Essex.
Lord Sandys was only acquainted with what passed
on the Sunday.
Lord Cromwell did not make any deposition
a,t that time, nor until after the death of Essex;
nor does it appear that Henry Cuffe1 or Sir
Gilly Meyrick ever did. These confessions disclosed
the meetings of Drury House ; and although South-
ampton urged that to consult was not to determine,
and that there was no connection between those
meetings and the irruption into the city, which was
caused entirely by the sudden intimation of danger
to Essex, and the arrival of the Lord Keeper, yet a
much graver case was thereby made against them.
Great surprise was felt at this weak betrayal of
themselves and their associates. George Carleton,
writing to his brother Dudley, after the execution of
the Earl, says, " It was strange to see the beginning
" of this action, whereof I was a beholder, and some-
" what stranger to consider the circumstances now
" towards the end ; for these noble and resolute men,
" assured of one another by their undoubted valor,
" and combined together by firm oaths, being all
u taken, severed, examined, and the principal ar-
" raigned and condemned, set in the end before their
" deaths to such plain confessions and accusations
" one of another, that they seemed to strive who
" should draw one another in deepest, and sought by
1 Cuffe wrote a remarkable letter, which may be called a confession, to
Sir Robert Cecyll, while under sentence of death.
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 159
" all means to remove the blame and shame of being
" the first movers and contrivers of these their con-
" fessed treasonable plots one from another ; in which
" the Earl himself exceeded all other to all men's
" wonder." This is an unjust charge against Essex,
who did not make any confession until, through the
confessions of his comrades, he had been condemned
to death.
The most remarkable circumstance attending the
trial was the appearance of Francis Bacon as counsel
for the prosecution.
A man of fine feeling, or one endowed with a high
sense of honour, would have stood up and defended to
the very utmost of his power the friend and patron
of former years ; one who possessed but the most
ordinary share of such qualities would have re-
mained neuter. Bacon was none of these. To him
the smiles of the Queen far outweighed the calls
of gratitude, friendship, and honour. Not being a
Crown lawyer, he was not required by his office
to appear ; the offence was so clear, that a con-
viction was certain, had no counsel spoken at all ;
yet did Francis Bacon, to his eternal shame, not only
appear against them, but exerted all his wit and elo-
quence to aggravate the offence of the prisoners, and
to cut away those grounds of palliation from which
they might have hoped to reach the Queen's pardon.
How different was the conduct of Serjeant Yelverton,
who, many years after, was called on, as Attorney Ge-
neral, to prosecute the Earl of Somerset, and nobly
dared the utmost anger of King James rather than
160 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
plead against the man who had made him Solicitor
General.
Essex urged in palliation of his conduct that he
was surrounded by enemies, who had ruined his for-
tune, who sought his life, and by whose means he had
been driven to despair. Bacon compared him to Pi-
sistratus, who, by working on the affection borne him
by the citizens, established tyranny at Athens. He
declared all that Essex had said or could say were
but shadows. Essex then interrupted him, saying,
he should call Mr. Bacon for a witness against Mr.
Bacon the pleader ; and desired him to tell the
Lords, whether he had not written letters in the
names of Essex and his brother Anthony, in which
he pointed out the enemies of the Earl as plainly as
he now denied them. To this Bacon only replied,
that he had spent more hours in endeavouring to
make Essex a good subject than any man in the
world besides ; and proceeded to compare Essex to
the Duke of Guise, and his going into the city to the
day of the barricades at Paris ; a comparison which
more than any other which could have been hit upon,
\vas calculated to embitter and exasperate the feelings
of the Queen against the Earl ; for as some analogy
might be drawn between him and the Duke of Guise,
the comparison which would naturally follow between
her and Henry III., who was held in such subjection
by his great subject, must have been in the highest
degree offensive to her.
The prisoners having been withdrawn, the Peers
unanimously found them guilty of high treason.
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 161
Being then brought back to the bar, the bearer of the
axe turning its edge towards them, the Clerk of the
Crown said : " Robert, Earl of Essex, you have been
" arraigned and indicted of high treason ; you have
" pleaded not guilty, and for your trial you have
" put yourself on God and your Peers; the Peers here
" have found you guilty ; now what can you say for
" yourself, why you should not have judgment of
" death ? "
The Earl spoke as follows : "I only say this, that
" since I have committed that which has brought me
" within the compass of the law, I may be accounted
" the law's traitor in offending the law, for which I
" am willing to die, and will as willingly go thereto
" as ever any did ; but I beseech your Lordships
" here to have consideration of what I have formerly
" spoken, and do me the right to think I am a
" Christian, and that I have a soul to save, and that
" I know it is no time to jest. Lying and counter-
" feiting my soul abhorreth; for I am not desperate
" nor devoid of grace, now to speak falsely. I do not
" speak to save my life, for that I see were vain ;
" I owe God a death, which shall be welcome, how
" soon soever it pleaseth Her Majesty. And to
" satisfy the opinion of the world, that my con-
" science is free from Atheism and Popery ; how-
" soever I have been misled in this action, to trans-
" gress the points of the law, in the course and
" defence of private matters, and whatsoever through
" my weakness of wit, and dulness of memory, or
<; through violent courses, I have omitted, or may
VOL. II. M
162 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
" have uttered otherwise ; yet I will live and die
" in the faith and true religion which here I have
" professed."
The Clerk of the Crown having put the same
question to the Earl of Southampton, he made a
speech, throwing himself wholly on the mercy of
the Queen.
The Lord Steward then addressed Essex, saying,
that the Queen had granted him many favours, and
he therefore wished that Essex would in like manner
submit himself to Her Majesty's mercy. To whom
the Earl replied : —
" My Lord, you have made an honorable motion ;
" do but send for me at the time of my death, and
" you shall see how penitent and humble I will be
" towards Her Majesty, both in acknowledging her
" exceeding favors to my ancestors and to myself,
" whereby I doubt not, but that the penitent suffering
" of my death, and sprinkling of my blood, will
" quench the evil conceited thoughts of Her Majesty
" against me. And I do most humbly desire Her
" Majesty, that my death may put a period to my
" offences committed, and be no more remembered by
" Her Highness. If I had ever perceived any of my
" followers to have harboured an evil thought against
" Her Majesty, I would have been the first that
" should have punished the same in being his execu-
" tioner ; and therefore I beseech you, my good Lord,
" mistake me not, nor think me so proud that I will
" not crave Her Majesty's mercy, for I protest,
" kneeling upon the very knee of my heart, I do
. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 163
" crave Her Majesty's mercy with all humility; yet I
" had rather die than live in misery."
Then the Lord Steward exhorted them to prepare
to meet their God, and said that the law having found
them guilty, he must proceed to judgment. To which
Essex replied cheerfully, " Yea, my good Lord, with
41 a very good will I pray you to go on."
Then the Lord High Steward gave judgment : " You
" must go back to the place from whence you came,
44 there to remain during Her Majesty's pleasure ; from
44 thence to be drawn on a hurdle through the streets
44 of London, and so to the place of execution, where
44 you shall be hanged, bowelled, and quartered ; your
44 heads and quarters to be disposed of at Her
44 Majesty's pleasure ; and so God have mercy on your
" souls."
The Earl of Essex then said : 44 My Lord, I am not
44 a whit dismayed to receive this sentence, for I
44 protest death is as welcome to me as life ; and I
44 shall die as cheerful a death upon such a testimony
" as ever man did. And I think it fit my poor
44 quarters, that have done Her Majesty true service
44 in divers parts of the world, should be sacrificed
44 and disposed of at Her Majesty's pleasure ; where-
44 unto with all willingness of heart I do submit
44 myself. But one thing I beg of you, my Lords,
44 that have free access to Her Majesty's person,
" humbly to beseech Her Majesty that, during the
44 short time I shall live, T may have the same preacher
" to comfort me that hath been with me since my
44 troubles began ; for as he that hath been long sick,
M 2
164 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
" is most desirous of the physician which hath been
" and is best acquainted with the constitution of his
" body, so do I most wish to have comfort and
" spiritual physic from the preacher which hath been
" and is acquainted with the inward griefs and
" secret affections of my soul. And my last request
" shall be only this : that it will please Her Highness
" that my Lord Thomas Howard and the Lieutenant
" of the Tower may be partakers with me in receiv-
" ing the sacrament, and be witness of it, in token
" of what I have protested in this life, for my loyalty,
" religion, and peace of conscience ; and then, when-
" soever it shall please Her Majesty to call me, I
" shall be ready to seal the same with my blood."
The Earl then desired the Lords Delaware and
Morley to forgive him for having been the cause of
leading their sons into trouble, and declared that they
knew nothing of what was done or to be done. He
also asked pardon of the Earl of Worcester and Chief
Justice for having confined them.
The trial lasted from eight o'clock in the morning
till seven at night.
When Essex found that Sir Christopher Blount,
Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Sir Charles Davers, and Sir
John Davis, had confessed all the consultations held at
Drury House, for arranging the plan of surprising
the Court, he exclaimed to those about him, that
these very men who now accused him, had been, ever
since the last August, inciting him to work his access
to the Queen with force.
Dr. Dove, Dean of Norwich, was sent to Essex the
CHAP.V. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 165
next day by the Lords of the Council, to urge him to
acknowledge the offences of which he had been found
guilty ; he refused to listen to the persuasions of that
reverend divine. Being asked by the Dean why he
had refused to go to the Council, when sent for on the
Friday before the insurrection, he replied, that David
refused to go to Saul when sent for by him.
Mr. Ashton his chaplain, also instructed by the
Council, was next admitted to him. This person is
described as a timid and mercenary man, who by
great show of zeal had gained the good opinion of
the Earl, who being himself of strong religious prin-
ciples, was very easily deceived into believing others
as sincere as himself.
Mr. Ashton found Essex very cheerful and resigned.
Instead of administering consolation to him, this Chris-
tian minister opened upon the unfortunate nobleman a
torrent of the most bitter reproaches. He told him that
he had dishonoured God, shamed his profession, of-
fended his sovereign, and drawn on himself notes of
infamy. That he had shown to the world that he was a
hypocrite in religion, and in his heart either an atheist
or a papist. That he was sorry to see he had no more
sense of these fearful sins. He declared that what-
ever colour it might please the Earl to give to it, there
was no doubt his object was an ambitious seeking of
the crown; and unless by a true confession and
unfeigned repentance he unburthened himself of these
sins, he would carry out of the world a guilty soul to
God, and leave upon his memory the stain of infamy
to the remotest posterity.
M 3
166 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
Essex, who had expected to receive spiritual comfort
only from Mr. Ashton, was grievously distressed at
the slanderous accusations with which his chaplain so
unmercifully overwhelmed him. After a long and
sad silence, he said to him : " Mr. Ashton, you have
" laid grievous things to my charge, of which if I
" could not with truth free and clear myself, I might
" justly be held one of the most unworthy creatures
" on earth. And I assure you that to have these
" reports carried and believed in the world, is more
" grievous to me than a thousand deaths. Touching
" my religion, I have always abhorred atheism and
" superstition, believing in the true God, and desiring
" to serve him in [that form of his worship professed
" and believed in England, in which from my infancy
" I was brought up, and have constantly held the
" profession thereof till this day. True it is, that
" in those public services wherein I have been ern-
" ployed, I have had use of men of sundry quali-
" ties. But howsoever I loved their valor, faithful-
" ness, and knowledge of service, that were not re-
" ligious, I was ever grieved at the want thereof in
" them, and neglected no opportunity I could possibly
" gain, to bring them to it.
" For the crown, I never affected it ; neither, I
" praise God, was ever so careless of my soul, as by
" seeking a crown on earth to which I had no color
" of title, to deprive my soul of a crown in heaven,
" whereof I have so assured hope. Neither am* I
" ignorant what success God, in his justice, hath laid
14 upon such ambitious courses in ages past. But
CHAP.V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 167
" being a principal member in this commonwealth, I
" could not but see and feel what misery was near
" unto my country by the great power of such as are
" known indeed to be atheists, papists, and pen-
" sioners to the mortal enemies of this kingdom. I
" knew myself to be bound in conscience, as a Chris-
" tian, to prevent the subversion of religion, and as
" an Englishman to have regard of my native country.
" The only means left to turn away these evils was
" to procure my access to Her Majesty, with whom I
" assured myself to have had that gracious hearing,
" that might have tended to the infinite happiness
" of this state, both in removing evil instruments
" from about her person, and in settling a succession
" for the Crown, to the preventing of Spanish servi-
" tude, and the saving of many thousand English-
" men's lives. No, no, Mr. Ashton, I never desired
" other condition than the state of a subject ; but only
" to my sovereign, and not to so base and unworthy
" vassals under her."
This answer was far from being sufficient to ap-
pease the appetite of Mr* Ashton's employers ; he
accordingly told Essex, that he did not believe those
general assertions, and warned him, that though he
knew what it was to die here, he had yet to learn
what it was to receive condemnation at the judgment-
seat of God. He said he did not believe the Earl had
any other motives than he had named, nor that he
could mention any one person who was either his ad-
viser, persuader, or approver.
Deeply distressed at this doubt of his truth, Essex
M 4
168 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
replied : " Mr. Ashton, I cannot marvel that my
" protestations are so little believed by my enemies,
" when they prevail so little with you. But I am
" able, by particulars, so to confirm that to you,
" who are a minister of the Gospel, and messenger of
" God to me at this my last end, as you shall no
" longer doubt it."
He proceeded to explain the whole scope and
bearing of his plan to obtain an Act of Parliament to
establish the right of the King of Scotland to the
succession ; and named a great many persons of rank
and sound religion, who had approved of his views,
and engaged with him to further them.
The treacherous intention of Mr. Ashton, who
ought rather to have been a Jesuit than va Puritan
divine, now showed itself. He told Essex that these
were great matters he had divulged, and that he
should consider himself bound in allegiance to reveal
them. Religious consolation was a secondary object
with this worthy chaplain ; and by his declarations that
he should himself report the confidential communica-
tion he had received, and his other persuasions, he so
worked on the mind of the Earl, that he was induced
to send to Lord Thomas Howard, Constable of the
Tower, and request him to move Her Majesty that
the Lord Keeper, the Lord Treasurer, Lord Admiral,
and Secretary, might be sent to him that he might
discharge his conscience by confessing his offences,
and reconciling himself to his enemies.
These great officers accordingly waited on him in
the Tower the next day, and there received his con-
CiiAP.V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 169
fession. As most of the conspirators had already con-
fessed, his confession implicated but few who were not
already in confinement. The principal of these were
Lord Mount] oy, and Sir Henry Neville, Ambassador
in France, who had attended one or two meetings at
Drury House, but on finding that they projected
violent means to gain their object, withdrew, and re-
fused to hold any further communication with them.
Lord Mount] oy, in common with the majority of people
of consideration in the country, had desired to see the
question of the succession settled, and, as we have
seen, had been engaged in the intrigues for that pur-
pose. His services were too valuable to be spared
from Ireland, and his preparations for flight, and his
fears, were ended by a comfortable letter from Eliza-
beth, assuring him of her confidence in his loyalty,
and not dropping a hint of her knowledge that he
had been engaged with Essex.
In his weakness, over which we grieve, and which
can only be accounted for by the ascendancy which
his chaplain had now gained over him, Essex requested
that his secretary, Cuffe, might be brought before
him, when he exhorted him to call to God and the
Queen for mercy, and deserve it by confessing the
whole truth : " For I," said he, " that must now pre-
" pare for another world, have resolved to deal
" clearly with God and the world, and must needs
" say this to you ; you have been one of the chiefest
" instigators of me in all these my disloyal courses
" into which I have fallen."
Cuffe made no other reply than a complaint of his
170 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.V.
Lordship's inconstancy, and betraying of his most de-
voted friends ; a reproof which we are sorry to own
the justice of, although his friends had begun by be-
traying him and themselves.
Mr. Chamberlain gives an account of the trial and
subsequent events to Dudley Carleton, which may be
supposed to represent the opinion and feeling of an un-
interested bystander. After some account of the pro-
ceedings, he relates the heads of Essex's defence, and
proceeds : —
This was the sum of his answer, but delivered with such
bravery, and so many words, that a man might easily see
that, as he had ever lived popularly,, so his chief care was to
leave a good opinion in the people's minds now at parting.
But the worst of all, was his many and loud protestations of
his faith and loyalty to the Queen and State, which no doubt
caught and carried away a great part of his hearers : but I
cannot be so easily led to believe protestations, though never
so deep, against manifest proof; yet I must needs say, that
one thing sticks much in many men's minds, that whereas
divers preachers were commanded the Sunday before, to
deliver to the people arribng his other treasons, that he had
complotted with Tyrone, and was reconciled to the Pope —
and whereas Mr. Attorney, at Tom Leigh's arraignment,
averred the same combining with Tyrone, and that he had
practised by the means of seminary priests, with the Pope
and King of Spain, to be King of England — there was no
such matter once mentioned at his arraignment ; and yet
there was time enough for it, from nine o'clock in the morn-
ing till almost seven at night.
At his coming to the bar, his countenance was somewhat
unsettled, but after he was once in, I assure you I never saw
any go through with such boldness and shew of resolution,
CHAP. V. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX, 171
and contempt of death ; but whether this courage was bor-
rowed and put on for the time, or natural, it were hard to
judge. But I hear he begins to relent, and, among other
faults, to acknowledge and be sorry for, his arrogant, or
rather, as the Secretary well termed it to his face, his impu-
dent behaviour at his arraignment; and what is more, to
lay open the whole plot, and appeach divers others not yet
called in question. His execution was expected on Satur-
day, then yesterday, now to-morrow or Thursday. Most
of the Council have been with him these three or four days
together.
The Earl of Southampton spake very well, but methought
somewhat too much, as well as the other, and as a man that
would fain live, pleaded hard to acquit himself; but all in
vain, for it could not be : whereon he descended to entreaty,
and moved great commiseration ; and though he were gene-
rally well liked, yet methought he was somewhat too low
and submiss, and seemed too loth to die before a proud
enemy.
I do not well remember whether I sent you word of Tom
Leigh's traitorous enterprise to surprise the Privy Chamber,
which he communicated to Sir Henry Neville, that married
my Lord Treasurer's daughter, and Sir Robert Crosse, who
revealed him, both at once. Being arrested, he confessed his
meaning was but to have gotten the Queen to have signed a
warrant for the noblemen's delivery ; at his trial, he affirmed
his intent only to have argued her one half hour, that she
might have lived the merrier all her life after. To this tune
he died on the 17th of this present at Tyburn, very reso-
lutely, and, to seeing, religiously.
This Captain Leigh, as appears by his trial, had
offered his services to the Lord Admiral and Secretary
to kill the Earl of Essex, and, after the latter was sent
172 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
to the Tower, made proposals to force the Queen to
release those Earls, which, as related by Mr. Cham-
berlain, was immediately revealed to the ministers,
and on search being made for Leigh, he was found,
in the dusk of the evening, near the door of the Privy
Chamber. He was tried for plotting to take away
the Queen's life, and although it does not appear that
he entertained any such intention, was condemned
and executed for the same; which, "as the times
were, appeared a very seasonable piece of rigor."
Besides Mr. Ashton, two other divines were now
sent to Essex, Dr. Montford, Prebendary of West-
minster, and Dr. Barlow, who, if their own report be
trustworthy, so worked on the religious feelings and
tender conscience of the Earl, that he made use of all
kinds of extravagant expressions, such as that the
Queen could not be in safety while he lived ; that his
crime was a leprosy, which had infected far and
near ; and that he desired to die. These ministers
were sent by the faction which, having been so long
striving to effect the ruin of the Earl of Essex, were
now within one move of winning their game. This
one was the most difficult ; for, not only did Queen
Elizabeth at all times affect the quality of clemency,
— and in this case, however his enemies might endea-
vour to magnify the offence and its effects, she was
too clear-sighted not to be aware how little real
danger to herself or her crown was involved in the
mad enterprise, if it may be so termed, of the Earl of
Essex, — but she must have been more or less than
woman, if his present unhappy situation had not re-
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 173
vived some feeling of tenderness and compassion
towards the man who for years had been the object
of her favour and affection. Tf the haughty and ob-
stinate deportment which he had conceived it to be
necessary to carry towards his mistress, had roused a
spirit as haughty and obstinate as his own, and, for
the time, extinguished her regard, surely at this
moment, when his life depended on a stroke of her
pen, the old feelings must have rushed back like a
torrent into their former channel. Essex said that he
did not despise her mercy, but he did not think he
should sue too humbly for it. He had been con-
demned by his Peers for an act of treason against her ;
and though not unwilling to receive mercy, preferred
death before a pardon, which was not the sponta-
neous act of the Queen against whom he had offended.
But the reader must not suppose that no efforts
were made by others to obtain a reprieve at least, for
the unhappy Essex. Lady Essex's appeal to Sir
Robert Cecyll, breathed the deepest misery, and
surely could not have been read by her husband's
bitterest enemy without emotion.
No. XXXVII.1
Lady Essex to Cecyll.
Sir, — Although the answer I received from you two days
since, gave me small encouragement to flatter myself that
any importunity I could make should be able to appease the
scandal you had conceived to be given you by my unfortunate
1 Lansd. MSS. 88. 14.
174 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
husband ; yet, had it not pleased God to pour upon me one
affliction after another, and to add to the immeasurable sor-
rows of my heart so violent a sickness as I am not able of
myself to stir out of my bed, I had presented unto your view
the image of the unfortunate widow mentioned in the Scrip-
tures, and had never ceased to pester you with my complaints
till you had afforded me some assurance that whatsoever
respects might depart you from so much as wishing my hus-
band's good, yet that an afflicted and woful lady should not
wholly lose her labor, or return desperate of such comforts
as the last year you so honorably ministered unto me in a
great affliction, though differing from this in quality. As I
received then such noble courtesies from you as must never
be forgotten, so be persuaded, I beseech you, that whatsoever
new favor you shall now be pleased to add to the old, shall
so bind me to reverence of your virtues, as I will resolve to
reckon myself a bankeroute until I have yielded some de-
monstrative testimony of the best that the honestest heart
can express for the worthiest benefit.
Honorable Sir, I know there be private causes to discourage
me from moving, you hearing; yet, seeing the highest pro-
vidence hath placed you in a calling most proper to be a
mean for my comfort, and that former experience hath taught
me that you are rather inclined to do good, than to look
alway to private interest; I beseech you, even for your virtue's
sake, perform this noble office for me, as to join with the rest
of your Lordships of the Council in presenting my humblest
supplication to Her Majesty.
Dear Sir, I pray you bear with these tedious blots from her
feeble hand and sad sick heart, that is stored with much
thankfulness and infinite best wishes unto you, who will ever
rest your most beholding poor distressed servant,
FKANCES ESSEX.
Good Mr. Secretary, even as you desire of God that your
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 175
own son never be made orphan by the untimely or unna-
tural death of his dear father, vouchsafe a relenting, to the
not urging, if you may not to the hindering, of that fatal
warrant for execution, which if it be once signed, I shall
never wish to breathe one hour after.
We see by this letter that Cecyll had been deeply
offended by the unfounded accusation that he had
supported the claim of the Infanta to the Crown,
which was put forth by Essex on his trial ; and that,
in consequence, he had returned an unfavourable
answer to a previous letter from Lady Essex.
Whether this touching appeal produced an effect, or
whether other motives actuated him, we have no
means of ascertaining, but there is no doubt that he
showed symptoms of relenting1, which called forth
the following letter.
No. XXXVIII.2
Ralegh to Cecyll.
[This letter is not dated, but endorsed 1601.]
Sir, — I am not wise enough to give you advice; but, if
you take it for a good counsel to relent towards this tyrant,
you will repent when it shall be too late. His malice is fixed,
and will not evaporate by any of your mild courses ; for he
will ascribe the attention to Her Majesty's pusillanimity, and
not to your good nature, knowing that you work upon her
1 The opinion that Cecyll did not desire to put Essex to death, receives
support from an expression of Sir John Harrington, in a letter to the
Bishop of Bath and Wells, 1603. " Cecyll doth bear no love to Ralegh,
as you well understand, in the matter of Essex." — Nug. Ant. ii. 342.
2 Murdin, 811.
176 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
humor, and not out of any love towards him. The less you
make him, the less he shall be able to harm you and yours ;
and if Her Majesty's favor fail him, he will again decline to
a common person. For after-revenges fear them not ; for
your own father was esteemed to be the contriver of Norfolk's
ruin, yet his son1 followeth your father's son, and loveth him.
Humors of men succeed not, but grow by occasion, and acci-
dents of time and power. Somerset2 made no revenge on the
Duke of Northumberland's heirs. Northumberland3 that
now is, thinks not of Hatton's issue. Kelloway lives, that
murdered the brother of Horsey, and Horsey let him go by
all his life time. I could name a thousand of those ; and
therefore after-fears are but prophecies, or rather conjectures,
from causes remote. Look to the present, and you do wisely.
His son shall be the youngest Earl of England but one,
and if his father be now kept down, Will. Cecyll4 shall be
able to keep as many men at his heels as he, and more too.
He may also match in a better house than his, and so that
fear is not worth the fearing. But if the father continue, he
will be able to break the branches, and pull up the tree, root
and all. Lose not your advantage ; if you do, I read your
destiny.
1 Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, beheaded 2nd June, 1572. His second son
Thomas was restored in blood, and in 1597 summoned as Lord Howard
de Walden; in 1603, he was created Earl of Suffolk ; and in 1614, Lord
Treasurer.
2 Edward Seymour, son of the Protector, Duke of Somerset. Dudley,
Duke of Northumberland, obtained an act depriving Edward Seymour of
his titles and lands, which had not been forfeited by the pretended offence
for which his father had been executed. He was created Earl of Hert-
ford, 1 Eliz.
3 Henry Percy, eighth Earl, was found dead in the Tower, whither he
had been committed on a charge of conspiring with the Guises to release
Mary, Queen of Scots. The coroner's jury returned a verdict that he
had killed himself; but suspicions were cast on a servant of Sir Christo-
pher Hatton, who had lately been appointed to attend him.
4 Sir Robert Cecyll's son.
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 177
Let the Queen hold Bothwell while she hath him ; he will
ever be the canker of her state and safety. Princes are lost
by security, and preserved by prevention. I have seen the
last of her good days, and all ours, after his liberty.
Yours, &c.
W. K.
The first part of this letter would have been
equally applicable to the situation of the parties
during the summer of the preceding year, but the
name of Bothwell, by which Ralegh designates Essex
in the latter part, fixes it clearly for this period.
Francis Stuart, descended from a natural son of
James IV., had been created Earl of Bothwell, and
Lord Admiral of Scotland, by James VI. Turbulent
and ambitious, these honours did not satisfy him ; he
desired to govern the countr}7. He was constantly
engaged in intrigues ; made several attempts to obtain
possession of the King's person by violence, in one of
which he was successful; was pardoned in 1593;
again declared a traitor, he was forced to fly the
country, and died at Naples, 1612.
We are in the dark respecting the petition offered
to the Queen herself in behalf of Essex : one thing
only is certain, that he did not make any direct appeal
to Her Majesty for mercy. Yet we can scarcely be-
lieve that he was destitute of all hope of a reprieve,
but rather suppose that he was himself taken by sur-
prise when the order for execution arrived ; for it is a
remarkable fact, that he never saw his wife or son,
nor took a last farewell of them or any of his friends,
VOL. II. N
178 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.V.
nor had expressed a wish to see any of them.1 We
come then to the consideration of what private com-
munication he may have made to the Queen, and of
the celebrated story of the ring which he is said to
have sent to her. After carefully examining the au-
thorities, I incline to believe in its truth ; but as
doubts have been thrown upon the authenticity of
the facts stated, I lay before the reader, to enable
him to form his own judgment, the original relation
as given by M. Aubery de Maurier, and the story as
told in England by Lady Elizabeth Spelman, with
some other extracts bearing on the question.
II ne sera pas inutile ni desagreable d'aj outer ici ce que le
meme Prince Maurice tenoit de M. Carleton, ambassadeur
d'Angleterre en Hollande, qui est mort secretaire d'etat, si
fort connu sous le nomme de Milord Dorchester, homme d'un
tr£s-grand merite ; que la reine Elisabeth donna une bague
au Comte d'Essex dans la plus grande ardeur de sa passion,
lui disant qu'il la gardat bien ; et quoiqu'il put faire, en lui
rendant ce depot, qu'elle lui pardonneroit. Depuis les en-
1 An additional argument may be brought forward to support this view,
viz. the absence of any testamentary paper of a date subsequent to the
birth of his son. The will of Lord Essex, proved by his son in 1616, is
in the Prerogative Court. It is dated in 1591, previous to the Norman
expedition; leaves to the Countess for life, the manors of Teinton,
Bicknor, and Dymock, Gloucester ; Merevale in Warwick and Leicester,
with all the possessions of that dissolved monastery, including " the em-
paled ground containing deer, called Merevale Park;" and the manors
of Llanthomas and Hay, otherwise Gelly, in Brecknockshire ; with all
plate, household stuff, &c. that she had in common use. By a law
paper in S. P. O. Dora. 1595, which appears to be an abstract of the
remainders of the estates of Lord Essex, it appears that Essex House
was in remainder to " Walter Devereux, the base reputed son of Rob.
Earl of Essex, begotten of the body of Elizabeth Southwell."
CHAP.V. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 179
nemis du Comte Payant emporte sur Pesprit de la reine, et
d'ailleurs se trouvant irritee du mepris que le Comte faisoit de
sa beaute, que Page ruinoit, elle lui fit faire son proces, et
dans le temps de sa condamnation, attendoit toujours qu'il
lui rendit cette bague pour lui donner grace, selon sa parole-
Le comte, dans la derniere extremite, eut recours a la femme
de Pamiral Howard, sa parente, et la fit supplier par une
personne confidente, de bailler cette bague a la reine en main
propre ; mais son mari, Pun des ennemis capitaux du comte, si
qui elle le dit imprudemment, Payant empechee de s'acquitter
de sa commission, elle consent! t a sa mort, indignee centre
un esprit si fier et si altier, qui aimoit mieux mourir que de
recourir a sa clemence.
Quelque temps apres, cette amirale etant tombee malade
et abandonnee des medecins, envoya dire a la reine qu'elle
avoit une chose de grande importance a lui dire devant que
de mourir. La reine etant au chevet de son lit, ayant fait
retirer tout le monde, Pamirale lui rendit hors de temps cette
bague du Comte d'Essex, s'excusant de ne lui avoir pu donner
plutot, sur ce que son mari Pen avoit empechee. La reine se
retira aussitot frappee d'une douleur mortelle, fut quinze
jours a soupirer, sans presque prendre de nourriture, se
couchant tout habillee, et se relevant cent fois la nuit. Enfin
elle mourut de faim et de douleur.
J'espere que les lecteurs curieux seront bien aises de savoir
ces particularites et ces secrets de cette grande princesse, que
mon pere avoit appris de M. le Prince Maurice.1
Now let us compare this relation with the story as
it descends to us from Lady Elizabeth Spelman, the
great-grand-daughter of Sir Robert Cary, afterwards
1 Mem. pour servir a 1'Histoire d'Hollande, par Messire Louis Aubery,
Seigneur de Maurier, p. 260. Paris, 1688.
N 2
180 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
Earl of Monmouth.1 Sir Robert Gary left memoirs
of his life, in which was an account of the last illness
and death of Queen Elizabeth, of whom he says,
that when he came to Court, he found the Queen ill,
but that hearing of his arrival she sent for him.
After he had kissed her hand, and said, his chief
happiness was to see her in health, which he hoped
might long continue, she took his hand, wrung it
hard, and replied, " No, Robin, I am not well ;" and
then, discoursing of her indisposition, told him that
her heart had been sad and heavy these ten or
twelve days ; and, while talking, she fetched not so
few as forty or fifty great sighs.
Lady E. Spelman's story was, that when the
Countess of Nottingham was dying, she sent to en-
treat the Queen to visit her, as she had something
to reveal before she could die in peace. On the
Queen's coming, Lady Nottingham told her that
when the Earl of Essex was lying under sentence
of death, he was desirous to ask Her Majesty's
mercy in the manner she had prescribed during the
1 Sir Robert KCary, born 1559 = Eliz. Trevanion.
Earl of Monmouth, ob.
1639, set. 80.
Henry, E. of Monmouth = Martha, daughter of Lionel
ob. 1661.
Cranfield, E. of Middle-
sex, Lord Treasurer.
Two sons and eight
daughters, of whom, Martha = John. E. of Middleton.
mar. 1667. |
Lady Eliz. Spelman.
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 181
height of his favour. Being doubtful of those about
him, and unwilling to trust any of them, he called a
boy whom he saw passing beneath his window, and
whose appearance pleased him, and engaged him to
carry the ring, which he threw down to him, to the
Lady Scrope, a sister of Lady Nottingham, and a
friend of the Earl, who was also in attendance on
the Queen, and to beg her to present it to Her
Majesty. The boy, by mistake, took it to Lady
Nottingham, who showed it to her husband in order
to take his advice. The Earl forbade her to carry it
to the Queen, or return any answer to the message,
but desired her to retain the ring. Lady Notting-
ham having made this confession, entreated the
Queen's forgiveness; but Elizabeth exclaiming, "God
" may forgive you, but I never can ! " left the room
in great emotion, and was so much agitated and dis-
tressed that she refused to go to bed, nor would she
for a long time take any sustenance.1
M. de Maurier's account, which he states to have
received from his father, was printed about eighty
years after the events had occurred. Sir Dudley
Carleton, the alleged authority, was ambassador in
Holland under James I. That the story was not
then told for the first time, we learn from Lord
Clarendon, who, in his "younger days," wrote a
" Disparity between the Earl of Essex and the Duke
" of Buckingham," in reply to Sir Henry Wotton's
1 The story of the ring is also related in a little book called " Secret
History of Queen Elizabeth and the Earl of Essex," by a " Person of
Quality." Printed at Cologne, 1695, and in London without date.
N 3
182 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CnAr.V.
" Parallel" between them. He did not believe in
that " loose report which hath crept in," of the Queen's
expressing much grief for his death, on the delivery of
the ring by Lady Nottingham. We shall see, presently,
that the Queen did not wait for that event to express
her grief for the loss of Essex. Lady Elizabeth
Spelman was the descendant of Sir Robert Gary;
but the anecdote related by her could scarcely have
come from him, or he would have mentioned it in his
memoirs, the manuscript of which was given by
Lady Elizabeth to the Earl of Cork, by whom they
were edited. Clarendon's doubt only shows at how
early a period the story of the ring was current ;
that it was not more generally known is not sur-
prising, if we consider that the knowledge of the
circumstance was confined to the Queen, the Earl
of Nottingham, and probably Lady Scrope. Sir
Dudley Carleton returned from his mission to Holland
in 1618 ; Clarendon was born in 1608, entered Mag-
dalen College, Oxford, in 1621, and while a student
may be supposed to have written his " Disparity."
There are two rings, claiming to be the identical
one retained so fatally by Lady Nottingham, which
ought to be noticed here. The one is preserved at
Hawnes, in Bedfordshire, and is now in the posses-
sion of the Rev. Lord John Thynne, from whom I
have received the following history.
It has descended from Lady Frances Devereux,
afterwards Duchess of Somerset, in unbroken suc-
cession from mother to daughter, according to the
following table : —
CHAP. V.
ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX.
183
Lady Frances Devereux, =
daughter of Robert,
second Earl of Essex.
William, Earl of
Hertford.
Mary = Heneage, Earl of Winchilsea.
Frances = Thomas Thynne, first Viscount Weymouth.
Frances = Sir Robert Worsley, of Appuldurcombe.
Frances = John Carteret, Earl Granville.
I
Louisa = Thomas, second Viscount Weymouth, whose
second son, Henry Frederick Thynne,
became heir to his uncle, Earl Granville.
A very clear descent is thus made ; but it must,
on the other hand, be remarked, that in the very
long, curious, and minute will of the Duchess of
Somerset, no mention is made of any such ring.
Whether it be the ring or not, it is, both as a work of
art, and as an historical relic, of great value *and high
interest.
The ring, of which an engraving is annexed, is
gold, the sides are engraved, and the inside set in
blue enamel: the stone is a sardonyx, on which is
cut in relief a head of Elizabeth, the execution of
which is of a high order.
N 4
184 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
The second ring, which is represented in the
following cut, is the property of C. W. Warner, Esq.
This ring was given by Charles I. to Sir Thomas
Warner, the settler of Antigua, Nevis, and other
islands in the West Indies. It has continued in the
possession of his descendants to the present time,
with the tradition attached to it, on what authority
is not known, that it is the identical ring given by
Queen Elizabeth to Essex. But there is also another
tradition of interest attached to it, which may in-
terfere with its claims to be the Essex ring : namely,
that it was sent to Elizabeth by Mary, Queen of
Scots, together with some lines by Buchanan. The
stone is»a diamond of the size represented in the
engraving, set in gold, inlaid with black enamel at
the back and sides.
Let us now resume our narrative. What a hurri-
cane of passions and emotions, pride and anger strug-
gling against tenderness and love, must have torn
the heart of Elizabeth during the week that elapsed
between the condemnation and the execution of Essex.
Urged by the dominant faction, she signed the warrant
for execution ; relenting, she sent Edmund Gary to
countermand it. Days passed, yet no petition, no
token reached her from the prisoner; the serpent
Ralegh and the vindictive Cobham at her ear, com-
CHAP.V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 185
paring Essex to Bothwell and to Guise, and persuad-
ing her that he had himself declared his continuing
to live incompatible with her safety — incredible tale !
Under his supposed obstinacy in refusing to implore
her mercy, her anger was again awakened, and aided
too well the machinations of his enemies. She sent
off Mr. Darcy with an order to execute the warrant,
which this time was not recalled.
On the evening of the 24th of February, it was
made known to Essex, that on the following morning
he would undergo the sentence of the law. The
execution was to take place within the Tower, it is
said at his own request, lest he should be " hoven
e£ up" by the acclamations of the citizens. Strict in-
junctions were given that he should not be permitted
to speak of the nature of his offence, or of his asso-
ciates, but confine himself to a simple declaration of
his treason.
It was well to say that Essex had himself desired
to be executed in private; but there can be little
doubt no option was given to him. The true reason
was, that Essex was now as ever the darling of the
people, who could not be made to believe that he had
received a fair trial. So powerful was this feeling
in his favour, that the popularity of the Queen
seemed to die with him ; after his death, she was
greeted no longer with cheers and acclamations, but
was received in mournful silence when she appeared
in public. Her councillors, who were thought to
have hunted him to death, were met by expressions
of hatred and insult.
186 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
Our narrative of the last moments of the Earl of
Essex, has been selected from the numerous manu-
script accounts which exist, some by spectators, and
all by cotemporaries.
On Tuesday night, between eleven and twelve, he
opened the casement of his window, and spoke to the
guards : "My good friends, pray for me, and to-morrow
" I shall leave an example behind me you shall
" all remember ; you shall see in me a strong God in
" a weak man. I have nothing to give you, for I have
" nothing left but that which I must pay to the
" Queen to-morrow, in the morning."
On Wednesday morning he arose about one o'clock,
and desired Dr. Mountford, Dr. Barlow, and his
chaplain Mr. Ashton, to join with him in those ex-
ercises that might best prepare him for death ; saying
to them, " God so bless you as you comfort me."
About seven he was brought forth by the Lieutenant
of the Tower, accompanied by the three divines, and
sixteen partisans of the guard, to the scaffold, which
was erected in the high court above Caesar's tower ; it
was raised some four feet high, was three yards wide,
and railed round. The Earl was dressed in a black
wrought velvet gown, and a black satin suit, with a
black felt hat. He prayed aloud all the way from
his chamber to the scaffold, saying, " 0 God ! give me
" true repentance, true patience, and true humility,
" and put all worldly thoughts out of my mind." His
countenance was neither light nor dejected, as with a
steady step he mounted the scaffold and approached
the block, which was a piece of wood, some half a
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 187
bow over, and half a yard long, rounded at the upper
side. On a seat placed near the scaffold, were the
Earls of Cumberland and Hertford, Lord Thomas
Howard, Constable of the Tower, Yiscount Bindon,
Lords Darcy and Compton, who were ordered to
attend the execution ; many knights and gentlemen,
and some aldermen of the city, in all about 100
persons.
The Earl, after some small pacing, drew near the
Lords, and then with some bowing of his body and
delivering away his hat, he spoke in a distinct and
serious manner, with his eyes lifted up to heaven : —
My Lords, and you, my Christian brethren, that are ap-
pointed by God to see me die, I confess, to the glory of God,
that I am a most wretched sinner, and that my sins are more
in number than the hairs of my head ; that I have bestowed
my youth in wantonness, lust, and uncleanness ; that I have
been puffed up with pride, vanity, and love of this wicked
world's pleasures ; and that, notwithstanding many good
motions inspired into me from the spirit of God, the good I
would, I have not done, and the evil that I would not, that
I have done ; for all which I beseech my Saviour Christ to
be a mediator to the Eternal Majesty for my pardon, especially
for this my last sin, — this great, this bloody, this crying, this
infectious sin, — whereby too many for love of me have been
drawn to offend God, to offend their Sovereign, and to offend
the world. I beseech God to forgive it us, and to forgive me,
the most wicked of all. I beseech Her Majesty, the State,
and the Ministers thereof, to forgive it us. The Lord grant
Her Majesty a prosperous reign, and a long, if it be His will.
O Lord ! grant her a wise and an understanding heart ! O
Lord ! bless her and the nobles and ministers of the Church
188 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. V.
and State ! And I beseech you and the world to have a chari-
table opinion of me for my intention towards Her Majesty,
whose death, upon my salvation, and before God, I protest I
never meant, nor violence to her person ; yet I confess I have
received an honorable trial, and am justly condemned. And
I desire all the world to forgive me, even as I do freely, and
from my heart, forgive all the world. And whereas I have
been condemned for my religion, I was never, I thank God,
atheist nor papist : for I never denied the power of my God
not believing the word and scriptures ; neither did I ever
trust to be justified by my own works or merits, but hope, as
a true Christian, for my salvation from God, only by the
merits and mercy of my Saviour Jesus Christ, crucified for
my sins. This faith I was brought up in, and therein am
now ready to die, beseeching you all to join yourselves with
me in prayer, not with eyes and lips only, but with lifted up
hearts and minds to the Lord for me, that my soul may be
lifted up above all earthly things : for now I will give myself
up to my private prayer ; yet, for that I beseech you all to
join with me, I will speak that you may hear.
Then returning to the block, he took off his gown
and ruff; he told the chaplains that having been often
in places of danger where death was not so present
and certain, he had felt the weakness of the flesh, and
therefore he hoped God would strengthen him in this
conflict, that the flesh should have no power over him.
He asked for the executioner, who on his knees
entreated his pardon ; to whom he replied, " Thou art
" welcome to me, I forgive thee ; thou art the minister
" of true justice." He then, with his eyes fixed upon
heaven, and long and passionate pauses, began his
prayers.
CHAP. V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 189
O God ! creator of all things, and judge of all men, thou
hast let me know by warrant of thy word, that Satan is then
most busy when our end is nearest, and that Satan being
resisted, will fly : I humbly beseech you so to assist me in
this my last combat ; and since thou acceptest our desires as
acts, accept of my desire to resist him with true resistance,
and perfect by thy grace what thou seest to be frail ; and
give me patience to be as becometh me in this just punish-
ment, inflicted upon me by so honorable a trial. Grant me
the inward comfort of thy spirit ! Let thy spirit seal unto my
soul an assurance of thy mercies ! Lift my soul above all
earthly cogitations, and when my soul and body shall part,
send thy blessed angels to be near unto me, which may con-
vey it to the joys of heaven.
He next said the Lord's Prayer, and afterwards the
Creed, one of the divines saying it softly before him,
and ended with this ejaculation : " Lord Jesus receive
" my soul, into thy hands I commend my spirit !" He
then prayed for forgiveness to his enemies, because
they bare the image of God as well as himself. Then
inquiring of the executioner how he should dispose
himself towards the block, and his doublet being re-
moved, in a scarlet waistcoat he bowed himself towards
the block, saying, " 0 God ! give me true humility,
" and patience to endure to the end ; and I pray you
" all to pray with me and for me, that when you shall
" see me stretch out my arms and my neck on the
" block, and the stroke ready to be given, it would
" please the ever living God to send down his angels
" to carry my soul before his mercy seat."
Then lifting up his eyes devoutly to heaven, he
190 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.V.
said: "Lord God, as unto thine altar do I come,
" offering up my body and soul for a sacrifice, in
" humility and obedience to thy commandment, to
•" thy ordinance, and to thy good pleasure. O
" God ! I prostrate myself to my deserved punish-
" ment." And so lying flat on the boards, with his
hands stretched out, he said, " Lord have mercy upon
" me, thy prostrate servant ! " He was desired by one
of the divines to say the beginning of the 51st Psalm,
" Have mercy on me, 0 God," &c., whereof when he
had said two verses, he uttered these words, " Execu-
" tioner, strike home ! Lord Jesus! come, Lord Jesus !
" and receive my soul. 0 Lord ! into thy hands I
" commend my spirit ! " in the midst of which sen-
tence his head was severed from his body at three
blows ; the first of which, however, deprived him of
all sense and motion.
The executioner then took the head, in which the
eyes remained open and turned towards heaven, and
the expression of the face unchanged, and holding it
up, cried, " God save the Queen ! "
The body and head were then removed into the
Tower, put into a comn ready prepared, and buried
by the Earl of Arundel and Duke of Norfolk.1
So perished the gallant and accomplished Essex,
in the pride and vigour of life ; he was thirty-three
years, three months, and fifteen days old at his exe-
cution. Brave, eloquent, generous, and sincere, —
1 The Queen ordered that the banner and hatchment of the Earl of
Essex as Knight of the Garter should not be removed from St. George's
ChapeL
CHAP.V. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 191
proud, imprudent, and violent, — his fate is a lesson.
Endowed with talents and qualities that placed
him far above the majority of men, his unrestrained
and ungoverned passions ruined himself and some of
his dearest friends, and brought on them the traitor's
doom.
192 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
CHAPTER VI.
LIFE OF ROBERT EARL OF ESSEX Concluded.
CHARACTER OF ESSEX. — HIS WRITINGS LIBERALITY — CHILDREN.
— FATE OF ESSEX'S COMPANIONS. POPULAR FEELING RESPECTING
ESSEX. — BACON'S "DECLARATION OF THE TREASONS OF THE LATE
EARL OF ESSEX." ANTHONY BACON DEFENDS ESSEX TO THE
LAST. — ELIZABETH'S MELANCHOLY, GRIEF FOR ESSEX'S LOSS, AND
DEATH. — FAVOUR SHOWN BY JAMES I. TO ESSEX'S FRIENDS.
ATTAINDER OF RALEGH, GREY, AND COBHAM. — NORTHUMBERLAND
ARRAIGNED. MOUNTJOY RETURNS FROM IRELAND, MARRIES LADY
RICH. HIS DISGRACE AND DEATH. — DESCRIPTION BY MORYSON.
THE character of the Earl of Essex may be fairly
judged from his life and letters ; but he must have
possessed qualities of the most attractive and endear-
ing nature, which cannot be there discerned, if it be
true, as Lord Clarendon tells us, that love for the
memory of his father was one of the chief causes
which, forty, years afterwards, made the last Earl of
Essex the most popular nobleman of his time.
Yet we are not without some precise information
respecting the late Earl. Sir Henry Wotton1, one of
his secretaries, has described his person and habits.
Tall, strong, and able-bodied, he was not graceful in
his movements, arid bent a little forward in the neck.
His hands were incomparably fair, and of fine shape,
which, though it be but feminine praise, he inherited
from his father. He was not a good dancer ; was
1 Reliq. Wott. 171.
CHAP. VI. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 193
thoughtful and reserved in countenance, and gene-
rally more so at meals, when others are most cheer-
ful. He used to say that the time he preferred to
consider and solve any knotty business, was when he
had checked his appetite with two or three morsels,
after which he sat usually a good while silent.
As he became more attentive to business, so he
became less curious in his dress, insomuch that
those about him thought that sometimes, when he
went up to the Queen, he scarce knew what he had
on. This was his manner : his chamber being com-
monly crowded with friends and suitors, when he
was up he gave his legs, arms, and breast to his
ordinary servants to button and dress him, Avith little
heed ; his head and face to his barber ; his eyes to
his letters, and ears to his petitioners ; and many
times all at once. Then the gentleman of his robes
throwing a cloak over his shoulders, he would make
a step into his closet, and after a short prayer he was
gone. Only in his baths he was somewhat delicate.
For point of diet and luxury, he was very inordinate
in his appetite ; and of so indifferent a taste, that he
would stop in the midst of any physical potion, lick
his lips, and then swallow the rest.
He never spoke ill of any one ; only against Henry
Lord Cobham he forswore all patience, calling him,
even to the Queen, the sycophant per excellentiam ;
arid one lady, whom, for her sex's sake, Sir Henry
forbears to nominate, he termed the spider of the
Court.
VOL. II. O
1 94 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
He was a bad philosopher, being a great resenter
and a weak dissembler ; and herein no good pupil of
my Lord of Leicester, who put all his passions in his
pocket.
In 1588, when he was made M. A. of Oxford, he
was esteemed one of the best poets among the no-
bility of England. There are not many poems extant
known to be from his pen; one beginning1 "There
" was a time when silly bees could speak," is printed
in Walpole's " Royal and Noble Authors." Several
sonnets are in the Ashmolean Library, Oxon, of which
the following is one : —
There is none, oh ! none but you,
Who from me estrange the sight,
Whom mine eyes affect to view,
And chain'd ears hear with delight.
o
Other's beauties, others move,
In you I all the graces find;
Such are the effects of love,
To make them happy that are kind.
Women in frail beauty trust,
Only seem you kind to me ;
Still be truly kind and just,
For that can't dissembled be.
Dear, afford me then your sight,
That surveying all your looks,
Endless volumes I may write,
And fill the world with endless books.
1 This is said to have been written " during his first discontentment
and absence from Court," in July, August, 1598.
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 195
Which when after ages view,
All shall wonder and despair,
Women to find a man so true,
And men, a woman half so fair.
On one occasion, when the Queen showed some
appearance of coolness towards him, he wrote a song,
which he caused to be sang before her, of which the
burthen was —
And if thou should'st by her be now forsaken,
She made thy heart too strong for to be shaken.
He was an acute and sound speaker when he was
in earnest ; the letters in this memoir afford abundant
proof of his talents as an epistolary writer, not merely
in the exaggerated style of euphuism in which it was
the fashion of the day to address the Queen, but his
public letters are worthy of admiration. I would
especially call attention to his letter on the state of
Ireland, of the 25th June, 1599, addressed to the
Queen ; by following the advice contained in it, his
successor, Mountjoy, who had, fortunately, more able
co-operators, and more seasoned soldiers than Essex,
succeeded in subduing that kingdom. His Latin
letters are said to afford excellent proof of his
scholarship. Of his other writings, his " Darling
" Piece of Love and Self-love " is particularly named
by Sir H. Wotton. It is, I believe, not extant. His
apology to Mr. A. Bacon has been often printed.
One. of a different kind I have placed in the Ap-
pendix ; it is a device made by the Earl of Essex for
the entertainment of Her Majesty.
o 2
196 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
His liberality was great, especially towards men of
genius and learning, in whose society he delighted.
He had a great respect for eminent divines ; with
these feelings he had a kind of filial regard both for
Archbishop Whitgift and Mr. Cartwright, who was the
principal Puritan divine of the day. He was a great
admirer of Spenser, whose patron he would doubtless
have been, had not that poet been attached to Sir
Walter Ralegh. But Spenser dying in great distress,
he was buried in Westminster Abbey at the expense
of Lord Essex. As Ralegh was of Spenser, so
Southampton was the patron of Shakspeare ; but it is
not to be doubted that the noble friends often en-
joyed together the society of the great dramatist. In
the opening chorus of the fifth act of Henry V., some
mention is made of him being then in Ireland ; and
of the welcome home that he will receive when he
brings " rebellion broached upon his sword."
The Earl of Essex, by his wife Frances, daughter
of Sir Francis Walsingham, and widow of Sir Philip
Sidney, left three sons and two daughters.
Robert, baptized 22nd January, 1591.
Walter, baptized 21st January, 1592.
Henry, baptized 14th April, 1595.
Frances, born 30th September, 1599.
Dorothy, born about 20th December, 1600.
The second and third sons died young. Lady
Frances Devereux was married at Drayton Basset, on
the 3rd March, 1617, to Sir William Seymour, after-
wards Marquis of Hertford and Duke of Somerset,
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 197
widower of the unfortunate Lady Arabella Stewart,
and died in 1674.
Lady Dorothy was married at the church of St.
Lawrence Pountney, London, the 18th May, 1615, to
Sir Henry Shirley, Bart., of Stanton Harold, who
died 8th February, 1634 ; and secondly, to William
Stafford, Esq., of Blatherwyke, in Northamptonshire.
By the second marriage she had no issue, and died
30th March, 1636.
These ladies became ultimately co-heiresses to their
brother.
The Countess of Essex found a third husband in
the person of that Eichard de Burgh, Earl of Clan-
rickarde, who was said to bear some resemblance
to her late husband. This marriage took place
about the time of the Queen's death. Mr. Cham-
berlain writes from London on the 12th April,
1603: — " Here is a common bruit that the Earl of
" Clanrickarde hath married my Lady of Essex,
" wherewith many that wished her well are nothing
" pleased. The speech goes that the King hath taken
" order, and sent her word that her son shall be
" brought up with the young princes."1
The companions in crime and misfortune of the
Earl of Essex were disposed of in the following
manner.
The Earl of Southampton was reprieved, but re-
1 S. P. O. The Earl of Clanrickarde was, in 4 Chas. I., created Earl
of St. Alban's. He died 1636, and the title became extinct on the death
of his son, s. p>
o 3
198 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
mained a prisoner until the accession of Jarnes ', when
he was restored in blood and honours, and created a
Knight of the Garter.
Sir Charles Danvers, Sir Christopher Blount, Sir
John Davis, Sir Gilly Meyrick, and Henry CuiFe,
were tried and condemned at Westminster, the 5th
March. The first two were beheaded on Tower Hill.
Meyrick and Cuffe were hanged at Tyburn. Sir John
Davis, after a year's imprisonment, received the
Queen's pardon.
Sir Henry Neville, for having been privy to the
treasonable councils at Drury House, and not reveal-
ing the same, was confined in the Tower during the
remainder of this reign.
Mr. Lyttelton, a man of large fortune and great
abilit}7, who had been of the council at Drury House,
was tried with Sir Edward Bainham, and Orell, an
old soldier. They were condemned. Mr. Lyttelton
purchased a reprieve, by paying Sir Walter Ralegh
10,000£ , who also obtained a remission of Bainham's
sentence on similar terms. If he dealt largely in this
line among the prisoners, Sir Walter must have made
a very pretty profit out of the Essex insurrection.
Of the other prisoners, some were pardoned, others
imprisoned, and most of them fined ; but very few
among them paid their fines.
The popular feeling was so strongly manifested,
that even Elizabeth thought it was necessary to
1 "The 10th of this month the Earl of Southampton and Sir Henry
Neville were delivered out of the Tower by a warrant from the King."
—Chamberlain to Carleton, 12th April, 1603.
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 199
justify the severe measures which had been taken.
Dr. Barlow, one of the divines who had attended
Essex in the Tower, was accordingly ordered to
preach a sermon on the subject at Paul's Cross, on
Sunday, the 1st March ; while Mr. Francis Bacon
drew up a " Declaration of the practices and treasons
" attempted and committed by the late Robert, Earl
" of Essex, and his complices." Clarendon thought
that no expression of regret to his memory, friends,
or dependents, could weigh down these, which he
declared to be two of the most pestilent libels against
his fame, that ever were published against any male-
factor.
Of the divine and his sermon I have nothing to
say ; he was a labourer hired for a given purpose, and
soon received his wages in the shape of two prebend al
stalls in the churches of St. Paul's and Westminster.
But what shall we say to Bacon, who, not now shel-
tered under the wretched plea of his duty as an
advocate, did not scruple to use all his ingenuity, not
merely to aggravate the offences of which his generous
friend had notoriously been guilty, but . to pervert
facts, and charge him with other and more heinous
crimes, which they had not ventured to hint at in
Court, because they knew well how unsubstantial they
would be proved. He endeavoured to excuse himself,
saying that he furnished but the language, and was
not answerable for the matter. How weak an excuse,
must be evident to every one ; and all he gained by
it was a share in the universal dislike which attended
the enemies of Essex. On the death of Elizabeth,
o 4
200 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
not venturing to present himself, he wrote an abject
letter to Southampton, full of professions of respect
and regard, which doubtless were received with the
contempt they merited. Subsequently he wrote to
Mountjoy, then Earl of Devonshire, an apology,
touching his conduct towards the late Earl of Essex,
a weak defence of undeniable baseness. It was not
until 1607, that he received the reward which had
tempted him to commit these meannesses. In that
year he was made Solicitor General, when his great
talents and insinuating address rapidly bore him to
the highest point of his profession, only that he might
be cast down with the more overwhelming crash.
Of Anthony Bacon's fate but little is known. He
is said to have died in Essex House, but the time of
his death is uncertain, except that it took place before
the accession of James I. The diseases under which
he had so long suffered, and whose aggravation pro-
bably terminated his life, must have been a complete
bar to any active exertion on his part : yet it is gra-
tifying to know, that the qualities of baseness and in-
gratitude, which attach so disgracefully to his brother
Francis, are not to be found in him ; and that some
aspersions having been cast upon the honour of his
deceased friend and patron, he took means to clear his
reputation. It appears to me that the charge of a
weak confession of guilt, at the expense of his asso-
ciates, has already been removed from the memory of
Lord Essex ; the evidence of the well-informed writer
of the letter from which the following extract has
been made, may, however, add weight to that opinion.
CHAP. VI. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 201
No. XXXIX.1
A. Bacon to .
Sir, — I perceive by your letters, many strange reports are
spread of a confession my L. of Essex should make before
his death, wherein his honor hath, as you say, been much
touched, and your desire is to receive some satisfaction con-
cerning the same. And surely, I confess, you cannot give
me a more pleasing subject to write of, than the discovery of
that truth, by which any unworthy aspersion of dishonor
may be removed from his memorial, whose life was so dear
unto me, and of whose noble virtues I had so great experi-
ence.
After his L. condemnation, upon his suit to the Lords,
there was sent to him one Ashton, that was preacher in his
house, a man base, fearful, and mercenary ; but such a one
as by a formal shew of zeal, had gotten a good opinion of
that noble Lord, who that way, being himself most religious,
might easily be deceived. How the man was prepared, I
touch not ; but how he dealt, the substance of which was his
own confession to a worthy person, as he well knoweth, I
will fully relate unto you. At his coming to my L. he
found his L. exceeding cheerful, and prepared with great
contentation for his end, with whom he began to deal to this
effect.
The rest of the letter contains the account already
given, of the manner in which Ashton obtained a
confession from Essex, and then by his threats and
reproaches induced him to make confession to the
Lords, which after all only amounted to the fact, that
1 Camd. Ann. edition by Hearne, 1717, in the Appendix. The letter
is dated, u From my chamber in London, 30th May, 1601," but not signed.
202 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
his intention was to establish the title of the King of
Scots to the succession.
I have observed that Sir Robert Cecyll com-
menced a correspondence with King James imme-
diately after the death of the Earl of Essex, by the
agency of those ambassadors who had been sent
at the instance of the latter. He used every endea-
vour to keep this from the Queen's knowledge, but
there was a party of which he was yet more jealous ;
this consisted of his quondam allies, Cobham and
Ralegh, who, with the Earl of Northumberland *,
had formed themselves into an opposition to the
Secretary at the English Court, and endeavoured to
supplant him with James. Lord Plenry Howard,
who carried on the Scotch correspondence for Cecyll,
called them the diabolical triplicity, and insinuated
that Lady Arabella Stewart was the person they de-
sired to see on the throne, a woman being more
tractable than a man. In fact, from the time Essex
was removed, Elizabeth appears to have been little
thought of; all her devoted servants were paying
court to her successor, as she soon discovered. Well
might she exclaim, that times were altered with her,
and she had no one now to trust.
This feeling must have added poignancy to her
1 Northumberland was a weak and intemperate man, although so
learned as, from his pursuit of science, to gain the sobriquet of the
Wizard Earl ; possessing no judgment, and often engaged in quarrels, in
which he was usually worsted, as in the cases of Southampton and Sir
Francis Vere. His separation from Lady Northumberland in October,
1599, has been mentioned ; they became reconciled in the summer of
1601. Lady Northumberland died in 1619, her husband in 1632.
CHAP. VI. EGBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 203
regrets for the loss of Essex; yet, although she
struggled gallantly, affected youthful vigour, and in-
sisted on making her annual progress, she could not
persuade her courtiers to worship the setting sun.
The accounts of her grief, her despondency and
illness, are extremely curious.
Sir John Harrington, Elizabeth's godson, who had
accompanied Essex to Ireland, and was knighted
by him, came to the Court in October, 1601. He
says, " The Queen was reduced to a skeleton ; altered
" in her features ; her taste for dress gone. Nothing
"pleased her; she stamped and swore violently at
" the ladies of the Court, whom she tormented beyond
measure."
Sir John again visited her at the end of December,
1602; he was asked if he had seen Tyrone. He re-
plied, that he had seen him with the Lord Deputy.
She looked up with grief arid choler in her counte-
nance, and said, " Oh ! now it mindeth me that you
" was one that saw this man elsewhere ; " and dropping
a tear, smote her bosom.1
Comte Harlay de Beaumont was the French Am-
bassador at the Court of London, and we have ex-
tracts from his original despatches, by M. Yon Rau-
mer2, and from copies of them by Dr. Birch.3
In May and June, 1602, the Queen told De Beau-
mont that she was tired of life, for nothing now cori-
1 Nug. Antiquae, i. 322.
2 History of 16th and 17th Centuries, translated from the German,
vol. ii. pp. 101. passim. London, 1835.
8 Mem. of Queen Elizabeth, 1754.
204: LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CiiAP.Vl.
tented her spirit, or gave her any enjoyment. She
talked to him of Essex with sighs, and almost with
tears. She said, that she foresaw his impatient
spirit would involve him in misfortunes; that she
had warned him, "qu'il se contentat de prendre
" plaisir de lui deplaire a toutes occasions, et de
" mepriser sa personne insolemment, comme il faisoit,
" et qu'il se gardat bien de toucher a son sceptre."
De Beaumont proceeds to say, that finding the sub-
ject moved her too much, he gave the conversation
another turn.
A letter to a Scotch nobleman from his corre-
spondent in England, also quoted by Dr. Birch, says :
" Our Queen is troubled with a rheum in her arm,
" which vexeth her very much, besides the grief
" which she hath conceived for the death of my Lord
" of Essex. She sleepeth not so much by day as she
" used, neither taketh rest by night. Her delight is
" to sit in the dark, and sometimes with shedding
" tears to bewail Essex." l
De Beaumont reports, in November, 1602, that —
The Queen, though she has suffered from pains of the
stone, and flux of blood from the bladder, is restored to
health ; her eye is lively, and her spirits good. A new in-
clination, supposed to be for the Earl of Clanrickarde, a
handsome, brave Irishman, who is said to resemble Essex ;
but he is cold, and hath not sufficient understanding to lift
himself. The Queen declares she cannot love him, as he
recalls her sorrow for the Earl. This occupies the whole
Court.
1 Birch, ii. 506. The original is in the Advocate's Library, Edinburgh.
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 205
13th March, 1603 (New Style). — The Queen would not
receive De Beaumont, alleging her mourning for Lady Not-
tingham.
15th March. — The Queen has been unwell these seven or
eight days.
19 th March. — Sickness has been the cause of the Queen not
shewing, not her grief for Lady Nottingham, as alleged to
me. She does not sleep, eats little ; some think her disorder
proceeds from dissatisfaction at what has taken place with
respect to Miss Arabella [this was the project for marrying
Lady Arabella Stewart to William Seymour] ; some that it
proceeds from Irish affairs [the pardon of Tyrone] ; others
that sorrow for the Earl of Essex has taken possession of her.
It is certain that she has displayed great melancholy.
28th March. — The Queen quite exhausted ; some days ago
she said, I no longer desire to live, and desire to die. She
speaks not a word for three hours together. For the last
two days has her finger almost continually in her mouth, and
sits on cushions without ever rising, or laying herself quite
down, her eyes open, and fixed on the ground.
Dr. Lingard has quoted from a manuscript, said to
be an account by the " fair young Mrs. Southwell."
That lady was a very short time maid of honour.
We find, in the Sidney Correspondence, that she
was appointed in November, 1599, on the death of
Mrs. Ratcliffe; but on the 23rd December, she ap-
pears as " My Lady Mollins, she that was Mrs. South-
" well, the maid of honor." It is doubtful, therefore,
whether she was an eye-witness of the Queen's last
illness.
Mr. Chamberlain writes to Mr. Dudley Carleton an
account of her illness, to which we also append a
206 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
curious account in French, which is in the State
Paper Office, said to be written by Mr. D. Carleton.1
30th March, 1603. — I had good means to understand how
the world went, and find her disease to be nothing but a
settled and unremovable melancholy, insomuch that she
could not be won or persuaded, neither by the council, di-
vines, physicians, nor by the women about her, once to taste
or touch any physic, though ten or twelve physicians that
were continually about her, did assure her, with all manner
of asseveration, of perfect and easy recovery, if she would
follow their advice ; so that it cannot be said of her, as it was
of the Emperor Adrian, that turba medicorum occidit regem,
for they say she died only for lack of physic. Here was
some whispering that her brain was distempered, but there
was no such matter, only she held an obstinate silence for the
most part ; and because she had a persuasion, that if she once
lay down, she should never rise, she could not be gotten to
bed in a whole fortnight, till three days before her death ; so
that after three weeks languishing, she departed the 24th of
this present, being our Lady's eve, between two and three in
the morning.
Le 3me Avril (N.S.). — Sur les trois heures du matin, la
royne d'Angleterre rend 1'esprit fort doucement, ayant
comence de perdre la parolle depuis deux jours, sans avoir
endure ny fiebvre ny aucune douleur pendant sa raaladie, ny
perdu le sens ny 1'entendement. L'opinion comune des
medecins de la royne, et de ceux qui la servoient privement
en sa chambre, est, que sa maladie ne .precede que d'une
tristesse qu'elle conceut fort secretement quelques jours
devant que s'en plaindre. Et se fondent en ce jugement sur
1 Although endorsed as from Sir Dudley Carleton, it appears not to be
in his handwriting. It may have been written by a secretary. Carleton
was at the time Ambassador at Paris.
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 207
cc qu'il n'est aparu auctm signe du mal qui fut mortel en
elle outre celui de 1'age, aiant le poux, urine, et les yeux
toujours bons jusqu'a la fin. Et principalement qu'en tout
le cours de sa maladie, elle n'a jamays voulu user d'aucune
remede qu'on luy ait non obstant les prieres et
menaces de mort que ses serviteurs et medecins luy faisoient ;
comme sy 1'apprehension et mespris de sa vieillesse, out
quelque autre repentement secret, que Ton attribue au regret
de la mort du feu Comte d'Essex, 1'eussent esmene a la
chercher ou desirer elle meme. Quoy que se soit, c'est la
verite que des lors qu'elle sentit atteinte, elle diet en vouloir
mourir.
This shows that even at the time, grief for the
death of Essex was one of the causes to which her
death was ascribed. The following extract from an
intercepted letter, apparently from a popish priest,
connects the Queen's last illness with Lady Notting-
ham's death-bed very curiously.
London, 9 Martii, 1603. — About ten days since died the
Countess of Nottingham. The Queen loved the Countess
very much, and hath seemed to take her death very heavily,
remaining ever since in a deep melancholy, with conceit of
her own death, and complaineth of many infirmities suddenly
to have overtaken her, as impostumation in her head, aches
in her bones, and continued cold in her legs, besides notable
decay in judgment and memory, insomuch as she cannot
attend to any discourses of government and state, but de-
lighteth to hear some of the " Hundred Merry Tales," and
such like, and to such is very attentive ; at other times very
impatient and testy, so as none of the Council, but the
Secretary, dare come in her presence.1
1 S. P. O. Venice.
208 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
Elizabeth died on the 24th March, 1603. Sir Robert
Gary waited under the windows of the Palace at
Richmond, until a token ring was thrown to him
from the window, with which he posted off to Scot-
land, and was cordially received by King James, as
the bearer of tidings of great joy. James was pro-
claimed in London the day that Elizabeth died, and
the inhabitants that night lighted innumerable bon-
fires ; we may presume, therefore, that grief for the
loss of their late mistress, was confined to a few
bosoms.
King James lost no time in proceeding to take pos-
session of his land of promise ; but even before he
quitted Edinburgh, he bethought him of the friends
and family of Essex.
The message he sent to Lady Essex has been
already noticed ; with the order for the release of
Southampton, came an invitation to that nobleman
to repair to York, to meet there his friend and sove-
reign. Great alarm was caused by this conduct ;
Ralegh, Cobham, and Grey, although doubtful of
their reception, resolved to meet the King, and ac-
companied by the weak Northumberland, who had
associated himself with them, repaired to York. The
three former were left in neglect ; Ralegh indeed lost
his offices of Warden of the Stannaries and Captain
of the Yeomen Guard, while the last, owing probably
to his connection with Essex, received a promise of
favour.
Two conspiracies, which in some degree owed their
origin to the consciousness of this adverse feeling in
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 209
the royal breast, and the mysteries of which have
never been clearly unravelled, were on foot at this
time, and enabled the King to wreak his vengeance
on the enemies of Essex. Lords Cobham, Grey,
and Sir Walter Ralegh, headed the one, the object
of which was said to be, the dethroning of King
James, and setting up Arabella Stewart1 in his
place; to effect which they treated with the Count
d'Aremberg, envoy from the Archduke, for 600,000
crowns, and Ralegh was said to have demanded a
pension of 1500 crowns a-year. The other conspiracy,
which was independent of this, and yet so far con-
nected, that the same persons were privy to both, and
" hoped that if one sped not, the other might," was
headed by George Brook, Lord Cobham's brother, Sir
Griffin Markham, Anthony Copley, and two priests,
named Watson and Clarke. These conspirators pro-
posed to seize the persons of the King and Prince,
carry them to the Tower or to Dover, and keep them
in custody until James had complied with their
demands ; the chief of which was, the satisfaction of
personal vengeance against Cecyll and other ministers.
On the 16th July, a proclamation was issued to
arrest Sir Griffin Markham. Anthony Copley con-
fessed the existence of a plot to surprise the King.
1 Margaret, daughter of Henry VII., married, first, James IV., King of
Scotland, secondly Archibald, Earl of Angus. By the latter she left a
daughter, wife of Matthew Stewart, Earl of Lennox, and grandmother to
James I. and Arabella Stewart ; but the father of Arabella was younger
brother to Lady Darnley. The advocates of her claim put forward her
birth within the realm, as outweighing her defect in primogeniture.
VOL. II. P
210 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
Lord Cobham being examined, denied all knowledge
of it, but refused to put his hand to anything. On
the 30th, Cobham and Ralegh being then in the
Tower, Sir John Peyton, the Lieutenant, makes a
report of them. Ralegh still continues " perplexed,"
and " my L. Cobham' s spirits are exceedingly de-
" clined ; he is grown passionate in lamentation."1
The plague was raging in London ; the King fled
from it, the judges followed the Court, and it was not
until November that the conspirators were tried.
Sir William Waad, reporting to Lord Cecyll that
he had brought the prisoners to Winchester Castle,
the 13th November, 1603, gives a proof of the ex-
cessive violence of the popular feeling against Ralegh.
" I thank God we brought all our prisoners safely
" hither yesternight in good time, and yet I protest
" it was hob or nob whether Sir Walter Ralegh
" should have been brought alive through such
" multitudes of unruly people as did exclaim against
" him. We took the best order we could in setting
" watches through all the streets, both in London,
" and for the suburbs. If one hair-brained fellow
" among so great multitudes had begun to set upon
" him (as they were very near to do it), no entreaty
" or means could have prevailed, the fury of the
" people was so great."2
Cobham, the "sycophant per excellentiam," justified
the contempt which Essex had always expressed for
1 S. P. o. * ibid.
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 211
him. " Never," says Sir Dudley Carleton1, " was
" seen so poor and abject a spirit."
Grey made a long and eloquent speech, and bore
himself so gallantly, as to win the esteem of his
judges.2 The chief evidence against Ralegh was the
confession of Cobham, whom he had betrayed to
Cecyll, and who, in return, betrayed him. Cobham
afterwards retracted ; and there was great difficulty
in proving Ralegh's guilt without implicating d' Arem-
berg. The Attorney General, Sir Edward Coke,
endeavoured to make up the defects in evidence by
an amount of invective and vituperation, unusual
even in that foul-mouthed advocate ; but the fact of
the pension was proved. All were condemned ; but
only the two priests and George Brook were executed.
Sir Walter Ralegh remained in the Tower till August,
1616, when he was suffered to go on the voyage to
Guiana, from which he promised the King such great
results, and which proved a complete failure. On his
return, he was confined to his house, and James,
willing to conciliate Spain, determined to proceed
against him on the old judgment of 1603 ; and on
the 29th October, 1618, he was beheaded in Old
Palace Yard, Westminster. In his speech from the
scaffold, he did not hesitate to call God to witness
that he was not a " persecutor of the death of the
" Earl of Essex, but shed tears for him when he
1 Who was in England at- this time. His letter describing the trial, is
in State Trials, vol. ii. p. 50.
2 " Great compassion was had of this young lord ; for so clear and
fiery a spirit had not been seen by any that had been present at like
trials." — Sir D. Carleton, ut supra.
F 2
212 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
" died." What belief is to be placed in this decla-
ration, his own letter to Cecyll has shown. There
can be no doubt he met death with a lie in his
mouth.
After the failure of the Gunpowder Plot, in
November, 1605, the Earl of Northumberland, on
account of his connection with Thomas Percy, one of
the conspirators, was confined first in the house of
the Archbishop of Canterbury, afterwards in the
Tower ; he was brought before the Star Chamber the
next year, and arraigned on these charges ; that he
had sought to be the head of the papists : that he had
admitted Thomas Percy to be a gentleman pensioner,
without administering the oath of supremacy: and
that after his restraint he wrote letters without leave,
giving warning to Percy to seek safety. He treated
them with contempt, and desired a public trial by
law. The proofs against him failed; nevertheless,
the Star Chamber sentenced him to pay a fine of
30,000/., to be imprisoned during the King's pleasure,
deprived him of all his offices, and declared him
incapable of holding any in future. During a con-
finement in the Tower of thirteen years, he acquired
the character of a Mecaenas, from his devotion to
literary and scientific pursuits, and the number of
learned men he entertained. Imprisonment could
not lower the pride of the Percy ; for when Hay, Lord
Doncaster — the King's favourite, who had married,
against her father's consent, Lady Lucy Percy, the
celebrated beauty, better known as Countess of
Carlisle — obtained his liberation from James, in
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 213
1617, Northumberland was with difficulty induced
to accept the favour at such hands.
Mountjoy had succeeded, during the autumn of
1602, in reducing Tyrone and O'Donnel, the heads
of the Irish rebels, to so great distress, that they were
anxious to submit on terms ; but Elizabeth at first
would listen to nothing less than an unconditional
surrender, and subsequently was so undecided, that
Mountjoy knew not what to do; until, at length,
hearing that the Queen was dying, he sent at once
for Tyrone, received his submission kneeling, and in
return, published an act of oblivion of all past
offences. Scarcely was this done, when the intelli-
gence arrived that Elizabeth was no more; Tyrone
burst into tears of regret that he had been so preci-
pitate.
Mountjoy brought over with him the two Irish
chiefs, who were pardoned, Tyrone being re-invested
with his former title, and O'Donnel created Earl of
Tyrconnel. Mountjoy himself was received by James
with the utmost favour, not only as having been
successful in Ireland, but as the friend of Essex, and
his associate in the secret correspondence with Scot-
land. On the 21st July, 1603, he was created Earl
of Devonshire, K. G., and Master General of the Ord-
nance. His favour was as great with the King, as
that of Lady Rich was with the Queen. Shortly after-
wards, by mutual consent, that lady was divorced
from her husband, and on the 26th December, 1605,
became the wife of the Earl of Devonshire ; the cere-
mony was performed by Laud, afterwards Archbishop,
214 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
then the Earl's chaplain. This union roused the
greatest anger in James, who declared such a mar-
riage illegal and void.
Devonshire and his wife were disgraced and
banished from Court. The case was argued ; but before
any decision was arrived at, the Earl fell ill of a fever,
which carried him off, after ten days7 illness, on the
3rd April, 1606. Sir Dudley Carleton, writing to
Mr. J. Chamberlain, at Ware Park, on Good Friday,
the 17th April, says: —
My L. of Devonshire's funeral will be performed in West-
minster, about three weeks hence. There is much dispute
among the heralds, whether his lady's arms shall be impaled
with his, which brings in question the lawfulness of the mar-
riage, and that is said to depend on the manner of the divorce ;
which, though it run in these terms, that she was to be sepa-
rated from her late husband, a ihoro et mensa, propter varia et
diversa adulteria, confessata et commissa ea in suburbis quam
intra muros civitatis London, yet are they tied in the con-
clusion not to marry any other. Her estate is much threat-
ened with the King's account, but it is thought she will find
good friends, for she is visited daily by the greatest, who
profess much love to her for her Earl's sake ; meantime,
amongst the meaner sort, you may guess in what credit she
is, when Mrs. Bluenson complains that she hath made her
cousin of Devonshire shame her and the whole kindred.
2nd May. — My L. of Devonshire's funeral will be per-
formed on Wednesday next, in which my Lord of South-
ampton is chief mourner, my L. of Suffolk and Northampton
assistants, and three other Earls. It is determined that his
arms shall be set up single, without his wife's.1
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 215
She survived him but a short time, and died
in 1607. Their eldest son, Mount] oy Blount, was
created Baron Mountjoy, 1627, and Earl of Newport,
1628.
Fynes Moryson has left so interesting an account
of the person and habits of his master, that no apology
is requisite for its insertion here.
" He was of stature tall, of comely proportion ; his
" skin fair ; he had very little hair on his body, it
" was nearly black, thin on the head, where he wore
" it short, except a lock under the left ear, which he
" nourished, and being woven up, hid it in his neck
" under his ruff. He only used the barber for his
" head ; for the hair on his chin, cheeks, and throat,
" growing slowly, he used to cut with his scissors
" almost daily, keeping it so low that it could scarce
" be discerned, keeping also the hair on his upper
" lip somewhat short, suffering only that under his
" nether lip to grow at length and full ; yet some two
" or three years before his death, he had a very sharp
" and short pike devant on his chin. His forehead
" was broad and high ; his eyes, great, black, and
" lovely ; his nose, low and short, and something
" blunt at the end ; his chin, round ; cheeks, full,
" round, and ruddy ; countenance, cheerful and
" amiable as ever I beheld of any man. His arms
" were long, his hands long and white, his fingers
" great in the end, and his legs somewhat little,
u which he gartered above the knee.
" His apparel in Court and city was commonly of
" white or black taffetas or satins ; he wore two, yea,
p 4
216 LIVES OF THE EABLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VI.
" sometimes three, pair of silk stockings, with black
u silk grogram cloak, guarded, and ruffs of comely
" depth and thickness ; black beaver hat, with plain
" black band ; a taffety quilted waistcoat in summer ;
" a scarlet waistcoat, and sometimes both, in winter.
" In the country, and in the field, he wore jerkins
" and round hose ; he never ware other fashion than
" round, with laced panes of russet cloth, and cloak of
" the same lined with velvet, and white beaver hat
" with plain band ; and besides his ordinary stockings
" of silk, he wore under boots another pair of woollen
" or worsted, with a pair of high linen boot hose.
*' Yea, three waistcoats in cold weather and a thick
" ruff, besides a russet scarf about his neck thrice
" folded under it ; so as I never observed any of his
" age and strength to keep his body so warm. He
" was very comely in all his apparel, but the robes
" of St. George's Order became him extraordinarily
" well.
" For his diet he used to fare plentifully and of the
" best, so as no lord in England might compare with
" him in that kind of bounty. Before the war he
" used to have nourishing breakfasts, as panadoes
" and broths ; but in the wars, he used commonly to
" break his fast with a dry crust of bread, and, in
" the spring time, with butter and sage, with a cup
" of stale beer, wherewith, in winter, he would have
" sugar and nutmeg mixed. He fed plentifully, both
" at dinner and supper, having the choicest and
" most nourishing meats, with the best wines, which
" he drank plentifully, but never in great excess ; in
CHAP. VI. ROBERT, EARL OF ESSEX. 217
" his latter years, and in the wars, he used to sleep
" in the afternoons, and that long, upon his bed. He
" took tobacco abundantly, and of the best. He was
" very neat, loving cleanliness both in apparel and
" diet ; and was so modest, that his most familiar
" never heard or saw him use any liberty out of his
" privy chamber, except, perhaps, in his Irish journeys,
" when he had no withdrawing room.
" His behaviour was courtly, grave, and exceeding
" comely. He loved private retiredness, good fare,
" and some few friends. He delighted in study, in
" gardens, a house richly furnished, and delectable
" rooms of retreat ; in riding on a pad to take the
" air ; in playing at shovel- board or at cards ; in
" reading play-books for recreation ; and especially
" in fishing and fish-ponds ; seldom using any other
" exercises, and using these as pastimes only for a
" short and convenient time, and with great variety
" of change from one to the other.
" He was a close concealer of his secrets, sparing in
" speech, but judicious, if not eloquent. He hated
" swearing, which I have seen him often control at
" his table with a frowning brow and an angry cast
" of his black eye ; slow to anger, but once provoked
" spoke home ; a gentle enemy, easily pardoning, and
" calmly. pursuing revenge; as a friend, if not cold,
" yet not to be used much out of the highway*
" Lastly, in his love to women, he was faithful and
" constant, if not transported with self-love more
" than the object, and therein obstinate."
218 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
CHAPTER VII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX.
•CONTRAST BETWEEN ELIZABETH "AND JAMES I. — ROBERT DEVEREUX,
AT ETON AND OXFORD. — THE ATTAINDER OF ESSEX AND SOUTH-
AMPTON REVERSED. — QUARREL BETWEEN THE PRINCE OF WALES
AND ESSEX. - — MARRIAGE OF ESSEX AND LADY FRANCES HOWARD,
AND FESTIVITIES AT COURT.- — DISSOLUTE STATE OF THE COURT.
ESSEX GOES ABROAD. — HIS LETTERS FROM FRANCE. — HIS
CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE PRINCE OF WALES.
IT would be difficult to point out two characters
which, with certain points of resemblance, offer a
more complete contrast than do those of the late
Queen and her successor. Elizabeth was fearless,
firm, cautious, arid parsimonious ; James was timid,
irresolute, credulous, and prodigal. Both were hasty
and irritable, indulging in the coarsest abuse in their
moments of anger ; but Elizabeth was malignant and
vengeful, while James was easily appeased, and would
ask pardon of those he had wronged or abused in his
anger. Both were learned. Few women of her age
were better read than Elizabeth, who spoke five
languages1 ; James prided himself on his kingcraft,
1 "Elizabeth possessess much understanding and courage, and is
adorned with many great qualities. She speaks French, Spanish, Italian,
and Latin, knows something of the sciences and history, is thoroughly
acquainted with the affairs of her kingdom, knows those of her neighbours
3i
15 91 - 1646.
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 219
his theology, his knowledge of the science of demo-
nology, while his undoubted acquirements were so
overlaid with pedantry, as to earn for him, from
Sully, the title of "the wisest fool in Europe." Both
had favourites ; but the spirit of the Tudors always
preserved Elizabeth from the abject slavery in which
James was bound to Somerset and Buckingham.
The morals of the Court of Elizabeth were not of
the purest order, if we compare them with a modern
standard; but in contrast with the profligate and
degrading habits of the great lords and ladies under
James, her courtiers were models of propriety. In
the course of this narrative, enough will appear to
warrant the assertion that, not even in the age of
Charles II., were honour, virtue, and morality at so
low an ebb, as during the first quarter of the seven-
teenth century.
When James was proclaimed on Tower Hill, " at
" that instant the Earl of Southampton, with his
" keeper, did walk upon the leads in the Tower,
" whence he perceived the proclamation to be made,
" at which he did much rejoice, as great reason he
" hath so to do, throwing his hat up two several times,
" and the third time cast it over the wall from him,
" that all upon the Tower Hill might behold it. At
" the time of proclamation of the King in Cheap-
" side, my Lord of Northumberland brought with
and judges well of them. She is passionate and violent among her
attendants, and demands more than is due to her sex ; she is more frugal
than she ought to be, and instead of giving will have others give to her.'*
—From a despatch of M. de Bouillon, 1596. Von Raumer, ii. 178.
220 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
" him, upon horseback, the Earl of Essex his son,
" and instantly after the proclamation was done, he
" was sent unto Essex House to his mother, for there
" she doth lie at this time."1
Eobert Devereux was, at this time, a gentleman
commoner of Merton College, Oxford, whither he had
removed from Eton at the end of January, 1602.
Mr., afterwards Sir Henry Savile2, was Warden of
Merton, who, for his father's sake, undertook that
the youth should be learnedly and religiously edu-
cated; the better to effect this, he gave him an
apartment in the Warden's lodging.3
On the 5th April, James wrote a letter from Holy-
rood concerning the Earl of Southampton, which
does not bear the address, but was probably to the
Privy Council ; in it he says, " We have thought
" meet to give the Peers of the realm notice of our
" pleasure, though the same be to be executed by
" our own regal power ; which is, only because the
" place is unwholesome and dolorous to him, to
" whose body and mind we would give present com-
" fort. We have written to our Lieutenant of the
" Tower to deliver him out of prison presently, to go
1 From a letter from Thomas Ferrers to his brother Sir Henry Ferrers
at Walton on Trent, in Lord Ashburnham's Collection, No. 355. Stowe
Catalogue.
2 Warden of Merton, 1585. He became Provost of Eton 1596, and died
1621. He was a man of severe morals, and the strictest religious prin-
ciples, from whom probably Lord Essex imbibed the anti-episcopal
opinions which distinguished him at a later period. Sir Henry Savile
was also an eminent mathematician, and founder of the chairs of Astro-
nomy and Geometry at Oxford.
3 Ath. Oxon. iii. 189.
CHAP. VII. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 221
" to any such place as he shall choose, in or near our
" city of London, there to carry himself in such
" modest form as we know he will think meet in his
" own discretion, until the body of our State now
u assembled shall come unto us, at which time
" we are pleased that he shall also come unto our
" presence ; for as it is on us that his only hope
" dependeth, so we will reserve those words of
" further favor until the time he behold our own
" eyes, whereof as we know the comfort will be great
" to him, so it will be contentment to us to have op-
" portunity to declare our estimation of him."1
There was little cause to fear that the subject of
such expressions from the new Sovereign would be
treated with harshness or disrespect. But the House
of Peers had not even waited thus long ; for on the
26th March, only two days after the death of the
Queen, bills reversing the attainders of the Earls of
Southampton and Essex were read a first time, and
came back from the Commons the 18th April. James
must, therefore, have given instructions before he
became King, or else his wishes were so well known
to Cecyll that he ventured to forestal them thus ; a
remarkable circumstance whichever way it is viewed.
James I. arrived at Theobalds on the 7th, having,
by his reception of Southampton at York, displayed
his antipathy to the late Queen, quite as much as his
regard for the memory of Essex.
On the 13th May, he made his entry into London,
1 Ashburnham MSS. 692. Stowe Cat.
222 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
and shortly afterwards had a creation of Peers,
when Lord Henry Howard became Earl of Nor-
thampton; Lord Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk;
Mountjoy, Earl of Devonshire ; and Sir Robert
Cecyll, Baron Cecyll of Essendon.
Henry, Prince of Wales, was about two years
younger than the Earl of Essex, who, in pursuance of
his promise to Lady Essex, the King placed about
the Prince as a sharer both in his studies and his
amusements. " They became very conversant and
." familiar, the Prince being near unto him in years,
" but nearer in affection." 1 The Prince matriculated
at Magdalen College, Oxford, in August, 1605 ; but
whether it was in the Tennis Court at Oxford, or
elsewhere, that the quarrel occurred between him
and Essex which is related by Mr. Codrington, we
are not informed.
The Prince and Essex were playing tennis to-
gether, when, after a set or two, a dispute arose
connected with the game. The Prince became so
angry, that he called Essex "son of a traitor;" on
which the latter hit the Prince on the head with his
racket, " so shrewdly," that he drew blood. The
quarrel came to the ears of the King, who examined
into it, and finding what provocation the Prince had
given, dismissed them with these words to his son :
" that he who did strike him then, would be sure,
" with more violent blows, to strike his enemy in
" times to come."
1 Life of Robert, Earl of Essex, by Robert Codrington, M. A., printed
in Harl. Misc. vol. i. p. 212.
CHAP. Vn. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 223
The recreations of Essex at Oxford, were " riding
" the great horse, running at the ring, and the
" exercise of arms. His other hours were occupied
" in the perusal of books that afforded most profit,
" not most delight."
In the autumn of 1605, King James was enter-
tained by the University of Oxford, when the degree
of M.A. was bestowed on the Earl of Essex, in
company with many other noblemen1 and knights.
On the 24th October, 1605, Mr. Chamberlain, writ-
ing to Sir Dudley Carleton at Paris, says : " The
" Earl of Essex, and the young Lord Cranborne2,
" shall marry two of my Lord Chamberlain's3
" daughters at Court very shortly : they only stay
" for the King's coming, who is looked for in the
" next week."
This match is said to have been made by King
James, in his care for the children of the late Earl of
Essex; but as, in the divorce case in 1613. he in-
veighed strongly against " the marrying of young
" couples before they be acquainted one with another,"
that assertion may be considered doubtful. Others
say that Salisbury, who desired to connect his son
and Essex, was the contriver ; but as Lord Cran-
borne's marriage did not take place till three years
later, that could hardly be the case. By whom-
soever proposed, nothing could be less happy than
the result of this union.
1 Ath. Oxon. iii. 189. gives the names.
2 Cecyll was created Viscount Cranborne in 1604, and Earl of Salis-
bury the 4th May, 1605.
3 Earl of Suffolk, Lord Chamberlain, 1603.
224 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
It appears by the following letter, the earliest I
have discovered of Essex's writing, that he and Lord
Cranborne, who, as well as himself, had been brought
up with the Prince, were somewhat more than mere
playfellows at this time.
No. XL.*
Essex to Salisbury.
My most honorable good Lord, — I humbly beseech your
Honor that you will be pleased to excuse my Lord of Cran-
borne's not coming to the Court, for the knowledge of your
L. pleasure was brought unto him so late, as he could not
with any ease or conveniency observe the same ; but if your
Honor will please to give us leave to keep company together
until the next week, we will then be ready to do our service
to his Highness, and I will ever acknowledge myself most
bound unto your good Lordship, and will always rest your
Honor's humbly to be commanded,
Ko. ESSEX.
Chesterford, this 5th September, 1605.
On the 5th January, 1606, the Earl of Essex was
married to Lady Frances Howard, and on that and
the following nights there were great entertainments
at Court in honour of the nuptials. Mr. Pory wrote
an account of the fetes to Sir Robert Cotton ; he
observes, " The bridegroom carried himself so gravely
" and gracefully, as if he were of his father's age. He
" had greater gifts given him than my Lord of
" Montgomery2 had, his plate being valued at 3000/. ;
> S. P. O.
2 Philip Herbert, who was created Earl of Montgomery, 4th May,
1605, married Lady Susan Vere, daughter of the Earl of Oxford.
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 225
"jewels, money, and other gifts, WOOL more.1 But
" to return; both Inigo, Ben2, and the actors, men
" and women, did their parts with great commenda-
" tion. The concert, or soul of the masque, was
" Hymen bringing in a bride, and Juno Pronuba's
" priest a bridegroom, proclaiming that these two
" should be sacrificed to nuptial union. Before the
" sacrifice could be performed, Ben Jonson turned
" the globe of the earth, standing behind the altar,
" and within the concave sat the eight men masquers,
" representing the four humors and the four affec-
" tions, who leapt forth to disturb the sacrifice to
" union. But amidst their fury, Reason, that sat
" above them all, crowned with burning tapers,
" came down and silenced them. These eight, to-
" gether with Reason, their moderatress, mounted
" above their heads, sat somewhat like the ladies
" in the scallop shell last year. About the globe
" hovered a middle region of clouds, in the centre
" whereof a grand concert of musicians, and on the
" cantons, or horns, sat the ladies, four at one corner,
" four at another, who descended upon the stage.
" These eight, after the sacrifice was ended, repre-
" sented the eight nuptial powers of Juno- Pronuba,
" who came down to confirm the union. The men
" were clad in crimson, the women in white ; they
" had every one a white plume of the richest heron's
" feathers, and were so rich in jewels as was most
1 The King's gift consisted of 506f oz. of gilt plate of sundry kinds.
2 Ben Jonson was the author of the masque, Inigo Jones the ma-
chinist.
VOL. II. Q
226 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
" glorious. I think they hired and borrowed all the
" jewels and ropes of pearls in both Court and City.
" The Spanish ambassador seemed but poor to the
" meanest of them. They danced all the variety of
" dances, both severally and promiscue ; and then the
" women and men, as namely the Prince, who danced
" with as great perfection and as settled a majesty
" as could be devised, the Spanish ambassador, the
" Archduke's ambassador, the Duke," &C.1
The Lords who figured in the masque were Lord
Willoughby2, Lord Walden3, Sir James Hay4, Earl
of Montgomery 5, Sir Thomas Howard6, Sir Thomas
Somerset7, Earl of Arundel8, Sir John Ashley.
Their dress was taken from the antique Greek
statues, with some modern additions, which made
it " both graceful and strange." They wore Persic
crowns, with scrolls of gold plate turned outwards,
and wreathed with carnation and silver net lawn.
Their bodies were in carnation cloth of silver, " cut
" to express the naked in manner of the Greek
" thorax," with broad belts of cloth of gold em-
broidered and fastened with jewels ; mantles of
several coloured silks, as they were coupled in pairs :
first, sky -colour; second, pearl colour; third, flame
1 Nichol's Progresses of James I., ii. 33.
2 Robert, tenth Lord Willoughby of Eresby, afterwards Earl of Lind-
sey, killed at Edgehill, 23rd October, 1642.
3 Eldest son of the Earl of Suffolk.
4 Afterwards Earl of Carlisle, Viscount Doncaster.
5 Philip, brother of William Herbert, third Earl of Pembroke.
6 Second son of the Earl of Suffolk.
17 Third son of Edward, fourth Earl of Worcester.
8 Son of that Earl who died in the Tower in 1595.
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 227
colour ; fourth, tawny. They were fastened on the
right shoulder, and " fell compass down the back ...
" gracious folds." Their legs were encased in silver
greaves.
The ladies, who were arranged according to their
height, were, the Countess of Montgomery, Lady
Knollys, Mrs. A. Sackville, Lady Berkeley, Lady
Dorothy Hastings, Lady Blanche Somerset, Countess
of Bedford, Countess of Rutland. Their attire was
" wholly new for the invention, and full of glory." The
upper part, white cloth of silver, wrought with Juno's
birds and fruits ; a loose under garment, full gathered,
of carnation, striped with silver, and parted with a
golden zone. Beneath that, another flowing garment
of watchet cloth of silver, laced with gold, " through
•" all which, though they were round and swelling,
" there yet appeared some touch of their delicate
" lineaments, preserving the sweetness of proportion,
" and expressing itself beyond expression." Their
hair was carelessly bound under the circle of a rare
and rich coronet, adorned with choice jewels, from
the top of which flowed a transparent veil down to
the ground, whose verge, returning up, was fastened
to either side " in most sprightly manner." Shoes of
azure and gold, set with rubies, completed their
costume, every part of which abounded in ornament.
The next night being Monday, out of a niist made
of delicate perfumes, two females appeared, represent-
ing Truth and Opinion. After a dialogue between
them, their supporters appeared, sixteen knights on
each side, one side led by the Duke of Lennox, the
n 2
228 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
by the Earl of Sussex, who " addressed them-
to fight," but were, after a time, interrupted
by an angel, who made a speech, and, reconciling
the rival ladies, they retired hand in hand.
As Lord Essex was but fifteen years of age at the
time of his marriage, and the bride a year or two
younger, it was arranged that he should pass the
interval until his arrival at man's estate in foreign
travel. This, reasonable as it appears, was probably
in some degree the origin of their future misfortunes ;
for had Essex been constantly in the society of his
young wife, she might have bestowed on him that
ardent affection, which, given to another whom to
love was a crime, and unchecked, ungoverned by any
principle, hurried her into an abyss which is fearful
to contemplate. Not only was she separated from
her husband, but she remained in the worst school,
under the worst guide that could have been selected,
— at Court, under the care of her mother, Lady
Suffolk. That lady, herself a beauty, avaricious, and
unprincipled, was more than suspected of having
bartered her favours for gold.1 One of her occupa-
tions was the endeavour to find a young Englishman
1 Lady Suffolk as well as her husband received bribes for political
services. " The Constable of Castile procured a peace so advantageous
for Spain and disadvantageous for England; there was not one
courtier of note that tasted not of Spain's bounty, nor any in so large a
proportion as the Countess of Suffolk : in truth, Audley End, that
famous and great structure, may be said to have its foundations of Spanish
gold." — Secret History of the Court of James /., vol. i. p. 338. Audley
End was built by the Earl of Suffolk. In 1618, Lord S. was tried in the
Star Chamber for peculation in his office of Lord Treasurer, and con-
demned to imprisonment, and to pay a fine of 30,000/.
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 229
to occupy the post of favourite, the courtiers being
extremely jealous of the favours lavished by James
on the Scotch. For this purpose she sought out
handsome youths, dressed them up, curled their hair,
and perfumed their breaths1, and placed them in the
way of the King, in the hope they would attract his
notice. Henry Rich2, afterwards Earl of Holland,
was one of the youths on whose " curious face and
" complexion " James cast his eye with favour, but
who, little as his character deserves esteem, is at least
to be respected in this, that he scorned to accept so
degrading a post. The manner in which he showed
his repugnance to subscribe to the conditions neces-
sary for the royal favourite, was sufficiently marked.
One day, after King James had lolled upon his neck,
and slabbered his face, Henry Rich, who could not
restrain his disgust, turned aside from the King, and
spat upon the ground.
Neither the example nor precepts of Lady Suffolk,
were therefore likely to keep Lady Essex in the
straight road. To show the reader what kind of
lessons were to be learnt at Court, I cannot do better
than transcribe part of a letter from Sir John
Harrington, " the witty godson " of Queen Elizabeth,
to Secretary Barlow, describing the entertainment of
Christian IV., King of Denmark, who visited London
in July, 1606: "The ladies abandon their sobriety,
1 Secret History of the Court of James I., vol. i. pp. 375, 376. All
those plans were upset by the accident of Carr breaking his leg.
2 Henry Rich was second son of Lord Rich and Penelope Devereux,
and godson to Henry IV. of France.
Q 3
230 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
" and roll about in intoxication. One day a great
" feast was held, and, after dinner, the representation
" of Solomon his temple, and the coming of the
" Queen of Sheba was made, or, as I may better say,
" was meant to have been made, before their Majesties,
" by device of the Earl of Salisbury and others.
"But alas ! as all earthly things do fail to poor
" mortals in enjoyment, so did prove our present-
" merit hereof. The lady who did play the Queen's
" part, did carry most precious gifts to both their
" Majesties ; but, forgetting the steps arising to the
" canopy, overset her caskets into his Danish Majesty's
" lap, and fell at his feet, though I rather think it
" was in his face. Much was the hurry and confu-
" sion ; cloths and napkins were at hand to make all
" clean. His Majesty then got up, and would dance
" with the Queen of Sheba ; but he fell down and
" humbled himself before her, and was carried to an
" inner chamber, and laid on a bed of state, which
" was not a little defiled with the presents of the
" Queen bestowed on his garments, such as wine,
" cream, jelly, beverage, cakes, spices, and other good
" matters. The entertainment and show went
" forward, and most of the presenters went back-
" ward or fell down, wine did so occupy their upper
" chambers. Now did appear in rich dress, Hope,
" Faith, and Charity. Hope did essay to speak, but
" wine rendered her endeavour so feeble, that she
" withdrew, and hoped the King would excuse her
" brevity. Faith was then all alone, for I am certain
" that she was not joined with good works, and left
CHAP. VII. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 231
" the Court in a staggering condition. Charity came
" to the King's feet, and seemed to cover the multitude
" of sins her sisters had committed ; in some sort she
" made obeisance, and brought gifts, but said she
" would return home again, as there was no gift
" which heaven had not already given His Majesty.
" She then returned to Hope and Faith, who were
" both sick in the lower hall. Next came Victory, in
" bright armour, and presented a rich sword to the
" King, who did not accept it, but put it by with his
" hand, and by a strange medley of versification
" did endeavour to make suit to the King. But
" Victory did not triumph long ; for after much
" lamentable utterance, she was led away like a silly
" captive, and laid to sleep on the outer steps of the
" antechamber. Now did Peace make entry, and
" strive to get foremost to the King ; but I grieve to
" tell how great wrath she did discover unto those of
"her attendants, and much contrary to her semblance,
" most rudely made war with her olive branch, and
" laid on the pates of those who did oppose her
" coming. We are going on hereabouts as if the
" devil was contriving every man should blow himself
" up by wild riot, excess, and devastation of time and
" temperance. The great ladies do go well masked,
" and indeed it be the only show of their modesty to
" conceal their countenance. But, alack ! they meet
" with such countenance to uphold their strange
" doings, that I marvel not at aught that happens.
" I do say --but not aloud — that the Danes have
u again conquered the Britons ; for I see no man, or
Q 4
232 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII
" woman either, that can command himself or herself.
" I wish I was at home. 0 rus, quando te aspiciam! " *
Lord Essex did not go abroad until the spring of
1608 ; but there is no mention of his presence at any
Court festivities between his marriage and his depar-
ture, excepting on one occasion that the King and
Prince of Wales were entertained at Merchant Tailors'
Hall, when the latter, and by his desire the Lords
" present who loved him and were not free of other
" companies," were made members of that society :
among the number was the Earl of Essex.
The first place that he visited was Paris. We learn
from the letters which follow, that he was most
graciously received and entertained by Henry IV.,
who had always felt great regard and esteem for his
father. From that time until his return to England,
after an absence of between three and four years, very
little is known of his movements ; a few letters to
the Prince of Wales, and to Mr. Newton, their
common tutor, are all written from France. Arthur
Wilson says he also travelled in Germany; and it
is very probable he might have visited his own
country during that period, but no record exists of
either.
No. XLI.2
Lord Carew to the Prince of Wales.
May it please your Highness, — The opportunity of this
bearer yieldeth me two causes of writing. The first, to pre-
1 Nug. Ant. i. 348.
2 Harl. MSS. 7007. 216. Sir George Carew, Master of the Ordnance
under Elizabeth, was created, 3 James I., Lord Carew of Clopton, and in
I Charles I., Earl of Totness; ob. S. P. M. 1629.
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 233
sent mine own humble duty, having as yet none other means
of professing my readiness and desire to shew my devoted
affection toward your service, which should more effectually
appear, if I might have the honor and happiness of receiving
your gracious commandments in any thing that my weak
means were able to accomplish ; the other, to witness unto
your Highness, that by the King your uncle's commandment,
and mine advice, this gentleman, Monsieur de St. Antoine 1,
hath made some longer stay in these parts, than his desire to
have been attendant on your person, in his place of service,
could otherwise have permitted. To the end he might ac-
company my Lord of Essex to Fontainebleau, whither the
King invited his Lordship to come unto him, to use him
with respect and kindness, in leading him on hunting with
him, and making other demonstrations of favor towards him.
And because none of my Lord's own attendants were ac-
quainted with the manner and customs of this Court, there-
fore recourse was had to Mons. de St. Antoine's experience
and judgment in that behalf. Where he hath both much
steaded his Lordship ; and besides been a hearer of that high
and honorable opinion, which is generally held in these parts,
of your noble towardliness, or rather accomplished virtues and
parts of worthiness. For the continuance and prospering of
the which, in long life and honor, praying to the Almighty,
I humbly leave your Highness to His most holy protection ;
resting your Highness' most humbly devoted in all loyalty,
Paris, 1st April, 1608. G. CAREW.
No. XLII.2
Essex to the Prince of Wales.
Most gracious Prince, — I do in these few lines present
my humblest duties unto your Highness. Being now entered
1 The Prince's riding master.
2 Harl. MSS. 7007. 440. This letter is endorsed " My lo. of Essex,
No. 2."
234 LIVES OP THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII.
into my travels, and intending the end thereof to attain to
true knowledge and to better my experience, I hope God
will so bless me in my endeavours, as that I shall return an
acceptable servant unto your Highness. My heart, noble
Prince, stands humbly and truly affected, and the world can
yield me no such comfort as to be numbered among those
that do indeed honor and reverence you with their entirest
thoughts. I will every day pray upon the knees of my
humblest heart, that God will bless your Highness with many
and most happy days. Your Highness' humblest servant,
Montreuil, this 24th of May. Ko. ESSEX.
No. XLIII.1
Essex to Mr. Newton.
Good Mr. Newton, — The hope I have of your kindness,
makes me the more unwillingly to trouble you with my com-
mendations, of which, if it will please you to accept, as they
are truly meant, with a loving affection, I shall be very
glad ; entreating your good opinion, I entreat further assu-
rance of your love, that you will be daily a means for me to
the Prince, my most noble master, that his Highness will
please to remit all past errors, and remember me, though in
a remote place, as one of his servants that will ever honor
him with^ an humble heart, and to my uttermost seek to
deserve well with the honestest and carefullest service I can
perform. I would willingly have written to his Highness
now ; but to presume too often may be interpreted a fault of
much boldness. I will pray humbly and heartily for his
Highness many happy and blessed days ; and I will ever, if
in this you will be my friend, love you with the love of an
honest man. I pray you that you will remember me to good
1 Lansd. MSS. 68. 22.
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 235
Mistress Newton; and so committing you to God's good
protection, I rest your very loving friend,
Blois, this 5th Sept. Ko. ESSEX.
No. XLIV.1
Essex to Mr. Newton.
Good Mr. Newton, — I have received your letter, full of
such comfort, as I shall think myself very unhappy if I do
not in some part grow worthy thereof. For your own kind
offer, I do acknowledge myself very much obliged to you. I
shall firmly rely upon your kindness, whenever I shall have
occasion to implore his Highness' goodness to me, and your
good furtherance therein : in the mean time, I do hold it a
great blessing to be continued in his honorable good opinion ;
to effect which my own means is small or none, your good
offices will be of power, and available in this. I pray you
shew your love to me, and as I will ever be an honest faith-
ful servant to my worthy master, so will I be a loving, faith-
ful man to you, and will be very proud if you will hold me
in the number of your assured loving friends.
Blois, this 15th October. Ko. ESSEX.
The above are all that remain of Essex's letters
from abroad ; his last correspondence with the
Prince may be placed here, before I proceed to
narrate the scandalous transactions, which ended in
the annulling, by an extra-judicial process, of the
marriage of Lord and Lady Essex.
1 Lansd. MSS. 68. 21.
236 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VII*
No XLV.1
Essex to the Prince of Wales*
Most mighty Prince, — Let it out of your great goodness
be pardoned, if, in forwardness of my zeal, I took boldness to
present my humble duty to your Highness' most gracious
acceptance. In the poorness of my fortune, I am not able to
give better testimony of my true affected heart to your ser-
vice ; which, were it so good as it would give means, no
creature should be more careful and forward to do your
Highness honor, than myself: as it is, that, with my life,
shall be freely expended, to continue your princely good
opinion of me. In hope of this, your royal nobleness, none
shall more truly pray for the increase and continuance of
your Highness' great happiness, or stand more heartily de-
voted to perform all hearty obedience, than your Highness'
poorest servant,
Eo. ESSEX.
No. XL VI.2
The Prince to Essex.
My respect hath always been such unto you, that I was
well content to see the late remembrance of your affection
unto me by your letter ; and would be no less glad to see
you at some times, if your occasions did afford you the means,
according to your desire. But whatsoever be wanting in
that kind, I am well persuaded will be supplied by the con-
tinuance of your hearty affection, which shall ever be re-
garded by me with that kindness which can be expected from
your very good friend,
HENRY.
1 Harl. MSS. 7008. 105. ; not dated, but endorsed " My lo. of Essex,
1612."
2 Harl. MSS. 7008. 105.
/
CHAP. VII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 237
No. XL VII.1
Essex to the Prince of Wales.
My most gracious Prince, — It is my truest contentment
to receive so noble a testimony of your Highness' favor, as it
hath pleased you to grace me with in Mr. Newton's letter ;
I will thereby give myself assurance of your princely good-
ness, whensoever I shall be emboldened humbly to implore
the virtue thereof. And, my most princely master, I can
but vow in the uprightness of my innocent heart, that when-
soever your Highness shall lend your princely hand to the
raising of my poor fortune, it shall be to enable a servant
that will always be ready to do you his best and faithfullest
services to the last mite of his estate, to the last breath of his
life.
Thus much all your Highness' servants will be ready to
offer ; thus much I will be ever ready to perform.
So most humbly praying your gracious pardon, I presume
to kiss your princely hands, and will ever pray to God for
the long, happy, and prosperous continuance of your blessed
life. Your Highness' most humble and most faithful servant,
Bo. ESSEX.
1 Harl. MSS. 7008. 104. ; not dated, but endorsed " Lord Essex, No. 5."
238 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CuAr. VIII.
CHAPTEE VIII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
RISE OF CARR TO BE FAVOURITE. — LADY ESSEX BECOMES ATTACHED
TO HIM. SHE REFUSES TO LIVE WITH HER HUSBAND. HER
LETTERS TO MRS. TURNER AND DR. FORMAN, FROM CHARTLEY.
THE CONNECTION OF LADY ESSEX AND ROCHESTER BECOMES
NOTORIOUS. — A COMMISSION APPOINTED TO INQUIRE INTO THE
PETITION OF LADY ESSEX FOR DISSOLUTION OF THE MARRIAGE.
— ITS PROCEEDINGS ESSEX CHALLENGES MR. HENRY HOWARD.
IN the autumn of the year 1607, there appeared at
Court, in the suite of Lord Hay1, a youth of " comely
" visage and proportionable personage, mixed with a
" courtly presence," named Robert Carr. Lord Hay,
having a part to perform in a tilting match, sent his
device to the King, according to the custom of those
pastimes, by Carr, who acted as his esquire. In
dismounting from his horse to perform this duty,
the animal started, threw him to the ground, and his
leg was broken by the fall. This accident happening
to one whose good looks he had already noticed,
called forth all the sympathies of King James, who
directed that he should be carried into the palace,
1 Son of Sir James Hay, of Kingask, created by King James successively
Lord Sawlie, Viscount Doncaster, and Earl of Carlisle. His second
wife was Lady Lucy Percy, whose beauty was celebrated by Waller and
other poets. His expenditure was so enormous, that of 400,000^ of gifts
received from the King, he left at his death neither a house nor an acre
of land.
CHAP. VIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 239
and there tended. His Majesty was also pleased to
visit the interesting patient every day ; the result of
which was, that in the month of December, the chry-
salis, casting off the grubby form of a page, which
till then he had borne, burst forth in all the butterfly
glory of a royal favourite. He was sworn Gentleman
of the Bedchamber, and knighted. No suit, petition,
letter, or grant, from this time, either reached or de-
parted from the royal hand, except through the
favourite ; by which means, and the lavish gifts of his
master, he had become so enriched in a short time,
that on the 9th April, 1611, he was elevated to the
peerage as Viscount Rochester.
At this period Lady Essex was just entering her
eighteenth year. She had, says Arthur Wilson, " a
" most sweet and bewitching countenance, hiding a
" wicked heart." Sir Symons d'Ewes l positively
asserts, that, set on by her great-uncle Northampton,
she captivated the Prince of Wales, who first en-
joyed her. Sir Charles Corn wallis2 opposes this no-
tion very strongly ; while Arthur Wilson says, that
the Prince threw many admiring glances towards
her, until observing that she was captivated by
Rochester, he soon slighted her. There is an anec-
dote related, that on one occasion, when she dropped
her glove, a courtier picked it up and brought it to
the Prince, thinking he was performing an accept-
1 Life written by himself. Harl. MSS. 646. 27.
2 Second son of Sir Thomas Cornwallis, of Brome Hall, Suffolk. He
was some time ambassador in Spain, and was treasurer of the Prince's
household.
240 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VIII.
able service. The Prince, however, rejected it,
saying, he would have no glove that was stretched
by another.
I incline to the belief that the Prince of Wales, if
he ever became an admirer of Lady Essex, was a
rejected suitor ; and that in the absence of her Lord,
forgetting, or possibly indifferent to her duty, she
gave her whole heart to Rochester. The exceeding
inconsistency of the various writers of this period as
to dates and intervals of time, renders it difficult to
ascertain, with any approach to exactness, when
Lord Essex returned to England to assume his
marital rights. I believe it to have been in the
summer or autumn of 1611. There is no proof of
any criminality between Lady Essex and Rochester up
to that time ; but probably they were then attached to
each other, and the return of her husband hastened
a declaration of their mutual feelings. It did more,
it brought to maturity all the evil passions of her na-
ture. Nevertheless, she dissembled so well, that Essex
ascribed to her " maiden bashfulness " all the cold-
ness she evinced in return for his ardent love, and
bore it for a time with the utmost patience and good
humour. He was at length, however, forced to call
upon Lord Suffolk to use his influence with his
daughter. At this crisis, Essex was unluckily at-
tacked by the small-pox ; and we may reasonably
presume, that the aversion felt towards him by his
wife, was not lessened by the disfiguring marks left
by the disease. " Yet he," says Arthur Wilson,
CHAP. VIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 241
" loved her with an extraordinary affection, having
" a gentle, mild, and courteous disposition, espe-
" cially to women, as might win upon the roughest
" natures." l
Lord Suffolk again interposed, and insisted that
Lady Essex should accompany her husband to
Chartley. She was compelled to obey ; but, de-
termined not to be defeated, she had recourse to
a certain Mrs. Turner, the widow of a doctor of
medicine, whose prodigal and profligate life had
brought her to want.2 Lady Essex had two objects
to attain ; the one was to prevent the access of her
husband, the other to maintain the constancy of
Rochester. By the advice of Mrs. Turner, one
Forman, a reputed conjuror and a quack doctor,
was called in, who promised, by his art, to afford
Lady Essex the assistance she desired. He made
little figures of brass and of wax, resembling Lord
Rochester, and the Countess, and the Earl of Essex ;
the former to be strengthened and united, the latter
weakened and melted away. But he did not trust
entirely to the black art ; he supplied philtres and
potions to be administered to the two noblemen,
which were to work upon them physically, and it
is quite possible with rather more effect than the
symbols of brass and wax.
On arriving at Chartley, Lady Essex shut herself
1 Life and Reign of James L, 1719, p. 686.
2 Mrs. Turner was celebrated as the inventor of yellow starch for ruffs,
which became very fashionable.
VOL. II. R
242 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VIII.
up in her apartments, entirely separating herself
from her husband, whom, when she was compelled
to see him, she received with reproaches and mur-
murs, calling him "cow, beast, and coward," — terse,
if not elegant, language from a beauty in her teens ;
all which he bore patiently for a long time, hoping
thus to win her affections.
The endeavours of her husband to please her,
the influence of her father, mother, brother, were
alike exerted in vain. Her passion for Rochester
was as a hurricane, sweeping before it every vestige
of decency and propriety, and was only strengthened
by opposition ; no crime now appeared too great, if it
was to procure her the power of gratifying her law-
less love.
A letter to Mrs. Turner, found in that person's
desk, notwithstanding the injunction of the writer
to burn it, shows how recklessly she placed herself
in the power of these infamous instruments, in her
eagerness to effect her purpose. It is a letter which
could not be omitted from this narrative, containing
as it does, under her own hand, evidence of the gross
perjury of which she was guilty in the subsequent
process for annulling her marriage. It was written
from Chartley, and with another of the same period
to Dr. Forman, will place the reader behind the
scenes, when he comes to the proceedings of the
divorce commission.
CHAP. VIII. ROBERT, TIIIHD EARL OF ESSEX. 243
No. XL VIII.1
Lady Essex to Mrs. Turner.
[Burn tliis.]
Sweet Turner, — I am out of all hope of any good in this
world, for my father, my mother, and my brother said I
should lie with him. My brother Howard was here, and said
he would not come from this place all this winter, so that all
comfort is gone ; and, which is worst of all, my Lord hath
complained that he hath not lain with me, and that I would
not suffer him to use me as his wife. My father and mother
are angry, but I would rather die at a hundred times over,
for besides the suffering, I should lose his love if I lie with
him ; I will never desire to see his face any more, if my Lord
do that thing to me. My Lord is very well as ever he was,
and very merry, so as you may see in what a miserable case
I am. You must send the party word of all : he sent me
word all should be well ; but I shall never be so happy as
the Lord to love me. As you have taken pains all this time
for me, so now do all you can, for never so unhappy as now,
for I am not able to endure all the miseries that are coming
on me. But I cannot be helped so long as this man liveth ;
therefore pray for me, for I have need of it : but I should be
better if I had your company to ease my mind. Let him
know this ill news. If you can get this done, you shall have
as much as you can demand ; this is fair play. Your loving
sister,
FRANCES ESSEX.
Notwithstanding the great crimes into which the
passions of Lady Essex hurried her, and the horror
one must feel at the deliberate planning of the death
1 Cobbett's State Trials, ii. 930.
R 2
244 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VIII.
of her husband which is shown in the latter part of
this letter, one cannot but feel some sympathy for her
situation. Married, when a child, to one who, being
sent abroad, remained a stranger to her, she became
attached, during his absence, to another, and now
resisted courageously all the efforts and authority of
her parents, brother, and husband, to make her un-
faithful to the man she loved. Had she rested here,
her unhappy situation would have called for our
compassion.
Lady Suffolk was not likely to have instilled into
her daughter those principles by which alone the evil
passions of her nature might have been governed.
No wonder then, that under their influence, backed
by such advisers as Turner and Forrnan, she sank to
the lowest depth of crime and degradation.
No. XLIX.1
Lady Essex to Dr. Forman.
Sweet Father, — I must still crave your love, although I
hope I have it, and shall deserve it better hereafter. Ke-
member the galls! for I fear, though I have yet no cause but
to be confident in you, yet I desire to have it remain as it is.
You will see it continue still if it be possible, and, if you can,
you must send me some good news ; alas ! I have need of it.
Keep the Lord still to me, for that I desire. Be careful you
name me not to any body, for we have so many spies, that
you must use all your wits, and all little enough ; for the
world is against me, and the heavens favor me not. I hope
you will do me good, and if I be ungrateful, let all mischief
1 State Trials, ii. 932.
CHAP. VIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 245
come unto rne. My Lord is lusty and merry, and drinks
with his men, and all the content he gives me is to use me as
doggedly as ever before ; I think I shall never be happy in
this world, because he hinders my good, and ever will, I
think ; so remember, I beg, for God's sake, get me free from
this place. Your affectionate daughter,
FRANCES ESSEX.
P.S. — Give Turner warning of all things, but not the
Lord; I would not have anything come out, for fear of my
Lord Treasurer, for so he may tell my father and mother,
and fill their ears full of toys.
It appears by this postscript that Lady Essex
dreaded the interference of Lord Salisbury, should
he become acquainted with her practices. He seems,
indeed, to have been a check upon all parties, from
the King downwards. He died on the 24th May,
1612; and almost immediately afterwards, the con-
nection between Lady Essex and Rochester became
notorious. The Earl of Northampton, disgracing his
rank, his learning, and his grey hairs, to gain the
favour of the favourite, became pander to the dis-
honour of his niece, and arranged meetings for the
lovers at his own house. Essex, having discovered
that her aversion to himself was caused by her
passion for Rochester, had ceased to attempt any
exercise of authority over her. The stolen pleasures
of the guilty pair were uninterrupted, but they were
stolen, and that slight restraint became very soon too
grievous to be borne.
Northampton was again employed, and used his
influence with James, who was also anxious to gratify
his favourite, to such purpose that the King consented
B 3
246 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VIII.
to further a dissolution of the marriage. Lord Essex
was willing to aid in all ways that did not reflect
dishonour on himself; and at length a sort of com-
mittee of the friends of both parties, being the Lord
Privy Seal, the Lord Chamberlain1, the Earl of
Southampton, and Lord Knollys, was assembled to
consider how the proceedings for the separation
should be carried on. The state of the law at that
time made it a matter of great difficulty, and the
affair of Devonshire and Lady Bich, in 1606, had
created a very strong feeling, which was not yet
forgotten ; but it was at length arranged that Lady
Essex should present a petition praying for a dis-
solution on the ground of impotence in her husband.
This does not appear to be a mode of proceeding
that could much gratify the Earl of Essex, but was
probably the only course which could be adopted
under the circumstances ; and no doubt the King,
who prided himself greatly on his knowledge of
divinity and ecclesiastical law, had many a doubt to
be resolved, and argument to be answered, before he
approved of any plan.
He at length consented to appoint a Commission
under the Great Seal to inquire into, and resolve the
question, whether the complaint set forth by the
Countess of Essex in her petition were well founded.
On or about the 12th May, 1613, the Archbishop
of Canterbury2 was requested by the King to sit on
1 The Earls of Northampton and Suffolk.
2 George Abbot, whose narrative, written and signed by himself (Harl.
MSS. 6854. 261.), contains a full and very curious account of the pro-
ceedings. It is printed in State Trials.
CHAP. V11I. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 247
the Commission. After an interview with Essex, who
" was very reserved, but declared his ability, and
"that he would lay no blemish on himself," and
with the condition that other Bishops should be
joined with him, his Grace consented, and a Com-
mission was appointed, composed of the following
ten persons : George, Archbishop of Canterbury ;
John, Bishop of London ; Lancelot, Bishop of Ely ;
Kichard, Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry ; Sir
Julius Ca3sar, LL.D., Chancellor of the Exchequer ;
Sir Thomas Parry, LL.D., Chancellor of the Duchy
of Lancaster ; Sir Daniel Dun, LL.D. ; Sir John
Benett, LL.D. ; Doctors Francis James, and Thomas
Edwards. Some of the Commissioners, says the
Archbishop, were " very averse to the business,
" especially Sir Thomas Parry ; but after the L.
" Chamberlain had some private conversation with
" him one day at Windsor, he was quite altered."
It is not possible to go into the details of the case ;
the depositions and examinations may be found at
length in the State Trials. Lord Essex appears
throughout the whole of the proceedings to have
treated the lady with far more tenderness and deli-
cacy than she showed towards him, or in any way
deserved.
The Archbishop says, that when the Earl was
examined, " he used no ill speech of his Lady, for
" which we all much commended him." He said,
" When I came out of France I loved her ; I cannot
" so now, neither ever shall I." When he was
examined as to the article that she was virgo incor-
K 4
248 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CIIAP. VIII.
rupta, " he smiled and said, she saith so, and she is
" so for me." Sir Daniel Dun, catching at this,
desired the registrar to set down as the answer,
" credit articulum esseverum" " This," adds his Grace,
" gave me no great encouragement." It was resolved
that Lady Essex should be examined by a jury of
matrons. The Archbishop says, " The inspectrices
" who were chosen came most unwillingly, and how-
" soever Sir Jul. CaBsar and Sir Daniel Dun, whom
" we never suspected to be as parties in the cause,
" as afterwards they appeared to be, made all clear
" and fair weather, yet my Lord of London told us
" openly, that he, being with them, found that the
" ladies knew not well what to make of it ; that they
" had no skill, nor knew not what was the truth, but
" what they said was upon the credit of the midwives,
" which were but two, and I know not how tampered
" with. Lady Knevet declared her sorrow at being
" used in such a business, and wept all the day about
" it."
Mr. Chamberlain says1: —
The divorcement 'twixt the Earl of Essex and his Lady is
on foot, and I think will come shortly to a conclusion. It
hath been heard at Lambeth before certain Commissioners,
twice or thrice, but a huis clos ; all the difficulty is, that
though he be willing to confess his insufficiency towards her,
yet he will be left at liberty to marry any other, and stands
upon it that he is malefactus only ad illam. Now some
lawyers are of opinion, that if she will swear that he is im-
potent towards her, there is sufficient cause of divorce, which
1 In a letter to Sir D. Carlcton, 10th June, 1613, in S. P. O.
CHAP. VIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 249
it is thought she will make no bones of, being, as she pre-
sumes, provided of a second; which I should never have
suspected, but that I know he (Rochester) was with her
three hours together within these two clays, which makes me
somewhat to stagger, and to think that great folks will have
their ends, without respect of friends or followers. In the
mean time, the lady hath been visited by some ancient ladies
and mid wives expert in these matters, who find her, upon
their oaths, a pure virgin; which some doctors think a
strange asseveration, and make it more difficult than to be
discovered.
It was currently reported and believed, that Lady
Essex, having obtained permission to appear veiled
before these " ancient ladies," procured a substitute
who might justify their verdict.
Mr. Chamberlain to Dudley Carleton, 8th July: —
The divorce goes not so fast forward as was expected.
The lady, for her part, hath performed all that belonged to
her, and endured all trials ; but he is gone into the country
with protestation to stand and to abide what the Commis-
sioners shall award. But that will not serve the turn, for
there be certain proceedings wherein his presence is neces-
sarily required ; so that it is thought the matter will be pro-
tracted to see if it will fall of itself: for the case is so diffi-
cult, and of so dangerous and scandalous consequence, that
there is no hope that any sentence will give satisfaction. l
Southampton, writing to Sir R. Win wood on the
6th August, from some place not named, where he
awaits the first fair wind for England, says : —
Of the nullity, I see you have heard as much as I can
write, by which you may discern the power of a king with
1 S. P. O.
250 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VIII.
judges ; for of those who are now for it, I knew some of them,
when I was in England, were vehemently against it, as the
Bishops of Ely and Coventry. For the business itself, I
protest 1 shall be glad, if it may lawfully, that it may go
forward, though of late I have been fearful of the conse-
quence, and have had my fears increased by the last letters
which came to me : but, howsoever, the manner of inter-
posing gives me no cause of contentment. l
On the 9th September, Mr. Chamberlain again
wrote to Sir Dudley Carle ton on this matter : —
That which most men listen after, is, what will fall out
betwixt the Earl of Essex and Mr. Henry Howard2, who is
challenged and called to account by the Earl for certain dis-
graceful speeches of him. They are both gotten over, the
Earl from Milford Haven, the other from Harwich, with
each of them two seconds. The Earl hath his base brother,
and one Captain Ouseley, or rather, as most men affirm, Sir
Thos. Beaumont, as one interested in the quarrel; Mr. Howard
hath one Mr. Ball, and Huntington Colbie, esteemed a very
valiant gentleman. The last news of them was, that the
Earl was at Calais, the other in Zealand. The King hath
sent a post to Calais to the Governor to stay them, and
young Gib of the bedchamber is sent with commandment
from the King to them both, if he come in time.
«
On hearing of the intended duel, the King imme-
diately interfered to prevent its taking place, riot only
by his own messengers, but through the Archduke's
ambassador, who sent circular letters to the Governors
of the towns in the Netherlands, desiring that Essex
and Howard should be arrested. This letter is in-
1 Winwood's Mem. iii. 475.
2 Henry Howard was third son of the Earl of Suffolk.
CuAP.VlII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 251
teresting, as it gives a description of Essex's person.
Another paper is appended, signed by the Earl's
seconds, from which it appears, that the King had
interposed to effect a reconciliation between the
principals ; that a paper was drawn up, read in the
presence of Sir Horatio Vere and Sir John Went-
worth, and signed by the seconds ; that subsequently
the seconds of Mr. Howard put forth a paper
professing to be that one, but containing a different
version of the story, of course unfavourable to Essex,
who, thereupon, disowning the act of his seconds,
they wrote this paper, declaring the statement of the
other party to be " merely false."
No. L.1
The Ambassador of the Archduke to .
Monsieur le Conte d'Essex, et le Sr. Henry Howard, fils
de MODS, le Conte de Suffolk, Grand Chamberlan du roy de
la Grande Bretagne, se sont desfier, et assigner jour au pays
de leur Altesses, pour mettre a effet leur combat ; et parceque
ce sont deux personages des plus qualifies de cette couronne
qui ont les dependences il nous en ay bien voulu
donner 1'avertance, et prier de vouloir faire le rapport a son
Altesse, affinque promptement soit donne ordre qu'ils soient
arretes prisonniers, et tenu avecq garde selon leur qualites
pour eviter le mal qui en pourroit resulter, qui est de grande
consideration.
Le Conte d'Essex est de moyenne stature: un peu maigre:
clieveulx noirs : sans barbe : la face un peu gastee de petites
verroles : age, de vingt trois ans ; estant accompagne de deux
aultres,
1 S. P. O.
252 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. VIII.
Le Sr. Howard est de la merne stature et age : port ant
long cheveulx couleur de chataigne : le visage ronde : peu de
barbe : semblablement accompagne de deux aultres ; selon
les advertences que j'ay, ils ont pris le chemin de Bruxelles.
Sur ce, Monsieur, je vous baise le mains en grande haste.
De Londres, le 8th Septembre, 1613.
FERD. DE BOJSSEHOT.
M. Montmorenci, Governor of Bruges, in a letter
to King James of the 18th September1, informs him,
that on hearing of the arrival of His Majesty's mes-
senger, the two parties of English gentlemen made
their escape, the one on horseback, the other in a
chariot voiturier. Mr. Howard and his seconds, who
were in the latter, were arrested at Courtray, and
he had little doubt the other party would be cap-
tured at Gand. Sir William Turnbull recommended
that the Governor should be rewarded with 100
crowns, or an ambling horse, for having arrested
them.
Declaration of Essex's Seconds.
Whereas there has been a new relation of the quarrel be-
twixt my Lo. of Essex and Mr. Henry Howard, after his
Maj. had reconciled them, made by the four seconds before
Sir Horatio Vere and Sir John Wentworth, and the same
being drawn into the brief by Mr. Horton, one that was
secretary to the last Lord Treasurer, and we setting our
hands thereto, not reading it, but only hearing it read, not
mistrusting anything, but to find just dealing, have since
seen a copy thereof, which we find contrary to that which
was then agreed upon, and merely false in some main points ;
1 S. P. O. Flanders.
CHAP. VIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 253
we have a sight of the original copy for our satisfaction, not
to satisfy the world, for the which we do unjustly suffer a
hard censure.
Be it known, therefore, to all men, that we do utterly
disclaim from any such writing. And whereas we have been
hitherto tender and sparing of their reputations, now, find-
ing that they have put this trick upon us, we do publish to
the world no writing but the first to be true — to which we
have only set our hands — and they have acknowledged to be
true before Sir Horatio Vere and Sir Jno. Wentworth, and at
divers other times to others ; and so true, as they neither can
nor dare deny it, in which is plain to be seen they might
have fought if they would. And thus much we will be
ready to justify, upon the sacrament first, and then with our
swords.1
WALTER DEVEREUX.
EICH. OUSELEY.
Mr. Chamberlain wrote, on the 24th October, that
the quarrel between Essex and Howard was com-
pounded and taken up by the King himself, but
that the matter was not ended ; it was afterwards
hushed up by the authority of the Council, and in
a subsequent letter Mr. Chamberlain encloses a
proclamation about the late quarrel, " penned by the
" King's own hand."
1 S. P. O.
254 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
CHAPTER IX.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
FURTHER PROCEEDINGS OP THE COMMISSION, AND SENTENCE AN-
NULLING THE MARRIAGE OF ESSEX. ROCHESTER CREATED EARL
OF SOMERSET, MARRIES LADY ESSEX. FESTIVITIES AND PRE-
SENTS ON THE OCCASION. ROCHESTER GUIDED BY OVERBURY.
THEY QUARREL. OVERBURY IS SENT TO THE TOWER, AND
THERE POISONED. SOMERSET AND HIS WIFE ARRESTED.
THEY ARE TRIED AND CONVICTED OF THE MURDER OF SIR
THOMAS OVERBURY. — THE UNEASINESS OF JAMES. LORD AND
LADY SOMERSET ARE PARDONED.
WE now return to the proceedings of the Commis-
sioners, the majority of whom, including the Arch-
bishop, were unwilling, under the circumstances of
the case, to sanction the dissolution of the sacred
bonds of matrimony. They were tampered with in
various ways; the King endeavoured by his argu-
ments to persuade the Archbishop, but in vain. His
Grace desired permission to retire from the Com-
mission ; but his rank and authority were wanted,
and he was not allowed to do so. Attempts were
made to intimidate him, by throwing out insinuations
of various kinds. Among other arguments brought
forward to move him to consent to the dissolution
without farther proof, this was used by Sir Daniel
Dun : " What a disgrace will this be to my L.
" Chamberlain and his daughter, if it should not
" go forward." To which the Archbishop answered,
CHAP. IX. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 255
" They should have looked to that before they did
" begin it; we were not the men that set the
" matter on foot. If it were a disgrace, they put it
" on themselves ; but, quoth 1, am I, to save any man
" from disgrace, to send my soul to hell, to give a
" sentence whereof I see no ground ? I will never do
" it." And he kept his ground right manfully,
against the obscure hints of James, the persuasions
of some, and the sneers and insinuations of others,
mingled with threats of the consequence of his ob-
stinacy; a circumstance reflecting no small honour
on his character, in that age.
He went farther ; he wrote a paper of reasons
against annulling the marriage, in which he cited the
authority of many of the fathers, and learned divines
and doctors. He expressed great displeasure at
the idea of the marriage contract being dissolved
by collusion between the parties. It pleased the
King to answer this paper, who introduced a new
distinction, which Essex consented to allow, impoten-
tiam versus Jianc : but the quarrel between him and
Henry Howard occurring just then, it was resolved
not to examine the Earl again, lest he should, in his
resentment, give such evidence as would prevent the
annulling of the marriage ; and he, hearing how the
last admission was disapproved, recalled his consent,
and it was settled that the case should be decided on
the oath of Lady Essex alone.
The Commission as then composed, not being suffi-
ciently flexible, its sittings were adjourned, by royal
command, until the 18th September. In the interim,
256 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
the Bishops of Winchester and Kochester were added
to the number ; and on the 25th, by a majority of
seven to five, a sentence was passed, declaring the
marriage " utterly void." The Archbishop, the
Bishop of London, Sir John Benett, Doctors James
and Edwards, formed the minority.
Mr. Chamberlain writes thus : —
The marriage twixt the Earl of Essex and Lady Frances
Howard is dissolved, and pronounced a nullity, by the Bishop
of Winchester, who with the Bishop of Kochester, were only
supernumerary to the first commission, and so cast the
balance by weight of number, being seven to five. The
morning that the matter was to be decided, the King sent
express commandment, that in opening, they should not
argue, nor use any reasons, but only give their assent or
dissent ; and in the sentence there is no cause exprest, but
in these terms, propter latens et incur abile impedimentumS
The sentence was no sooner pronounced, than the
approaching marriage of Rochester to Lady Frances
was declared. That she might not lose rank by the
change of husbands, Rochester was, on the 4th
November, created Earl of Somerset and Baron of
Brancepeth; and, writes Mr. Chamberlain2 —
It is thought he shall not stay here, but ascend one step
higher, and shortly be made Marquis of Orkney, that his
mistress may be a better woman, if it may be, than she was
before. The marriage was thought should be celebrated at
Audley End the next week, and great preparation there was
to receive the King ; but I hear that the Queen being won,
1 S. P. O. To Sir D. Carleton, 24th October, 1613.
2 S. P. O. To Sir D. Carleton, 22nd November.
CHAP. IX. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 257
and having promised to be present, it is put off till Christ-
mas, and then to be performed at Whitehall. All the talk
now is of masquing and feasting at these towardly marriages,
whereof the one is appointed on St. Stephen's day in Christ-
mas, the other for twelfthtide. The King bears the charge
of the first, all save the apparel ; and no doubt the Queen
will do as much on her side, which must be a masque of
maids, if they may be found, and that is all the charge she
means to be at, save the bride's wedding gown, and the
marriage bed, wherein she will not exceed 500/., for she says
her maid Drummond is rich enough otherwise, as well in
wealth as in virtue and favor.
30th Dec. 1613. — The marriage was upon Sunday, with-
out such bravery as was looked for. She was married in her
hair1, and led to chapel by her bridesmen, a Duke of Saxony
that is here, and the Earl of Northampton, her great uncle.
The Dean of Westminster preached, and bestowed a great
deal of commendation upon the young couple, on the
Countess of Salisbury, and on the mother vine, as he called
her, the Countess of Suffolk, The Dean of the Chapel
coupled them, which fell out somewhat strangely, that the
same man should marry the same person, in the same place,
on the self-same day, after six or seven years, — I know not
whether, — the former party yet living. All the difference
was, that the King gave her last time, and now her father.
The King and Queen were both present, and tasted wafers
and hippocras, as at ordinary weddings.
I have little or no commendation for the masque, either
for device or dancing, only that it was rich and costly. The
masques were, the Duke of Lennox, the Earls of Pembroke,
Montgomery, Dorset, and Salisbury, the Lord Walden, with
1 It was the custom of virgin brides to go to the altar with their hair
hanging in loose curls ; it was considered a mark of no trifling audacity
that she assumed that distinction.
VOL. II. S
258 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
his three brethren, Sir Thomas, Henry, and Charles Howard,
Lord Scroope, Lord North, and Lord Hay.
The next day the Prince and bridegroom ran at the ring,
and yesternight there was a medley masque, of five English
and five Scots, who are called the high dancers, among whom
Sergeant-Major Borde, one Abraham Crummie, and Ach-
muty, that was at Padua and Venice, are esteemed the most
principal and lofty.
The Archbishop was at the marriage, but not the Bishop
of London.
Sir Ralph Winwood was there likewise, and had a very
fair pair of gloves, of three pound price ; which he well de-
served, for he made a suit of apparel against this wedding, of
only doublet, hose, and cloak, all black, and without any kind
of gold, silver, or embroidery, that cost him above four score
pounds, which I write, that you may see how unreasonable
things are risen here, and what a chargeable world we live in,
He presented a very fair basin and ewer, of 225 oz., that was
given him by the States, and of so excellent workmanship,
that the goldsmiths here offered 201. an oz. for it. The
presents, indeed, were more in number and value than ever
were given, I think, to any subject in this land. It were too
long, neither could I, if I would, set down the tenth part of
them ; yet for a taste of all, you shall have some few that come
to hand.
The City, the Merchant Adventurers, the East India Com-
pany, the Farmers of the Customs, sent all presents of plate to
a great value, which belike were well taken, for the Lord
Mayor and Sheriffs had rich gloves sent in requital.
Sir Thos. Lake, six goodly candlesticks, that cost above
1000 marks.
Sir Rob. Gary and Sir Rob. Mansfield lighted both upon
one invention ; which was, fire-shovel, tongs, andirons, creep-
ers, and all furniture of a chimney, of silver.
CHAP. IX. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 259
Another gave a cradle of silver, to burn sea-coal.
Sir Fulke Greville, a cup of gold.
Sir Chas. Wilmot, a warming-pan of gold.
The Countess of Shrewsbury, a basin and ewer, two pots,
and some vessel, all of gold.
The Earl of Exeter, basin and ewer of gold ; his lady, a
pot of gold.
The Lord Admiral, a very rich basin and ewer of gold, set
with stones, that was given him by the King of Spain.
The L. Privy Seal, plate to the value of 1500/., besides a
sword to the bridegroom, the hilts and all the furniture of
gold, curiously wrought and enamelled : the very workman-
ship cost 100 marks, and the sword 5007.
The Earl of Salisbury, one suit of hangings that cost his
father 1500Z., and another suit of 800/.
You may guess at the rest by this scantling.
5th Jan. 1614. — The Lord Admiral's present proves not
to be pure metal, now it comes to the touch. The presents
are not valued by the goldsmiths at above 12,0007. This
great marriage continues still in gallantries and triumphs.
The Lord Mayor gave an entertainment in honour
of the event, by royal command ; and the festivities
terminated with the presentation of the " Masque of
" Flowers."
How little did the guilty pair conceive, in this their
hour of triumph, that the very ground they stood upon,
firmly based as it seemed on the favour and affection
of the King, was even then crumbling away beneath
their feet.
When Carr became, after the death of Salisbury,
the de facto Minister, he called to his aid Sir Thomas
Overbury, a man of considerable ability and knowledge
s 2
260 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
of affairs, by whose advice he steered his course.
When, however, it became known that Carr intended
to marry Lady Essex, his counsellor endeavoured to
dissuade him, as " nothing could be more destructive
" to their hopes than the committal of so great a
41 public injustice as to marry another man's wife,
" he living ; " and begged him to turn his thoughts
towards a more honourable object than one " whose
" disloyalty was infamous, and the brand of which
" would mark him also."
Henry Peyton, servant to Sir Thomas Overbury,
gave the following account of the quarrel between his
master and Rochester: — " In the quiet of the night,
" about a month before his master's commitment, he
" was attending in the chamber next the Privy
" Gallery for his master, who was waiting for Lord
" Rochester, who did not come in till two or three
" o'clock. On Lord Rochester's coming, he said to
" Overbury, ' What, are you there yet ?' To whom
" Sir Thomas replied, 4 Am I here, where have you
" been ? Will you never leave the company of that
" base woman ?' Which Rochester denying, he said,
" c It is too manifest ; and the King has bestowed
" great honor and gifts on you, and you overthrow
" yourself and all your fortunes by haunting the
" company of that woman ;' and, therefore, seeing he
" would take such courses as to ruin himself and
a fortunes, desired he might next morning have that
" which was due to him : l and you shall stand as
" you can, and I will shift for myself.' To which
" Rochester answered, c And my legs are straight
CHAP. IX. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 261
" enough to stand on mine own/ and so departed in
" displeasure ; and, as far as this deponent knoweth,
" who daily attended his master, they were never
" perfectly reconciled."1
Kochester acquainted Lady Essex with all that
Overbury had said, which so inflamed the evil
passions of that lady, that she immediately resolved
— and it cannot be doubted with the connivance, if
not the aid, of Rochester — to remove Overbury.
Accordingly, on the day that the King and Queen
accompanied their daughter, the bride of the Elector
Palatine, to Rochester, Lady Essex sent for one Sir
David Wood, to Greenwich. Sir David had quarrelled
with Overbury, and the latter refusing to meet him
in the field, Sir David meant to " give him the
" bastinado;" which Lady Essex hearing, thought he
would be a man fit for her purpose. She offered him
WOOL to kill Overbury, to which he said, that for all
the gold in the world he would not be a hangman,
nor take a Christian's blood ; but if she would get
Rochester's promise, under his hand, or given before
a witness, that he would, after it was done, set him
at liberty, he would " give him the sooner knocks for
" her sake." She required time, and soon after
sent to him to say that could not be ; but that she
would, on her life, warrant that he should be conveyed
away in safety. To which he replied, " that he might
" be accounted a great fool, if, upon a woman's word,
" he went to Tyburn."2
This plan failing, an attempt was made to remove
1 S. P. O. 2 Deposition of Sir D. W. in S. P. O.
s 3
262 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
him from the country, by offering him an embassy
to Russia. This he declined, nothing doubting that
the friendship of Rochester would bear him harmless.
So far from that, the opportunity was instantly
seized to commit him to the Tower for contempt, on
the 22nd April, 1613. Mr. Chamberlain says, that
the King desired to send him abroad, " to remove
" him from my L. of Rochester, as thinking it
" dishonor to him that the world should have an
" opinion that Rochester ruled him, and Overbury
" ruled Rochester." l Whatever may have been the
motives of the King, there is no doubt that they
were instilled into him by the contrivance of
Northampton and Rochester. Sir Thomas was no
sooner safely enclosed within the walls of the Tower,
than the Lieutenant, Sir W. Waad, was replaced by
Sir Jervas Elwes ; and one Weston, servant to the in-
famous Mrs. Turner, was appointed to be keeper of
the prisoner. Weston was then sent for by Mrs.
Turner, when Lady Essex asked him if he would give
Sir Thomas a glass of water which should be sent
him, and he should be well rewarded. Shortly after,
his son, who was apprentice to a haberdasher that
served the Countess with fans of feathers and other
wares, brought him a glass of water of a yellowish
and greenish colour. This he showed to the Lieu-
tenant, who rebuked him Christianly, and he cast it
into a gutter and brake it.2 About a fortnight
1 S. P. O. 29th April, 1613.
2 Western's confession. There are two letters in the S. P. O. from Lady
Essex to the Lieutenant of the Tower, which she sent with wine and jelly
for Overbury.
CHAP. IX. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 263
after, some of Rochester's servants came to inquire
how Overbury did, and whether he would like tarts
or jelly, which were sent him as coming from
Rochester, and which Weston received orders from
the Countess not to allow any person but Overbury
to eat.
In June, Rochester wrote to Overbury, enclosing
a white powder, which he desired him to take with-
out fear : " It will make you sick, but fear not ; I will
" make this a means for your delivery, and for the
" recovery of your health. "
During his imprisonment, Overbury was never
allowed to see any of his friends, from which it may
be inferred that he possessed some secret which it was
dreaded that he might divulge. Every article of his
food appears, at one time or another, to have been
drugged ; but although he languished, his strength of
body carried him on, and his enemies becoming im-
patient, a dose strong enough to do its fatal work
was administered to him as a glyster on the 14th
September. He was buried in haste and secrecy,
without the commonest decency being observed. It
was soon suspected that Overbury had been un-
fairly dealt with ; but it was not until Somerset's in-
fluence began to wane before the rising favour of
George Yilliers, that any body ventured to attack the
criminals.
Northampton died the 15th June, 1614 ; the Earl of
Suffolk became Lord Treasurer, and Somerset suc-
ceeded him in his office of Lord Chamberlain.
George Villiers, a younger son of Sir George Villiers,
s 4
264 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
of Brookesby, Leicestershire, obtained the office of
Cupbearer to the King. Tall, well favoured, and
polished by his residence at the French Court, this
youth immediately attracted the notice of his royal
master. In April of the following year, he was
knighted, and made Gentleman of the Bedchamber ;
and by the contrivance of the Earls of Bedford,
Pembroke, Hertford, and with the consent of the
Queen, was fairly installed as rival favourite.
Then did Secretary Win wood hint to James the
suspicions that existed concerning the manner of
Overbury's death. Sir E. Coke was instructed to
investigate the matter, and the result was, the resolu-
tion to try Somerset, his wife, Sir Jervas Elwes, Mrs.
Turner, Weston, and Franklin. Sir Thomas Monson,
who had recommended "Weston to be keeper of
Overbury, was arraigned, but his trial was not
concluded.
Somerset accompanied the King to Royston one
Friday, and then taking leave, James hung about his
neck, slabbering his cheeks, saying, u For God's sake,
" when shall I see thee again ? On my soul, I shall
" neither eat nor sleep until you come again ! " The
Earl told him, on Monday. " For God's sake, let
« me!" said James; " Shall I, shall I?" and lolled
about his neck. " Then for God's sake, give thy Lady
" this kiss for me," — doing the same at the stairs' head,
the middle, and the foot of the stairs. Somerset was
not in his coach when the King used these very words,
which were repeated to Sir A. Weldon, — " I shall
" never see his face more." On the arrival of
CHAP. IX. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 265
Somerset in London, he was arrested, his wife having
been so previously to his arrival.1
At an inquiry before Lord Zouch, Secretary
Winwood, Sir Fulke Greville, Chancellor of the Ex-
chequer, and Sir Thomas Parry, Chancellor of the
Duchy, Richard Weston had, on the 27th September,
made a full confession. Somerset was committed on
the 18th October, 1615; but Lady Somerset being
pregnant, was for the time placed under surveillance.
Sir Jervas Elwes, Turner, Franklin, and Weston,
were convicted and hanged during the month of
November.
On the 6th April, 1616, we learn from Mr. Cham-
berlain that —
The Lady of Somerset was committed to the Tower on so
short warning, that she had scant leisure to shed a few tears
over her little daughter at the parting ; otherwise she carried
herself every way constantly enough, saving that she did
passionately deprecate and entreat the Lieutenant, that she
might not be lodged in Sir Thomas Overbury's lodging.
20th May. — I come tired from hearing a piece of the Earl
of Somerset's arraignment, who is but now in the midst of
his answer, the proceedings against him having continued
ever since ten o'clock in the morning till five, that he began
to answer for himself. He denies all, even his own letters,
saying they be counterfeited. I was there by six o'clock in
the morning, and for 10s. had a reasonable place ; but the
weather is so hot, and I grew so faint with fasting, that I
could hold out no longer, especially when I heard they had
sent to provide torches. More ladies and great personages
there, than ever were seen, I think, at any trial.
1 Sec. Hist, of the Court of James I., p. 411.
266 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
His lady was arraigned yesterday, and made shorter work
by confessing the indictment, so that all was over and we
home before noon. She was pity by her sober demeanor,
which yet, in my opinion, was more curious and confident
than was fit for a lady in such distresses ; and yet she shed
or made show of some few tears divers times.
The Earl of Essex was at her arraignment, but somewhat
more privately than this day, when he stood full in his face.1
Lady Somerset wore at her trial a dress of black
tammel, a cypress chaperon, a ruff, and cuffs of cob-
web lawn. While the indictment was being read,
she trembled and shed tears ; at the name of Weston,
she concealed her face with her fan; and on being
called to plead, answered, with an obeisance, Guilty,
" with a low voice, but wonderful fearful. " When
she was asked whether she had anything to say why
sentence should not be passed, she only begged the
Lords to intercede for her, but in so low a tone, that
the Lord High Steward could not hear her.
The love of personal decoration, for which Somerset
was remarkable, displayed itself in his dress. He
wore, at his trial, " a plain black satin suit, laid with
" two satin laces in a seam ; a gown of uncut velvet,
" lined with unshorn, all the sleeves laid with satin
" lace ; a pair of gloves with satin tops ; his George
" about his neck, his hair curled, his visage pale, his
" beard long, his eyes sunk in his head."
He pleaded " Not Guilty ; " but on being asked
whether he had anything to say why judgment of
death should not be given against him, acknow-
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. IX. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 267
ledged that the sentence of their Lordships must
be just.
The uneasiness shown by James during Somerset's
trial, the menaces of the latter while in the Tower,
and the efforts of Bacon to soothe him, have given rise
to many comments, and appear to have arisen from a
dread on the part of the King, that some secret,
disgraceful to him, might be revealed, which pos-
sibly was his connivance at the removal of Sir
Thomas Overbury.
" I will not omit," writes Mr. Sherborne *, " to
" acquaint you that the day of the late Earl of
" Somerset's arraignment, His Majesty was so ex-
" treme sad and discontented, as he did retire
" himself from kll company, and did forbear both
" dinner and supper, nothing giving him content-
" ment, until he had heard what answer the said
" Earl had made. It shewed something was feared
" would in passion have broken from him ; but
" when His Majesty had notice that nothing had
" escaped him more than what he was forced to
u answer to the business then in hand, His Majesty's
" countenance was soon changed, and he hath ever
" sithence continued in a good opinion." 2
On the 13th July, Lady Somerset's pardon was
signed ; Somerset declared he was an innocent man,
and would accept nothing less than a reversal of the
judgment. This could not be granted, and although
1 To Sir D. Carleton, May 31., in S. P. O.
2 See Hallam's Const. Hist. i. 347. note, for other evidences of the
King's alarm.
268 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. IX.
he might have had his pardon, with all his jewels
restored to him, and an allowance of 4000£. a year,
Lord and Lady Somerset continued to live together
prisoners in the Tower until 18th January, 1622,
when the King, by order in Council, set them at
liberty, confining them, however, to either Grayes or
Cowsham, two houses of Lord Wallingford's l in
Oxfordshire, and a distance of three miles from
either of them.
James also promised to restore Somerset's pro-
perty 2, but died before he did so ; and Somerset,
vainly petitioning Charles to fulfil his father's pro-
mise, was reduced to great poverty and obscurity.
The love which had caused him and his wife " to
" break through all restraints of decency or shame,
" declined in the private life to which they were
" condemned, until they loathed the sight of each
" other ; and for long, though residing in the same
" house, they lived as strangers to one another." 8
Lady Somerset was afflicted with one of those painful
and lingering diseases incident to women ; and on
her death-bed, is said, in the trouble of her mind, to
have cried out much upon the Earl of Essex, whom
she had so greatly injured.
She died in 1632, leaving a daughter Anne, then
sixteen years of age. William Lord Kussell, after-
1 Sir William Knollys, afterwards Earl of Banbury, ob. 1632, set. 88.
2 It appears that in the last year of his reign, King James, dissatisfied
with Buckingham, renewed his correspondence with Somerset, and gave
him hopes of a complete restoration to favour. — Hallam, Const. Hist. i.
347. note.
3 A. Wilson, Life and Reign of James I., p. 699.
CHAP. IX. ROBELiT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 269
wards Earl and Duke of Bedford, became attached
to her ; his father, naturally averse to an alliance
with the Somersets, desired him to choose a wife out
of any family but that. Opposition only strengthened
their attachment ; the King sent the Duke of Lennox
to Bedford to intercede for the young couple, who at
length consented, provided Somerset gave a fortune of
12,000£. with his daughter. To do this, the latter was
forced to sell his house at Chiswick, his plate, jewels,
and furniture ; but by reducing himself to complete
poverty, he secured the happiness of his daughter,
who married Lord Eussell in 1637, and became the
mother of William Lord Kussell, who died on the
scaifold, the 21st July, 1683. She had been brought
up in such careful ignorance of the cause of her
parents' misfortunes, that some time after her mar-
riage she was found in a swoon on the floor, having
read in a pamphlet an account of the frightful
crimes of which her father and mother had been
convicted.1
The Earl of Somerset survived his wife until the
year 1645; he was buried in St. Paul's, Covent
Garden.
1 Pennant's Journey > p. 496,
270 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
CHAPTEE X.
LIFE OF EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
THE ELECTOR PALATINE MARRIES THE PRINCESS ELIZABETH.—
THEIR FRIENDSHIP FOR ESSEX. ESSEX RETIRES TO CHARTLEY.
ARTHUR WILSON IS TAKEN INTO HIS SERVICE. — SIR WILLIAM
SEYMOUR MARRIES LADY FRANCES DEVEREUX. ORIGIN OF THE
THIRTY YEARS' WAR. — THE ELECTOR PALATINE CHOSEN KING
OF BOHEMIA. — -ESSEX SERVES IN THE PALATINATE.
I TRUST my readers will pardon the episode contained
in the last chapter, for the sake of the moral it bears.
Apparently successful as were the Earl and Countess
of Somerset in their guilty projects, we are struck
with the rapidity and weight with which retribution
fell on them ; their passionate and irresistible love
turned to hatred, each accusing the other of being the
author of their misfortunes, they ceased to be even
friends at the moment when, shunned by all the
world beside, it was most necessary they should be
all in all to each other ; and in this condition, having
lost all those worldly advantages for which they had
sacrificed their souls' welfare, dragged on for years a
miserable and remorseful existence.
In October, 1612, Frederick, Elector Palatine of the
Rhine, came over to England to espouse the Princess
Elizabeth, daughter of King James, then in her
sixteenth year. The Elector was lodged in Essex
CHAP. X. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 271
House. Great preparations had been made to cele-
brate the auspicious event by a long series of festi-
vities, when, on the 6th November, rejoicing gave
way to deep and universal mourning, occasioned by
the death of Henry, Prince of Wales, who, after an
illness of ten days, was carried off by a low malignant
fever. It was speedily rumoured that the Prince
had been poisoned, and a very minute account exists
of a post mortem examination taken in consequence.
There does not appear to have been any ground for
these reports ; indeed, the practice of physicians was
so fantastic and absurd, that one can hardly believe
that any patient could be recovered by them from
dangerous illness. There can be no doubt that the
heir to the throne was attended by the ablest of the
faculty; yet we find that the remedies considered
most effective, and the failure of which caused the
Prince to be given over, were pigeons applied to the
head, and a split cock to the soles of the feet.
The regrets of the nation for his loss were more
lasting and profound than those of his father, who
shortened the mourning as much as possible. On
Christmas Day, the Court was ordered to mourn in
satin : two days after the royal pair were affianced,
and the marriage was celebrated on St. Valentine's
Day, 1613. From this time may be dated the inti-
macy, and even friendship, which existed between the
Elector and his consort, and Lord Essex, during their
lives.
After the dissolution of his marriage in the autumn
following, Lord Essex, disgusted with the treatment
272 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
he had experienced, retired to his house at Chartley.
The disgrace and ridicule attending the whole of the
proceedings, must have been galling indeed to a proud
and sensitive spirit.
To repay the marriage portion of Lady Essex, he
was forced to sell the Manor of Bennington, in Hert-
fordshire ; and it is likely that he strove to drown the
recollection of his domestic misfortunes by plunging
into dissipation, as Arthur Wilson informs us that he
cut down his fine woods at Adderston, and also
received pecuniary assistance from his grandmother ;
while a letter1 exists, written by his father's old
secretary, Edward Reynolds, who had heard some
" private whisperings " that his Lordship " hath of
" late somewhat declined from that path, wherein
" heretofore he had, without straying, directed his
" steps ; and a little blemished his honor by the
" company of some persons that have abused the
" goodness of his noble nature." Mr. Reynolds,
urged by the " true and everlasting love " he bore to
the memory of Essex's " late thrice worthy father,
" the perfect pattern of all true bounty, honor, and
" nobility," and the love and respect he had for the
son, earnestly entreated him, if there were " any
" profane spirits " that sought to draw him to disho-
nourable courses, that he would have before his eyes
the lively image of his father, and remember that he
was the son of that " great and renowned Earl of
" Essex, whom all the world admired, and whose
1 in s. P. o.
CiiAP.X. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 273
u memory all England doth, and ever will, honor and
reverence/''
From this period, 1614, we are indebted to Arthur
Wilson1 for a very amusing account of his life, in the
service of Lord Essex for a great many years. The
accident which introduced him to that nobleman
deserves a short notice. Having spent nearly two
years abroad, instead of at the University, Wilson, on
his return, became a clerk in the Exchequer Office,
which place he shortly afterwards lost, and with a
few crowns in his pocket, took a chamber in Holborn,
and living thriftily, addicted himself to reading and
poetry. When his crowns were finished, he went
home to his father, " and got small comfort there."
" Yet," says he, " something I got of him, and some-
" thing from him. That which I got of him, he gave
" me ; that which I got from him, I took. For once,
" finding his closet open, I very ungraciously took
" from him ten Barbary ducats, out of a little box,
" which cost me many a tear since, when I seriously
" called to mind the injustice and wickedness of the
" fact." Just at this time, when the chances were
even, whether Master Wilson would go to the gallows
or no, a relative of his induced Mr. Wingfield, " a
" grave gentleman," steward to the Earl of Essex, to
take him down to Chartley.
While he was there, the following event occurred,
which he relates as follows : " Toward Michaelmas
"(1614) a great alarm and outcry arose in the
" house after dinner ; some thought it was fire, some
1 Account of his own life, printed in Peck's Desid. Curiosa, p. 460.
VOL. IT. T
274 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
" thieves, and all ran hither and thither. My Lord
" of Essex, and some Lords and Gentlemen with
" him, ran out on the drawbridge, for the house
" had a very deep moat around it. I ran where
" I saw others run, into the laundry. When I came
" there I found the cause. One of the laundry
" maids rinsing clothes in the rnoat upon a little
" gallery for that purpose, she fell into the water ;
" another coming to help her, was pulled in by
" her; the third to help both, was pulled in by
" both, which caused the shrieks and noise which
" begot this disturbance. The two last got out by
" help of poles the first comers reached unto them ;
" but she who fell in first, with the plunging of the
" water, was driven without reach, or sense of taking
" hold. So that my Lord of Essex, and all who
" stood on the bridge, cried out, ' Now she sinks !
" now she's gone!' I came, as God would have
" it, just as she was so, and had only a glimpse
" of where she sunk ; and being no time to study
" what to do, I instantly, with a running lep,
" bounced into the water. My plunging then
" brought her up again, and holding her up with
" one arm, I swam with the other ; the people drew
" her out, and with much ado recovered her. For
" this my Lord of Essex took me into liking, and
" would have me wait on him in his chamber ; and
" he presently furnished me with clothes, which
" begot envy ; and entrusted me with the keeping
" of his private purse."
Had Essex known the antecedents of Arthur Wil-
son's life, which he has so freely confessed to us, he
CHAP. X. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 275
might have deferred for a time this last mark of
confidence ; yet, in justice to him, it must be added,
that for many years he was the faithful and constant
companion of his master's fortunes.
Every body is familiar with the romantic history
of the attachment and marriage of William Sey-
mour1 and Lady Arabella Stewart, their escape from
the jealous vigilance of King James, her recap-
ture, rigorous confinement, and consequent derange-
ment. This unhappy victim to the royal dread
of an imaginary danger, was released from her suf-
ferings on the 25th September, 1615, when Seymour,
who, to avoid imprisonment, had remained on the Con-
tinent, was pardoned, and suffered to return home.
On the 22nd February, in the ensuing year, Mr.
Chamberlain informs Sir Dudley Carleton that " Sir
" W. Seymour, that married the Lady Arabella, is in
" some forwardness to marry the Earl of Essex's
" sister." This was the Lady Frances Devereux,
whose marriage took place the 3rd March, 1617, at
Drayton Basset. Although this event in the life of
his favourite sister must have drawn Essex for a
time from his retirement, Chartley continued to be
his permanent abode, where he occupied himself with
the affairs of his county and the pastimes of the
chase, to which he was devoted. There is a horse
bridge over the Trent, at Shugborough, which, accord-
ing to existing tradition, was built by the county of
1 Succeeded his grandfather as Earl of Hertford in 1621 ; was created
Marquis of Hertford 1642 ; restored to the dukedom of Somerset, 1660,
and died the same year.
T 2
276 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
Stafford to enable the Earl more conveniently to
reach his hunting ground in Cannock Chase.
In 1617, the King made a progress to Stafford,
where he was received at the gate by the Earl of
Essex, High Steward of the town ; the King got out
of his coach and mounted a horse of state, making the
Earl mount another, ride before him " with his plumes
" up," and carry the sword. At Coventry the King
knighted Sir Walter Devereux, base brother to the
Earl.1
On the 1st May, 1619, Essex was sent to meet and
welcome the Marquis de la Tremouille, Ambassador
Extraordinary from the King of France ; and on the
19th of the same month, walked in the funeral proces-
sion of the Queen, who had died of dropsy on the 2nd.
An event was now at hand which enabled Essex
to prove his gratitude to the Elector Palatine and his
consort for the regard which they evinced towards
him, and his zeal for the Protestant religion ; at the
same time drawing him from his life of seclusion to
indulge his desire for military service. This event
was that terrible war between the Protestants and
Roman Catholics, by which Germany was torn and
devastated from 1618 to 1648; in which all Europe
was deeply interested, and every nation, either openly
or indirectly, took some share.
When the diet of 1555, called the " Religious
" Pacification of Augsburg," confirmed to the Pro-
testants the free exercise of their religion, many
points of dispute between the parties were left un-
1 Nichol's Prog. James I.
CHAP. X. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 277
settled. For a time this was of small consequence.
The wise and mild administration of Maximilian II.
tended greatly to appease the enmity of both sides ;
but, unhappily, that Prince did not live long enough
to cement his good work, and dying in 1575, was
succeeded by his son Rudolph, a weak man, whose
favourite pursuit was the discovery of the philoso-
pher's stone. When his brother Mathias rebelled,
and deprived him of Hungary, Austria, and Moravia,
Rudolph, to preserve the loyalty of the Bohemians,
granted to them a Charter, called the " Letter of
" Majesty," confirming their privileges, and granting
entire freedom of religion. A clause of this Charter
declared that " the Protestants should have the full
" right to build new schools and churches, not only
" in the towns, but in the country also." The breach
of this privilege, backed by the intolerance of Ferdi-
nand of Gratz, gave rise to the Thirty Years' War.
When the congregations of Brunau and Kloster-
graben were about to consecrate their newly-built
churches, the Roman Catholic clergy seized them,
pulling down the one and closing the other. Re-
monstrance was made to the Emperor, by whose
order this violence was said to be committed ; the
imperial answer stated that His Majesty was of
opinion the States had abused the Charter, and the
deputies had rendered themselves liable to be punished
as rebels. A meeting of the Protestant nobles in
Prague was held at the house of Count Thurn. It
was resolved, and a deputation sent to inform the
Imperial Commissioners, that no order or decree
T 3
278 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAI-. X.
tending to endanger the liberty of the Protestant
religion would be received or obeyed.
On the 23rd May, 1618, the Protestant deputa-
tion, attended by a great multitude crying out for
vengeance, proceeded to the Hradschin, where the
Council of State was assembled to receive them. The
determination of the Protestants was received with
great uproar; taunts and recriminations passed be-
tween them and Slawata and Martinitz, the two most
unpopular of the Imperial Ministers, which were
abruptly ended by some one crying out, " Wherefore
" all this delay ? Throw them from the window in
" good old Bohemian fashion ! " By the excited and
angry spectators these words were received with
loud cheers, and instantly put in practice ; the two
obnoxious Commissioners, with the Secretary Fa-
bricius, were hurled from the window. Happily for
them, a dunghill lay beneath, at a depth of nearly
eighty feet, on which they fell with slight injury.
Fabricius is said, indeed, to have apologised imme-
diately to Martinitz for having taken the liberty of
falling above his Excellency.
The Protestants immediately elected a Council of
Government, expelled the Jesuits, and banished the
Koman Catholic Archbishop of Prague, with many
of the clergy ; at the same time that they sent
humble apologies to Vienna for the violence used,
with protestations of their loyalty.
In August, 1619, Ferdinand of Gratz was elected
Emperor, in succession to Mathias, who had died in
March. At the same time that he received the
CiiAr.X. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 279
Imperial crown at Frankfort, the news arrived that
he had lost another at Prague. The Bohemians
had formally renounced their allegiance, and pro-
ceeded to the election of a new king.
Their choice fell upon Frederick V., Elector Pala-
tine, who, after some hesitation, accepted the offered
crown. Of pleasing address, and amiable disposition,
this prince was quite unequal to the duty of a leader
in the arduous struggle about to commence. It is
probable that a consciousness of his deficiency made
him waver, and it is said that his choice was de-
termined by his high-spirited wife, who declared she
would " rather eat black bread at his royal board,
" than feast at his electoral table." On the 31st Oc-
tober he made his solemn entry into Prague, and
was crowned King of Bohemia on the 4th November.
This intelligence excited in England the most ex-
travagant joy. The preachers, with Archbishop
Abbot at their head, inflamed from the pulpit the
passions of their congregations, until all England,
with one voice, called upon the King to support the
cause of God in that of the Elector. James was
involved in a dilemma. On the one hand, it was im-
possible for him to sanction the doctrine that subjects
might depose their sovereign, and, therefore, he could
not support his son-in-law as King of Bohemia. On
the other hand, had he been so inclined, it would not
have been safe, in the temper of the people of England,
to stand by and see the Elector, who was looked
upon as the champion of Protestantism, stripped of
his hereditary dominions. While Spinola was pre-
T 4
280 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
paring an army of 30,000 men in Flanders, the King
continued undecided, and made no preparations;
contenting himself with demanding, through his am-
bassador, the object of the armament, to which he
received no satisfactory answer : but it was not until
Spinola was about to march for the Palatinate, that
he resolved on acting.
King James then adopted a middle course ; he
granted a supply of money, and an army of volun-
teers, for the defence of the Palatinate. On the
6th June, 1620, Sir R. Yonge writes to Lord Zouch,
Warden of the Cinque Ports : — " The King has re-
" solved to send 4000 men to assist the King of
" Bohemia ; not to go into Bohemia, but to the
" King's own country. Sir Horace Yere *, General,
" Sir John Barclay, his lieutenant, of them which are
" presently sent over, being 2000. Of these 2000,
" my Lords of Oxford 2, Essex, Gerard 3, Grey 4, and
" Sir Edward Sackville to be captains." 5
1 Youngest son of Geoffrey Vere, of Kirby, Essex, who was third son of
John, Earl of Oxford. He was knighted at Cadiz, 1596, and subsequently
created Baron of Tilbury.
2 Henry de Vere, tenth Earl of Oxford, who in his youth lived a riotous
and debauched life, though he afterwards became highly esteemed as one
of the leaders of the Country party. His early reputation caused the fol-
lowing squib to be put forth at this time : —
Some say Sir Edward Cecil can
Do as much as any man ;
But I say no, for Sir Horace Vere
Hath carried the Earl of Oxford where
He neither shall have wine nor w — e ;
Now Hercules himself could do no more.
3 Lord Gerard, of Gerard's Bromley, in Staffordshire, extinct 1711.
* Henry, second Lord Grey of Groby, created Earl of Stamford, -1628.
5 S. P. O.
CiiAi-.X. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 281
The force that went over was only 2200 men.
Oxford and Essex had each a company of 250 men
in this regiment, with the promise of two more
regiments being sent over as speedily as possible, the
command of which was to be given to those noble-
men. So many volunteers flocked to Essex out of
love, that he, unwilling to refuse any, paid fifty out
of his own pocket. In his company of 300, there
were above 1 00 gentlemen of quality.
On the last day of August, this little force crossed
the Rhine below Wesel, by a bridge of boats, and
joining Prince Henry of Nassau, who had collected
2000 horse and 400 musqueteers from the adjacent
garrisons, they proceeded on their march to join the
other Princes of the Union in the Palatinate. On
arriving before Coblenz, they made show as if they
would pass the Mosel, but fell back at night, crossed
the Rhine, and made for Frankfort by forced marches
of "twenty miles a day and better, and all my Lord's
" servants, and he himself on foot, to encourage
" others, did the same." This feint was ably con-
ceived and executed by Prince Henry. Spinola, who
had captured Oppenheim, on learning the approach
of this force, fell back towards Bacharach to inter-
cept it, and was completely overreached. On hearing
how they had escaped him, he made a rapid march to
the Main with all his horse, and 4000 foot ; but at-
tempting a passage where the water was too deep,
all his ammunition was wetted, and some men lost.
He was obliged to retire, and on the 24th September,
the Dutch and English passed the Main by a ford
282 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
near Frankfort, and the following day arrived at
Darmstadt. Here Prince Henry, who had acted as
convoy, left the English, returning with his Dutch-
men to their garrisons. From Darmstadt, marching
by Bensheim and Worms, the English joined the
army of the Union, under the leading of the Mar-
grave of Anspach, on the 1st October.
After a short rest, the army marched to surprise
Alzey, which had been taken by the Spaniards ; on
their road thither they fell in with Spinola, who with
6000 foot, and 2000 horse, had hoped to effect some-
thing by surprise. The Protestant forces amounted
to 6000 foot, and 4000 horse. The two armies
drew up on opposite hills. It was resolved to attack
the Spaniards. " The Dutch, in courtesy, yielded
" the vanguard to the English, which before they
" stood upon, as a punctilio of honor." The ad-
vanced corps of English was accordingly drawn out,
and awaited the order to attack, which never arrived.
The slow and heavy Anspach, with his dull col-
leagues in command, suffered the Spaniards to
retreat under their very eyes, without making the
smallest effort either to check them, or to prevent their
junction with their main body at Oppenheim, which
he might have done with ease, being nearer to that
town than they were. " The Earl of Essex being
" informed of this by some who knew the country,
" pressed the Margrave of Anspach to it, desiring
" him not to let slip an opportunity so happily put
" into his hand. He, not well pleased at being urged
" a thing so contrary to his humour, replied angrily,
CHAP.X. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 283
" ' There is a fort betwixt us and the town, and
" we must pass thither at the mercy of their cannon.7
" Sir Horace Vere, hearing this answer, said, ' When
" shall we then fight, if we shun the cannon ? ' But
" no persuasion can be prevalent, where power and
" disaffection join their force." l
After this specimen, it is unnecessary to give more
particulars of the conduct of an army, in which the
English force was but subordinate ; it may easily be
believed the campaign was inglorious.
After harassing their men with useless marches and
countermarches, with bivouacs in snow and frost, the
troops were put into winter quarters in December,
the English being disposed in Manheim, Heidelberg,
and Frankendal. Essex, who had shared in every
service in the field, even to the trailing of a pike, set
off for England about Christmas, to press for the
promised regiments, which, by the intrigues of Gon-
domar, the Spanish ambassador, had been retarded.
He took his way through France, having a convoy of
100 horse to Metz ; from thence his own train, about
twenty in number, was sufficiently strong. At Gour*
nay sur Aronde, he had an adventure, which we give
in Arthur Wilson's words. Having arrived at Com-
piegne, he sent his horses and most of his train on to
Boulogne, riding post himself. " The next stage was
" Gournay. When the knavish postmaster, seeing us
" likely to be good guests, to keep us there all night,
" delayed, or rather refused, us horses, pretending he
1 A. Wilson.
284 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. X.
" could not furnish us till morning ; which, being
" contrary to my Lord's intention, for he took the
" post road to make more haste, not to hinder him,
" he was much troubled. And, as we were wrangling
" for this coarse entertainment with our host, my
" Lord's horses, the gentlemen with them having
" mistaken their way, came by."
Essex immediately mounted his own horses to go
the next stage, on which, " the innkeeper, deceived of
" his prey, fell to raging and railing ; which my Lord
" not brooking (for his words were very provoking),
" ran after him with a cudgel to give him a parting
" blow. The innkeeper's activity carried him to a
" garret, where, thrusting his head out at a window,
" he cried, Murder! Murder! with a fury, not thinking
" there were three stories betwixt him and his danger.
" It seems it was enough ; for before we were got
" twelve score (paces ?) in the street, we found our-
" selves barricadoed with carts, and encircled with
" 500 people ; men, women, and children, with pitch -
" forks, swords, and guns, smiths with iron bars, and
" every one with what came to hand, beset us. We
" had each a case of pistols, and stood closely on our
" guard."
Great noise and confusion ensued, nobody knowing
for what. No injury was done on either side ; u but
" we were very sensible of some knocks from a little
" hill above us, by friars, who filled their laps with
" stones, and kindly distributed them among us."
After this scene had continued half an hour, a
French Lieutenant of horse came up, and requested
CHAP.X. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 285
the English to put up their arms, and he would see
right done. He inquired into the business, and in a
quarter of an hour dismissed the people, and opened
the road for Essex and his party to proceed. It
should be added that the Lieutenant refused to accept
the reward offered him.
On his arrival in England, Essex found that
Gondomar had so improved his opportunities, that
the King was favourably disposed towards Spain. The
intelligence, however, of the complete defeat of the
Bohemian army, under Prince Christian of Anhalt,
in November, the capture of Prague by the Imperial
forces, and the flight of Frederick to Holland, forced
James to take steps for the recovery of his son-in-
law's hereditary dominions.
In January, 1621, an order in Council appointed a
committee or council of war, " to consider and give
" their advice, how the service for the recovery and
" protection of the Palatinate may best be carried
" on."1 The Earls of Oxford, Essex, and Leicester2,
Viscount Wilmot8, Lords Danvers and Caulfield4,
Sir Edward Cecil5, Sir Richard Moryson, Captain
John Bingham, with Sir Horace Vere and Sir Edward
1 S. P. O.
2 Robert, younger brother of Sir Philip Sidney, was created Earl of
Leicester 1618, and died 1626.
3 Henry, Viscount Wilmot, of Ireland, was created Earl of Rochester
1652. He was father of the celebrated companion of Charles II.
4 Toby, created, in 1620, Baron Caulfield of Charlemount.
5 Third son of Thomas, first Earl of Exeter; born 1571, served for
many years in the Netherlands, was created Viscount Wimbledon in
1626, and died 1638.
286 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP.X.
Conway1, "if they return into England," were
appointed its members.
But whatever might be the advice of the Council,
the sinews of war were wanting. By a voluntary
subscription and a loan, James had been enabled to
equip the small force sent over the preceding summer.
There were no means, except by the aid of Parlia-
ment, of raising the sum necessary to make British
interposition efficient, either for action or negotiation.
The King at length consented to call a Parliament.
His repugnance to this step arose, not from any fear
that supplies would be refused in so popular a cause,
but because the spirit of liberty was abroad among
the people of England ; and James dreaded to en-
counter the daring leaders of the Country party,
who, unawed by the threat of royal displeasure, would,
he was aware, call loudly for the reform of abuses.
But his necessities compelled him to that step, and
he hoped, by concession, to soothe the refractory
spirits he could not daunt.
1 He was created, in 1624, Baron Conway of Ragley; his grandson
dying s. p., made his cousin Popham Seymour his heir.
CHAP. XI. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 287
CHAPTER XL
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
PARLIAMENT OF 1621. ESSEX GOES TO HOLLAND. PARLIAMENT
OF 1624 VOTES SUPPLIES FOR THE PALATINATE. ESSEX COM-
MANDS A REGIMENT. HE IS RECALLED ON THE DEATH OF
KING JAMES. ATTENDS THE PARLIAMENT AT OXFORD. — HE IS
APPOINTED VICE-ADMIRAL OF THE FLEET UNDER VISCOUNT
WIMBLEDON. EXPEDITION TO CADIZ, 1625.
THE Parliament met on the 30th January, 1621, and,
for a time, the course of business seemed to promise
a session without disagreement between the King
and the Houses. The holders of monopolies by
patent were punished, Lord Chancellor Bacon was
impeached ; but the debates on grievances, on privi-
leges, and on supply, occupied so much time, that
the patience of the King became exhausted towards
the end of May, and he informed the Houses that he
intended to adjourn them. Notwithstanding so
much ardour had been expressed to aid their fellow
Protestants in the Palatinate, only one subsidy l had
been voted ; and foreign affairs had been almost
forgotten, in matters of domestic and personal
interest, when, on the 4th June, previous to the
adjournment, the Commons, to evince their zeal,
i A subsidy was a rate of four shillings in the pound on real property,
and two shillings and sixpence on personal estates. It produced about
70.000/.
288 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XT.
passed a declaration of their " general resolution to
" spend their lives and fortunes in the defence of
" those of their religion, and of the Palatinate."
There being no hope of obtaining any reinforce-
ment to carry into the Palatinate this summer, and
his comrades being then besieged by Spinola in the
few towns that yet remained to the Elector, Essex,
as soon as Parliament was adjourned, went to serve
as a volunteer under Maurice, Prince of Orange, at
the " leaguer of Dernick," in Holland.
Parliament reassembled the 20th November, soon
after which the Commons sent a petition to the
King, remonstrating strongly against the proposed
marriage of the Prince of Wales to the Infanta, and
praying him to prosecute the war in defence of the
Palatinate, to attack Spain, and to marry Charles
to a Protestant princess. James sent a reply, for-
bidding them to meddle in state affairs ; they re-
monstrated ; an angry controversy followed, which
the King ended by proroguing Parliament on the
19th December, having a few days before sent for
the Journals of the House of Commons, and with his
own hand torn out an obnoxious resolution.1
Although the Court party was strong in the
House of Lords in this Parliament, " yet there were
" some gallant spirits that aimed at the public
1 Parliament was dissolved in February following. Some idea may be
formed of the diligent attendance which Lord Essex gave to his legislative
duties, by the fact that, during these sessions, the House of Lords sat one
hundred and ten times, from which Essex was absent but eleven ; and
that he served on thirteen committees, and in two conferences with the
Commons.
CHAP. XL ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 289
" liberty, more than their own interest." The
leaders of this party were the Earls of Oxford,
Southampton, Essex, Warwick1, Lords Say2, Spen-
cer 3, and others.
" Essex," writes the historian 4, who having spent
many years in his service, knew him well, " had ever
" an honest heart, and though nature had not given
" him eloquence, he had a strong reason that did
" express him better. His countenance, to those
" that knew him not, appeared somewhat stern and
" solemn ; to intimates, affable and gentle ; to the
** females, obligingly courteous ; and though unfor-
" tunate in some, yet highly respected of most,
" happily to vindicate the virtue of the sex. The
" King never affected him, whether from the bent
" of his natural inclination to effeminate faces, or
" whether from that instinct or secret prediction that
1 Richard, Earl of Warwick, so created ; eldest son of Penelope Deve-
reux. " Though he had all those excellent endowments of body and
fortune that give splendour to a glorious Court, he used it but for his
recreation ; his spirit aimed at more public adventures, planting colonies
in the western world, rather than himself in the King's favor." — Life of
James /., Wilson, p. 736.
2 William, eighth lord, created Viscount Say and Sele, 1 624. " A
seriously subtle piece, averse to the Court ways, something out of perti-
naciousness. When the humor was a little allayed by Court favors, it
appeared afterwards that those stern comportments, supposed natural,
might be mitigated." — Ibid.
3 Created, 1603, Baron Spencer of Wormleighton, a great agriculturist.
He was saying something in this session respecting what their " great
ancestors " did, which displeased the Earl of Arundel, a man of arrogant
and imperious character, Avho cut him short, saying, " My Lord, when the
things you speak of were doing, your ancestors were keeping sheep."
Spencer instantly retorted, " When my ancestors, as you say, were keeping
sheep, yours were plotting treason." — Ibid.
4 Wilson, p. 736.
VOL. II. U
290 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XI.
" divine fate often imprints in the apprehension,
" whereby he did foresee in him, as it were, a hand
" raised up against his posterity, may be a notation,
" not a determination ; but the King never liked
" him, nor could he close with the Court."
The Country party in the Upper House did not
separate without letting the King know that they
were not pleased with his conduct. A great many
Scotch and Irish Earls and Viscounts had been
created by James, to the profit of himself and his
favourites. The ancient Barons of England were
greatly discontented at precedence over themselves
being thus gained ; and this grievance was made the
ground of a petition to the King, signed by thirty-
three Earls and Barons of England. This petition
they refused to deliver to the Council, or to the
Prince of Wales, unless he would say he did not
receive it as a councillor ; on which the King sent
for Lord Oxford, and asked him for it. Oxford,
according to previous agreement, said that he had it
not ; others made the same reply ; and at length
the King was told, that they were resolved not to
deliver the petition, unless they were all admitted
together ; on which James, in great anger, sent
them away, saying he would go to Parliament
himself, and bring them all to the bar. He ulti-
mately gave audience to the whole of the petitioners,
when he made use of this remarkable expression to
Essex : " I fear thee not, Essex, if thou wert as
" well beloved as thy father, and hadst 40,000 men
" at thy heels."
CHAP. XI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 291
James endeavoured to revenge himself on the
most conspicuous members of both Houses after the
dissolution. Oxford was committed to the Tower,
Southampton to the charge of the Dean of West-
minster. Of the Commons, Sir Edward Coke, Sir
Robert Philipps, Mr. Pym, and some others, were im-
prisoned ; Sir Dudley Digges, and other smaller
offenders, were sent into Ireland.
The summers of 1622 and 1623, were passed by
Essex in Holland, where he served as a volunteer
under Prince Maurice, and gained considerable dis-
tinction and reputation as a gallant soldier.
His winters were spent in England, either at
Dray ton, at Chartley, or at some of the Earl of
Hertford's houses. Their sports during this season
were, hunting abroad ; at home, chess or catas-
trophe. Sometimes they had masques, or plays,
especially at Drayton ; old Lady Leicester, being
partial to those amusements, often adorned her hos-
pitality with them.
Essex was an excellent horseman, and rode hard,
often riding eighty or a hundred miles a day.
Wilson relates an amusing adventure they once had
during a journey from Drayton to Tottenham, ac-
companied by Lord Cromwell.1 They dined at
Warwick ; " Cromwell had a constitution that he
" could not settle his stomach, till he had enough to
" overlay his head ; " and as soon as they were off
the stones of Warwick, he " put to it with such a
1 Thomas, fourth lord.
u 2
292 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XL
" fury," that on coming to the bridge at Barforcl,
where the waters were out, he had great difficulty
in making his way through, while Wilson, whose
horse, " a fiery nag," had run away, " floundered
" into the midst," and was parted from his rider.
Essex pulled up and went quietly through. Having
overcome this difficulty, they rode for some miles
as fast as their horses " could ply it;" when Crom-
well's horse, he being a heavy man, was scarce able to
trot. On this, Essex, leaving his retainer to take
care of his friend, rode alone for Barford, whither
his train and coach had preceded him.
The time of year was about Michaelmas, and before
Wilson and his charge got to Stow-in-the-Wold,
darkness had come on. Here they had proposed to
halt ; but meeting the Sheriff of Gloucestershire, who
was as " well warmed " as himself, Cromwell began
to quarrel with him, and Wilson, to separate them,
persuaded his drunken Lordship to go on to Barford.
Cromwell was as obstinate as he was quarrelsome,
and as soon as they got on the downs, insisted on
taking his own way. Wilson was obliged to follow
him ; and after three hours' riding, they found them-
selves within two miles of the place they had started
from, and returned to Stow about ten at night.
In 1623, Prince Charles took his celebrated journey
into Spain, accompanied by Buckingham, who made
himself odious to the Spaniards, insulted Olivarez,
and then successfully exerted his influence in breaking
off the marriage treaty, — a strong proof of his un-
CHAP. XL EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 293
limited power over James, as the Spanish match
had been for years the object of his wishes ; with the
two millions of dower, he had expected to relieve
himself from his embarrassments, and the breaking it
off was almost certain to produce a rupture with
Spain. By an untrue statement of the circumstances
in Parliament, by advocating a war for the recovery
of the Palatinate, and by allying himself to the
Country party, Buckingham became, for the time, a
popular favourite ; while James, weary of his tyranny,
was revolving the means of freeing himself, which
led to his renewed communication with Somerset.
During the negotiations with Spain, the Imperial
armies had not been idle. Heidelberg and Manheim
had fallen, and now Frankendal, the last fortress
remaining to the Elector, was taken by the enemy.
To succour that Prince, had, therefore, become a task
of great difficulty, being nothing less than to re-
conquer the country.
The Parliament that met on the 19th February,
1624, immediately voted three subsidies, and three
fifteenths, about 300,000/., for that purpose. Four
regiments of 1500 men each were equipped, and sent
into Holland under the command of the Earls of
Oxford, Essex, Southampton, and Lord Willoughby.1
Mr. Locke writes to Sir D. Carleton2, " There is a
" great struggle for the fourth colonel's place. The
1 Robert Bertie, created by Charles I. Earl of Lindsey, 1626, here-
ditary Great Chamberlain and Lord High Admiral of England. He re-
ceived a mortal wound at Edgehill, 23rd Oct. 1642.
2 24th May, S. P. O.
u 3
294 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XL
" King at dinner, yesterday, asked if men were mad
" to go into the Low Countries. The Prince hath
" the naming of all the captains."
A dispute arose between Oxford and Southampton,
which was to have precedence ; the first claiming it
for the antiquity of his earldom, his high hereditary
office of Lord Great Chamberlain, and his rank of
Admiral at sea ; the other, as having been General of
the Horse in Ireland. The Council of War recom-
mended, and it was ordered by the King on the 21st
July, that in " all civil and courtly passages " Oxford
should have precedence ; and that in respect of his
former command, Southampton should lead " in all
" martial and military passages."1
These troops joined the army under Prince
Maurice, who, notwithstanding this great reinforce-
ment, suffered Spinola to invest the important town
of Breda without hindrance, and failed in an attempt
to surprise Antwerp. The summer was wasted ;
and on the troops going into winter quarters at
Eozendaal, Maurice went to the Hague, and dying in
the following spring, was succeeded in his command
by his brother, Prince Henry. The English troops
suffered greatly from fever during the winter ;
Southampton2 and his son, Lord Wriothesley, were
among its victims.
Prince Henry proved as much too rash as his
1 S. P. 0.
2 He was succeeded by his second son, Thomas, afterwards Lord Trea-
surer, the friend of Clarendon, and father of the virtuous and heroic
Rachel, Lady Russell.
CHAP. XI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 295
brother had been over cautious, and was worsted in
an assault on Spinola's works. The Earl of Oxford,
who led the van, although not wounded, was so
overheated and fatigued, that, being a corpulent man,
he presently fell sick and died.
This was not the only misfortune that befel the
English troops. In the autumn of 1624, Count
Mansfeldt1 had come over to England to obtain
assistance, in men and money, for the service of the
Palatine. He was promised 20,000/. a month, and
12,000 men were raised by press. Of these recruits
Mr. Chamberlain writes to Sir D. Carleton2: "Our
" soldiers are marching on all sides to Dover; God
" send them good shipping and good success. But
" such a rabble of raw and poor rascals have not
" lately been seen, and go so unwillingly, they must
a rather be driven than led. You may guess how
" base we are grown, when one that was prest hung
" himself for fear or curst heart ; another ran into
" the Thames, and after much debating with the
" constable and officers, when he could not be dis-
" missed, drowned himself. Another cut off all his
" fingers of one hand ; and another put out his own
1 This brillknt adventurer was a natural son of Count Peter Mansfeldt.
He was born in 1585, and learned the art of war in Hungary ; but, discon-
tented with the slowness of his promotion, deserted the Imperial service,
and engaged against Spain under the Duke of Savoy. He afterwards
embraced the reformed religion, was chosen general by the insurgents of
Bohemia, and forced the Imperial armies to evacuate that country. He
next, while under the ban of the Empire, and with a price on his head,
defended the Lower Palatinate. After many alternations of fortune, he
died at a little town in Bosnia, in 1626.
2 S. P. O., 18th December, 1624.
u 4
296 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XI.
" eyes with salt." The excesses committed at Dover
were so great, that many soldiers were summarily
executed ; on which ground, when the fleet arrived
at Calais, the permission to land, and march thence,
which had been promised, was withheld. They then
sailed for Zealand, and after some delay proceeded to
Gertruydenberg, in Brabant. Here they were not
suffered to land ; a pestilential disease broke out in
the crowded shipping, so fatal in its attacks, that the
air was tainted with the multitude of putrefying
bodies, which were thrown overboard, and cast on
shore ; and of the 12,000 men that embarked with
Mansfeldt at Dover, he landed a bare moiety, and
those in so debilitated a condition, that he was
reduced to act entirely on the defensive.
On the 27th March, 1625, King James I. died at
Theobalds. There is a letter in the State Paper
Office, from Secretary Conway to the Earl of Essex,
dated the 29th June, inviting him to England to take
command of a regiment. It seems probable that an
attempt was made, under the new reign, to attach
Essex to the Court party. Events will show how
completely this failed; but, in obedience to the
summons, the Earl came over in July, and, landing
at Margate, waited at Dartford, while Wilson pro-
ceeded to London to see if it were safe to go to that
city, where the plague was raging, and where he
found " nothing but death and horror, — the very air
" putrefied with the contagion of the dead."
The Court was at Oatlands, whither Essex pro-
ceeded, and accompanied the King to Oxford, where
CHAP. XL ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 297
Parliament reassembled on the 1st August, having been
adjourned from Westminster in consequence of the
alarming increase of the plague. After ten days of
angry debate, Charles dissolved the Parliament on
the 12th August, 1625, to save Buckingham from
impeachment, the supplies not having been voted.
As that favourite was resolved on striking a blow at
Spain, to avenge his wounded vanity, the equipment
of a fleet and army proceeded at Plymouth, and the
King, to obtain the necessary funds, raised money by
loan, by benevolences, by writs of Privy Seal, by
suspending payment of salaries, and even by levying
duties under a bill which had not passed through the
House of Lords.
The command of the expedition was given to Yis-
count Wimbledon, the Earl of Essex was Vice
Admiral, the Earl of Denbigh1, Eear Admiral. The
force consisted of 10,000 troops, embarked in a fleet
of 87 sail of English, and a squadron of Dutch ships.2
Wilson says that Essex was at Tottenham, the
Earl of Hertford's seat in Wiltshire, when he was
sent for to go this voyage ; riot out of any regard the
King had for him, " but being a man beloved of the
" people, and the people not liking the Duke's exor-
" bitant power in thrusting the King on this war,
" which tended only to revenge his private injuries,
" the Earl was put in to sweeten the business."3
1 William Fielding, created Earl of Denbigh, 1622. He was killed in
action on the side of the King, 1643.
2 A. Wilson says 120 ships in all.
3 Desid. Cur. 467.
298 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XI.
The fleet sailed from Plymouth on the 8th October,
with a fair wind, which, however, after a few days,
changed to N.N.W., and increased to a gale in which
every ship suffered greatly ; one vessel foundered with
nearly 200 soldiers, and " all the long boats were
" towed to pieces." On the 22nd, being in sight of
Cadiz, a council of war was held, at which it was
resolved that the Earl of Essex should first enter
the bay with his squadron, and take up a position to
cover the landing of the troops at Port St. Mary's.
The wind was S. W., the weather fine and clear,
and about 2 P.M. Essex got into the road, where there
were lying 14 ships under the Admiral of .Naples,
and 12 galleys before Port St. Mary's. They opened
their fire before the English were within range.
" But the Earl, contemning a fight with them at
" coward's distance, sailed between the ships and the,
" galleys, that he might bestow his shot on both sides ;"
and opened his fire with such effect, that, one of the
galleys being sunk, the rest made off up the river,
while the ships cut their cables, and sought protection
in the narrow channel leading to Puerto Real.
Essex, though badly supported, Lord Valentia1 and
Sir John Chudleigh alone keeping him company,
chased them into three fathoms water, when, his ship
drawing 15^ feet, and the ebb making, he was forced
to anchor.
Count William of Nassau was sent with some
English colliers to batter Fort Puntal ; but the next
1 Francis Annesley. He was created Viscount Valentia in 1621, and
died 1660. He was Master of the Ordnance in this expedition.
CiiAP.XI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 299
morning, at daybreak, he went on board the Swiftsure,
Essex's ship, to complain that he was not supported,
on which the Earl proceeded to his assistance. The
Swiftsure " letting fall her anchor abreast of the fort,
"and bringing up her stern with a warp," continued
battering till 4 p. M., when all the guns of the fort,
save one, were dismounted.
Sir John Burroughs was landed with 1000 men, to
whom the fort was surrendered on terms ; the gar-
rison " marching out with colors flying, match in
" lock, and bullets in their mouths. When' the
" Commandant came out, he asked what man of
" quality was in the Swiftsure ; whereupon he was
" asked, if he knew who had taken Gales before. He
" answered : Yes, he did know, it was the Earl of
" Essex. On which he was told, the Earl of Essex,
" his son, is in that ship. ' Then,' said he, ' I think the
" devil is there also;' but desired he might have the
" honor to go aboard to see the Earl and the ship,
" which he obtained."1
On the 24th, Lord Wimbledon landed the chief part
of the army, and, accompanied by the Earl of Essex,
marched towards Ponte Suazo. Provisions were
forgotten ; the troops, wearied and in want of food,
were halted for the night about three miles short of
the bridge, in a place surrounded by storehouses filled
with wine, which the soldiers broke open, and a scene
of the utmost disorder ensued.
The next day Lord Wimbledon and his army
1 From a document in S. P. O., which appears to be the diary of the
master of the Swiftsure.
300 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XI.
countermarched to Cadiz, on approaching which
town a halt was called, while the General recon-
noitred the place, and decided that it was useless
to attack it. He then marched back again towards
the bridge to capture a few long boats, after which
brilliant exploit the army re- embarked ; the fleet
sailed on the 29th October, and after cruising in the
track of the homeward-bound fleet from the Indies
until the 17th November, returned to England.1
Charles, who had anticipated a result both glorious
and profitable, was filled with anger and grief at the
disgraceful end of this expensive expedition. In-
quiry was made into the cause of failure. The Earl
of Essex, Lords Yalentia and Cromwell, with seven
other Colonels, presented charges2 against the General
at the council table, from which we learn the in-
efficiency of Lord Wimbledon as a commander, These
charges were in substance as follows : that being
urged to attack the shipping that had gone to Puerto
Real, Lord Wimbledon replied, that " he would not
" hunt two hares at once." When the army was
ordered to land, he gave no directions about their
victuals, which being in the charge of the pursers, the
land officers had no power to obtain. And when re-
minded of this omission after landing, he gave instant
order to march, saying, "that was not the time to
" speak of victuals, the want of which must not make
" men cowards." He left no guard to secure his
1 Lord Essex landed at Falmouth, the 5th December.
2 These charges, and Lord Wimbledon's reply, with a journal of the
voyage, are in Harl. MSS. xxxvii. 3638. 6807.
CHAP. XI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX, 301
communication with Fort Puntal, which might easily
have been cut off by a sortie from Cadiz. Lord
De la Warr ' pointed out this omission. When he
resolved to bivouac among the wine stores, he gave
one butt of wine to each regiment, and omitted the
smallest precaution against the men obtaining access
to the rest ; and did not even place a single outpost
or sentry, or give a watchword. Lord Essex says,
that at a late hour he went to the General to
represent this state of things, who left every thing
to his direction and discretion, giving as a watch-
word, "Heaven bless us;" and that he contrived to
place a few guards, but was certain that such was
the state of drunkenness and disorder, that 500
Spaniards might have destroyed the whole army.
After a long inquiry, the matter was suffered to
die away in silence. Essex, who on his arrival went
to Hampton Court, where the King was residing,
" staid not long, for it was a sphere he loved not to
" move in ;" but retired to Chartley until the meeting
of the new Parliament on the 6th February, 1626,
which he attended with the same diligence as before,
having absented himself but four times during seventy-
nine sittings of the House.
On the dissolution of this Parliament, he was
offered the command of Yice- Admiral in the fleet
which was assembling at Portsmouth. The reason
for his declining to accept the appointment is given
in a published letter.2 " My Lord of Essex came to
l. Henry, fourth lord, born 1603, died 1628.
2 Court and Times of Charles I., vol. i. p. 126.
302 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XI.
" the King for leave to go to his charge in the Low
" Countries. Before, the Duke had oifered him the
" Vice Admiralship, but he refused. The King asked
" him why he would not accept it; who answered, he
" would have accepted a far meaner office to His
" Majesty's service, if His Majesty himself had oifered
" it ; but to receive it from another he thought riot
" so fit, as for other reasons, so especially because he
" knew not His Majesty's pleasure. Whereupon, the
" King, displeased, bade him go whither he would,
" and come again when he sent for him."
By a subsequent letter in the same correspond-
ence, we are informed that the Earl returned
from the Low Countries in November; the four
regiments there, which were greatly reduced in num-
ber, being sent to join the King of Denmark, under
the command of General Morgan.
Essex retired to Chartley, where he remained until
the assembling of a new Parliament, in 1628, called
him out of retirement.
ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 303
CHAPTEK XII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
PARLIAMENT OP 1628. — EARL OF ESSEX MARRIES MISS ELIZABETH
PAULET. — ARMY SENT AGAINST THE SCOTS COVENANTERS, 1639,
OP WHICH ESSEX IS LIEUTENANT-GENERAL. HIS PROCEEDINGS.
HE IS UNCEREMONIOUSLY DISMISSED AFTER THE TREATY.
PARLIAMENT CALLED IN 1640. THE SCOTTISH COVENANTERS
INVADE ENGLAND IN 1641. ESSEX AND OTHERS PETITION THE
KING FOR A PARLIAMENT. COUNCIL OF PEERS AT YORK.
COMMISSIONERS MEET AT RIPON.
THE reader of English history is well aware how
Charles I. commenced his ill-advised course, by in-
fringing the personal privileges of both Houses of
Parliament ; how all his subsequent proceedings
evinced an arbitrary temper, and impatience of
control, with an entire want of sincerity, and stability
of purpose ; how solemn promises made under pres-
sure, were deliberately broken when the pressure was
removed, and obnoxious and irritating measures were
adopted only to be relinquished. The Parliament, on
the other hand, showed the strongest determination
to vindicate their own privileges, and the rights and
liberties of the people ; and as they pursued their
object coolly, but keenly and unswervingly, every
false step, and every ebullition of temper on the part
of the King, only added to their strength.
The Parliament of 1628 lasted but three months,
304 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
from 26th March to 23rd June; but in that short
session, the second great charter of English liberty,
the Petition of Eight, was passed. Had Charles
faithfully adhered to the assent he gave to that bill,
he might have reigned in the hearts as over th£
persons of his subjects ; while, by his actual conduct,
he not only excited sentiments of disaffection and
dislike to his person, but lost that respect which men
feel for constancy of purpose and resolute conduct,
even when directed against themselves.
After the dissolution of the third Parliament of
Charles L, that monarch won over to his party several
of the most eminent among the leaders of the Oppo-
sition. The Earl of Essex was not of the number,
and during the years of misgovernment which fol-
lowed, he lived in retirement. Yet was this period
an eventful one for him ; he was tempted once more
to try his fortune in the matrimonial lottery, and un-
happily with not much better success than on the
former occasion.
He passed the winter of 1629-30 at Tottenham,
the seat of his brother-in-law, Lord Hertford. Among
the visitors came Miss Elizabeth Paulet, daughter of
Sir William Paulet, of Edington, " a young gentle-
" woman of a most sweet and bewitching countenance,
" and affable and gentle conversation." Such fair
company being acceptable at festival times, Lady
Hertford invited her to stay all Christmas, and, in
Lent, she became Countess of Essex.
Arthur Wilson plainly accuses her of adultery;
but, as he admits that by his jealousy of her influence,
CHAP. XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 305
and " the cloudy and discontented countenance "
which he showed, that he gave her cause of offence,
and in consequence quitted the service of Lord Essex,
I shall give the lady the full benefit of a more minute,
though, perhaps, partial account, which has been left
by her second husband.
Sir Thomas Higgons says, that " after the marriage
" of Lord Essex, his servants finding they no longer
" had the same liberty, conceived a dislike to the
" Countess." Sir Walter Devereux1 also entertained
a mortal aversion to her, and Sir Thomas charges
them with conspiracy. He states that, at a late hour
one night, when Essex was in the country, they took
advantage of Mr. Uvedale being in Lady Essex's
apartments to visit one of her sisters, broke in, and
although her sister and one of her maids were with
her, accused her of adultery with Uvedale, They
sent off instantly to Essex, intercepting a letter which
Lady Essex also wrote to him. Lord Essex, who
was credulous and jealous, and had, from the conduct
of his first wife, conceived a prejudice against women,
was induced to believe the tale. When Lady Essex
heard this, she refused to see or write to him again.
Lady Essex was, however, with child, a circumstance
which produced great irresolution in the mind of her
husband ; he at length said, that if the child was
born by the 5th November, he would own it for
his. Curiously enough, and most unsatisfactorily
1 Sir Walter was heir to the Viscountcy of Hereford, should his cousin
die without male issue, and may therefore be supposed to have entertained
"a mortal aversion" to Essex's second marriage.
VOL. II. X
306 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
for a man who entertained such suspicions, the
child was born on that very clay l ; and it appears
that Essex remained in the conviction that Lady
Essex had been unfaithful. A letter of 30th March,
16362, informs us, that articles of separation were
in negotiation, by which she was to receive 1300/.
a-year for life, on condition that she gave up her
jointure and thirds ; undertook never to complain or
sue for alimony; disclaimed all title to the Earl's
personal estate ; and never sought to cohabit again
with her husband. An article had been inserted,
that if ever u she had any child by my Lord," she
was to forfeit the 1300£. a-year. It was so " set
" down for the more honor ; because, if so be she
" should have any children, whosoever got them, yet
" my Lord must father them by the law. This
" article the Countess did utterly dislike, and there-
" fore my Lord was contented to desert it."
On the 26th December, 1636, Lady Leicester3
writes from Penshurst to her husband: — " I forgot
" to tell you last week, that my Lord of Essex's son
" was dead."
Lady Essex continued to reside in Essex House
until the commencement of the civil war, when she
retired to Oxford, at which place she became ac-
quainted with Sir Thomas Higgons, whom she subse-
quently married.
1 From the funeral oration spoken by Sir T. H. at the burial of the
Countess, Add. MSS. 5830. f. 122.
2 Court and Times of Charles I., vol. ii. p. 240.
3 Sidney Mem. ii. 454. Dorothy, eldest daughter of Henry, Earl of
Northumberland, and Lady Dorothy Devereux, married liobert, second
Earl of Leicester.
CHAP. XII. ROBERT. THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 307
It appears from two letters in the Earl of Stratford's
State Papers, in which that nobleman and Essex
exchange words of formal courtesy, that in 1634, the
latter passed some time at his estates in Monaghan,
which had, during thirty years of quiet, vastly
increased in value.1
When, on the levy of ship-money, in 1635, a great
fleet was fitted out professedly to maintain the
dominion of the English flag in the narrow seas,
the Earl of Essex was nominated to the command of
one squadron of twenty sail, as Vice Admiral, under
the Earl of Lindsey.
In November, the King's nephews, Charles and
Rupert, sons of the unfortunate Elector Palatine,
visited England. On the return of the former to the
Continent, in March, 1637, the Countess of Leicester
writes to her husband: — " The Elector's going from
" hence to Holland is expected within these few days.
" He desires much to have my Lord Goring go with
" him, but the King declines it ; and he presses much
" to have my Lord of Essex with him the sea voyage,
" but that has been also refused ; yet, I hear, he will
" again move for that great happiness."2
The celebrated plan of the Earl of Strafford, known
by the name of Thorough, which was to make Charles
an absolute monarch, was defeated by the King him-
self, who persisted in forcing on his Scottish subjects
1 It is stated by E. P. Shirley, Esq., in his Account of the Territory of
Farney, privately printed in 1845, that in the year 1618, that barony
liad more than trebled in value ; while the rent payable by Lord Essex
to the Crown, was doubled on the regrant of those lands to him in 1621.
2 Sidney Mem. ii. 450.
x 2
308 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CiiAr. XII.
a liturgy and book of canons. The anti-episcopal
party in Scotland organised a determined opposition,
which they called a Covenant, and which, from that
time, gave a name to the party. Charles resolved to
suppress the Covenant by force, and, to blind the
Scottish leaders while preparing his army, made
several concessions ; a useless piece of insincerity, for
there were persons about him who imparted to the
Covenanters the real intentions of the King.
In pursuance of this resolution, an army of about
6000 foot, and an equal number of horse, was raised
in the spring of 1639. The command of this army
was given to the Earl of Arundel, of whom Clarendon
says, " He had nothing martial about him but his
" presence and his looks, and therefore was thought
" to be made choice of for his negative qualities."
Those who are familiar with the portrait of Lord
Arundel at Warwick Castle, must acknowledge that
his appearance is as fierce as could be desired in a
general.
The Earl of Essex was made Lieutenant-General ;
the same author calls him " the most popular man in
" the kingdom, and the darling of the sword-men,
" who, between a hatred and contempt of the Scots,
" had nothing like an affection for any man of the
" nation ; and, therefore, was so well pleased with
" his promotion, that he began to love the King the
" better for conferring it upon him, and entered
" upon the province with great fidelity and alacrity,
" and was capable from that hour of any impression
" the King would have fixed upon him." AVe shall
CHAP. XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 309
find in the sequel another example of Charles's want
of judgment, in the slight he put upon his most
popular subject.
To the Earl of Holland was given the command of
the cavalry.
The Marquis of Hamilton was sent with 3000 men
and a fleet to annoy the coasts of his country.
On the 20th March, the Earl of Essex received in-
structions to proceed to the North, to direct the Vice-
President to call out the forces of Yorkshire and
Durham, and with them to proceed with all diligence
to Newcastle, where Sir Jacob Astley would meet
him, with whom he was to arrange for the rein-
forcing and provisioning of Berwick and Carlisle.
Should the Scots make any movement towards the
Border, he was to assemble all the forces of the
northern counties, and act as he should think most
conducive to the safety and security of the kingdom.1
On receiving his instructions, the Earl quitted
London for the North, arrived at York at 10 P.M. on
the 22nd, and thence, after consultation with the
Vice-President of the North, proceeded to Newcastle,
at which town he was joined by Sir Jacob Astley.
He was met daily by persons of quality out of Scot-
land, who, by false reports of the strength of the
Scottish army, and their proximity to Berwick,
sought to delay his advance. The only effect pro-
duced by the reports and advice of these persons,
was to cause him to press forward more rapidly, so
1 S. P. O.
x 3
310 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
that he reached Berwick sooner than he had pur-
posed, and marched into that town without oppo-
sition on the 1st April. "And," writes Secretary
Coke, who accompanied the King, to Secretary Winde-
bank in London, " that noble Earl, by his resolution,
" good conduct, and celerity, hath both done this
" good service to His Majesty, and won himself much
" honor, and gotten the soldiers' hearts."1
No. LI.2
Essex to Sir F. Windebank.
Sir, — I thought it my duty to acquaint you how far I
have proceeded in executing his Maj. commands.
In general meeting with ill horses all the way, I could
reach the first night but to Grantham, where I found Sir
Will. Ffourd; he told me the race was either the two
twentieth or three twentieth at Berwick, and that the Cove-
nanters were gotten between the Marquis Huntly and Aber-
deen. Yesterday morning I met with a Scotch gentleman,
William Keith, [who] had newly taken post at Newark with
the Bishop of St. Andrew's warrant, as 1 heard after; he
told me no such thing performed, only the Earl Hum's
brother had made a match for ten dollars, but was not run,
and that no troops were as yet marched towards Aberdeen.
It was ten o'clock at night before I reached this town,
there being no post-horses the last stage at Tadcaster, and
the Vice-President being out of town hindered me so, that I
fear I shall not reach Newcastle to-night. But I have sent to
Sir Jacob Astley, if it be no hindrance to the employment,
he would meet me at Durham ; if not, I will presently be
with him.
1 S. P. 0., 2nd April, 1639. 2 S. P. O.
CHAP. XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 311
I spoke this morning with the Vice-President and Sir
Arthur Ingram, the rest of the council being gone to the
hall. I find by the Vice-President the troops are in good
readiness, and is glad to hear of the pay, which fully satisfies
him ; but he fears whether the train-bands would stir with-
out a month's pay beforehand. Accordingly, it hath been
certified us, but no answer as yet, which he thinks would
give great content. I assured him in general, the King had
taken so great care as that there was a paymaster coming
post after me, and that the treasurer is upon the way. Sir,
give me leave to say this is a business of great moment, being,
if known, a leading case to all other parts. As soon as Sir
Jacob Astley and I meet, I shall presume to acquaint his
Maj. of our opinions ; and what may be done in the per-
formance of my instructions, I hope we -shall shortly give
good account of. I forgot to tell you the Vice-President
thought an answer to that letter would give great content,
which was sent from the colonels of the train-bands which
he opposed.
Sir, hasting away with a fervent desire to perform my
instructions, and my eyes full of dust, pleads for my pardon
for my scribbling, but at the best an ill scribe. But if occa-
sion be, I hope to shew I am trained to action [rather] than
to a pen, and so being at all times ready to lay my life at his
Maj. feet, and am your servant,
York, this 23rd March, 1639. Ro. E*SEX.
The King left London on the 27th March, " with a
" glorious attendance of nobility and gentry, that
" looked more like the pomp and parade of an
" Eastern Prince, than the expedition of an English
" Monarch." He arrived at York on the 31st, and
was shortly after greeted with the news of the occu-
pation of Berwick.
312 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
Leaving 2000 men with 8 pieces of artillery in
Berwick, Essex returned to York on the 10th April,
to receive further instructions from the King. The
Earl's proposal to march at once on Edinburgh,
which vigorous course would have unquestionably put
an end to the war, was negatived, or at least deferred,
thereby giving time to the Covenanters to collect their
forces ; and Essex himself was sent back to Berwick,
" with money, orders, men, and all necessaries, except
" victual and ordnance, which go by sea, for securing
" of that place."1 He gives the following account of
his proceedings.
No. LII.2
Essex to Sir F. Windebank.
Noble Sir, — My brother St, Albans3 acquainting me with
earnest business he hath to London, desired me to convey
this packet to you, makes me trouble you with a few lines
to excuse that letter I sent you from York. I coining thither
in two days, and hastening to Newcastle to perform my
master's commands, made me not to transcribe my blotted
letter, being cavised by the coming in of deputy lieutenants
and council of York at several times whilst I was making up
my despatch ; I took two sheets instead of one, and never
found it till I had ended my letter. For the letter I wrote
of, it came from the Colonels, and although His Maj. in
my instructions, did promise pay whilst the trained bands
were employed, yet the Vice-President feared they would not
1 Mr. De Wic to Sir F. Windebank, 13th April, in S. P. O.
2 S. P. O.
3 Ulick, fifth Earl of Clanrickarde, second Earl of St. Alban's. Ills
mother was widow of the late Earl of Essex. He was born 1604, and
died 1657.
CHAP. XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 313
be satisfied, because it was desired a month's pay beforehand ;
but now I, having the bands of the Bishopric to march hither,
hath ended that business. I being disappointed of the monies
promised me at Newcastle, and no paymaster coming down,
I being put to my shifts, could procure but 2700 men,
which made me rather to undertake the performance of it
with a few men, than to draw a greater number and not be
able to pay them, although I was assured by the Scots in
general at Newcastle, and in my first day's march by my
Lord Traquair in particular, that Mountrose, with double my
number, would take in Berwick a day before I could possibly
get thither with my small train of artillery and men ; yet,
being unwilling to be frighted out of so great a business with
words, having given a commission to my Lord Clifford to
raise the forces of Cumberland and Westmorland, with the
help of the Irish and Western forces for Carlisle, I took the
nine Bishopric's companies and four Northumberland that
met me half way, to march hither ; the particulars whereof I
believe before this you have received, since, waiting on his
Maj. at York, I am sent back hither until my Lord of Lind-
sey's coming. I promise you we will not be cozened of the
town ; and if we should, as I fear it not, it would be sold so
dear, the victors shall have no occasion to bray, although
all our men and officers know not what discipline means.
The Scots hath stopped all comers from us ; this town being
fed from thence, puts us to a little strait, till we can be pro-
vided out of England. But I have stopped all transport of
coals into Scotland, which they cannot well want. Sir W.
Penemen's regiment is now sent in, so that the garrison con-
sists of 1000 Bishopric, 1000 York, and 30 Northumberland
horse. Here are some men of quality now come in town ;
and if, at their importunity, I trouble your packet, you will
pardon your humble servant,
Berwick, this 15th of April. Ho. ESSEX.
3 1 4 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
The orders received by Essex were, that he should
make Berwick good against any force the Scots should
send, until the King's army were ready, or the Earl
of Lindsey, who was appointed Governor of Berwick,
should arrive. This was no difficult task, as he met
with no enemies " but what are constant to this place,
" snow, hail, and violent northern winds."
The King, with the army, did not arrive at Durham
until the 1st May. The Covenanters, whose object
was to increase the divisions, of whose existence in
the royal councils they were well informed, wrote
letters to the three Generals. Clarendon says, that
they adapted their styles to suit the characters of
these noblemen ; the letter to the Earl of Essex was
written "in a dialect more submiss than to the
" others."
No. LIII.1
The Covenanters to Essex.
Our most noble Lord, — As in all these great affairs which
have been so much noised abroad, of the liberties of our
church and state, our chief care hath been to walk warrant-
ably, according to the laws that were still in force for that
effect, so we are certainly persuaded that amongst ourselves,
there are none that can justly complain of what hath passed.
And for those of our countrymen who are now in England,
if they be of that number, as they are evil subjects to our
gracious sovereign, and worse compatriots to us, so of all the
worst guests amongst you, while they endeavour to make the
remedy of their evils, and the scape of their deserved punish-
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. XII. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 315
mentg, the beginning of an incurable disease betwixt the two
nations to whom this quarrel should in no way extend. If
the informations and protestations made by us for this end,
and the bond of our covenant sworn to God and man, have
not cleared all scruples in the mind of our gracious King
hithertill, and of all good subjects with you, it is not our
fault, but rather our joint misfortune with you, that there be
too many amongst you also in greatest place ancl credit,
whose private bias runs quite wide and contrary to the public
good, and who are those wicked ones rising early to poison
the public fountains, and to sow the tares of unhappy jea-
lousies and discord betwixt you and us, before the good seed
of love and respect to our neighbour nation can take place
in your heart. Amongst all the evils of this kind which
daily overtake us, next to the present undeserved displeasure
of our Prince against us, — which God, in mercy to us, will
take off in His own time, — there could nothing be fallen so
strange and unexpected to us, as the drawing your forces
together upon your border, which, whether to defend your-
selves, or to annoy us, and so prepare and gather those clouds
which threaten a sore tempest to both, we, for our part, wish
they may first perish in the shipwreck who began first to
dash the one nation against the other. As for you, my Lord,
although your place, person, and quality, the honor and re-
putation of your former life, may give us some assurance that
your Lordship will be wary to begin the quarrel, whereat only
enemies to both the nations will rejoice and catch the advan-
tage, yet give us leave to admire those groundless fears that
make you thus strengthen your borders, or rather suspect
those pregnant presumptions of a further project intended
against this nation by your power, which needs must make
us bestir ourselves betimes at all hands for our safety. God
is our witness, that we desire no national quarrel to arise
betwixt us, or to taste of that bitter fruit, which may set
316 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
both our and your children's teeth upon edge ; but rather
hold ourselves obliged, in conscience of our duty to God,
our Prince, and all your nation, our brethren, to try all just
and lawful means for the removal of all causes of difference
betwixt two nations who are yet linked together, and should
be still in all the strongest bands of affection and common
interest; and to be always ready to offer the occasion of
greater satisfaction in this kind, of clearing our loyal inten-
tions towards our Prince, to all whom it may concern, and
namely to your L., in regard of your place and command at
this time, by any means whatsoever should be thought ex-
pedient on both sides. Thus far we thought good to repre-
sent unto your L., being occasionally together, so few of us
as are in this place, for ourselves, and in name of the rest of
our number, who, together with us, will expect your L.
answer, and rest your L.'s affectionate friends to serve you,
ARGYLE. ROTHES. MONTROIS.
CASSILES. LINDESEY. ERSKYNE.
LOUTHEAN. ST. CLAIRE. ELCHO.
WYMES. BALMERINO. FORRESTER.
DALHOUSIE. BURLIE.
Mr. Norgate, in forwarding a copy of this letter,
says, that " one Cuningham who brought it, demand-
" ing an answer, my Lord replied, he had no authority
" to answer their letters, but if they would appear by
" petition to the King, in such a manner as became
" them, he would be ready to do them the offices of a
" gentleman of honor."1
On the 9th May, the royal army reached Newcastle.
" The Earl of Arundel, Lord General, rode at their
" head, gallantly mounted and vested a la soldado,
1 S. P. O., 4th May.
CHAP, XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 317
" with his scarf and panache." This appears to be
the limit of the noble General's military utility. On
the 22nd, the King proceeded to Berwick, and formed
an entrenched camp in an open piece of ground
called the Birks, about two miles west of the town.
Two demonstrations were made against the Scots,
who, in number about 3000, ill armed and undis-
ciplined, had advanced under Leslie to Dunse. The
Earl of Holland commanded on both occasions, and
on both occasions retreated as soon as he came in
sight of the Scots, without firing a shot. As he was
received by the King, on his return from these in-
glorious expeditions, with "joy and satisfaction," he
cannot be charged with cowardice or disaffection.
He either acted under orders, or well knew his
master's wishes. The result was, however, that the
Scots became more stubborn, while the royal troops
were disgusted. Had any serious attack been in-
tended, it is not, indeed, likely that Essex would
have been kept in the background. With the excep-
tion of that nobleman, every one holding office about
the King was desirous of a pacification. He alone
positively refused to receive a visit, or hold any com-
munication with the Scots, until peace was concluded.
So desirous was the King to terminate this mock
war, and so well were his wishes backed by his
courtiers, that on the 18th June, articles were signed.
The King gave an amnesty : both armies were to be
disbanded, which was immediately done on the part
of the English ; while the Scots, who had throughout
318 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
justified their conduct, retained in pay as many of
their officers and men as they thought fit.
" The mischief," says Lord Clarendon, " that befel
" the King from this wonderful atonement, cannot be
" expressed, nor was it ever discovered what prevailed
" over His Majesty to bring it so wofully to pass. All
" men were ashamed who had contributed to it ; nor
" had he dismissed his army with so obliging circum-
" stances as was like to incline them to come so
" willingly together, if there were occasion to use
" their service. The Earl of Essex, who had merited
" very well throughout the whole affair, and had
" never made a false step in action or in council, was
" discharged in the crowd without ordinary cere-
u mony ; and an accident happening at the same
" time, or very soon after, . by the death of Lord
" Aston, whereby the command of the Forest of
" Needwood fell into the King's disposal, which lay
" at the very door of his estate, and would infinitely
" have gratified him, was denied to him, and be-
" stowed upon another; all which wrought very
" much upon his rough, proud nature, and made him
" susceptible of some impressions afterwards, which
" otherwise would not have found such easy adrais-
" sion." If King Charles had no other talent, he
possessed, in an unrivalled degree, that of disobliging
those whom it was his interest to conciliate.
The Scots very soon afterwards published a pro-
test against the supposition, that in the late treaty
they had given up any of the claims advanced by
CHAP. XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. SI 9
the General Assembly, and the treaty was burned by
the hands of the common hangman. Charles and his
council resolved to raise another army, to do what
might have been so easily effected in the spring
of 1639, but for the King's weakness and want of re-
solution.
The late expedition, ineffectual as it proved, had
exhausted, and even anticipated, the revenues of the
crown. A parliament was therefore called, which
met on the 13th April 1540, and was dissolved on the
5th May, because the Commons debated the question
whether the consideration of grievances should pre-
cede the supply.
By other expedients, Charles contrived to raise a
supply, but the delay was fatal. While he. was
borrowing money, the Covenanters, unanimous and
full of enthusiasm, were assembling. When Charles
began to collect his army, Leslie, with 26,000 men,
was marching towards the Border. On the 20th
August he crossed the Tweed, and eight days after
passed the Tyne at Newburn.
Clarendon says it was a great pity that Essex had
not been appointed General, who, " though his ser-
" vices of the last summer had been ill requited,
" would have accepted the charge if offered to him,
" although he would not be a solicitor ; he would
" have been sure to discharge his trust with courage
" and fidelity, and therefore probably with success."
The Earl of Northumberland, who was appointed,
being indisposed, Lord Con way was sent forward
320 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP, X IT.
with the troops already prepared, with orders to
defend the passage of the Tyne, and though his force
was greatly inferior, the fords on that river were so
few and deep, that he might certainly have checked
the Scots. But with scarcely a blow exchanged, the
English army was put to a most disgraceful flight,
Con way never showing front again till he reached
Durham ; from which place Lord Strafford, who took
the command, withdrew the troops to the border of
Yorkshire, leaving the two northern counties in the
hands of the rebels, who were in such distress for
want of provisions, that they were deserting by com-
panies, and must have disbanded, had they not effected
the passage of the Tyne.
The Scottish leaders then sent a humble petition
to the King, who had arrived at York.
On the 28th August, a petition enumerating the
grievances' of the nation, and praying the King to
summon a Parliament as the only remedy for them,
was signed by the Earls of Bedford1, Hertford, Essex,
Warwick2, and Bristol3, Lords Mulgrave, Say and
Sele4, Howard of Escricke5, Bolingbroke 6, Mande-
1 Francis, fourth earl, died 1641. He commenced the drainage of the
Bedford Level.
2 Robert Rich, second earl, died 1658.
3 John Digby, created Earl of Bristol in 1622. He supported the
Country party till 1642, when he joined the King. He died in 1652.
4 William Fiennes, created Viscount Say and Sele, 1624. He died
1662.
5 Edward, seventh son of the Earl of Suffolk, was created in 1628 ;
died in 1675.
6 Oliver, Lord St. John of Bletso, was created Earl of Bolingbroke in
1624; he died 1646.
CHAP. XII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 321
ville1, Brooke2, and Paget.3 Another petition to the
same effect was signed by 10,000 citizens of London.
Before he received them, Charles had summoned a
great Council of the Peers to meet at York on the
24th September.
In his opening speech to this Council, the King
stated, that he had ordered writs to be issued for a
Parliament to meet on the 3rd November, and desired
their advice on the petition of the Scottish rebels, and
on the means whereby the army was to be maintained
until supplies could be voted by Parliament.
Commissioners were appointed to meet and treat
with other Commissioners from the Scots. To give
no umbrage to the latter, the English Commissioners
were selected from the • Country party, the Earl of
Holland, the only one of much interest in the Court,
being a determined enemy of the Earl of Strafford.4
The Commissioners met at Ripon on the 2nd Oc-
tober. The Scots began by demanding 40,000/. a-
month for the subsistence of their army, before they
1 Edward Montagu, eldest son of the Earl of Manchester. He was
called up to the House of Peers as Lord Kimbolton, and was accused of
high treason at the same time as the five members in 1641. After the
Self-denying Ordinance he was Speaker of the House of Lords until the
murder of Charles I., from which time he never attended till after the
Restoration. He died 1671.
2 Robert Greville, second lord, was killed at Lichfield when serving
under the Parliament, 1643.
a William, fifth lord, born 1611. He first joined the Parliament, but
at Edgehill fought for the King, and again came over to the Parliament
in 1644. He died 1678.
4 Their names were, the Earls of Bedford, Hertford, Essex, Bristol,
Holland, Berkshire, Salisbury, and Warwick; the Lords Mandeville,
Paget, Savile, Dunsmore, Howard, Brooke, Paulet, Wharton.
VOL. II. Y
322 LIVES OF TFIE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XII.
would treat ; 850/. a-day were agreed upon, but the
Scots continued to make difficulties about the security
of its payment. On the 26th, a cessation of arms
was agreed upon, under conditions strongly demon-
strative of the King's weakness, and the discussion
of the treaty was transferred to London, on account
of the approaching meeting of Parliament.
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 323
CHAPTER XIII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
THE LONG PARLIAMENT. EARL OF STRAFFORD'S TRIAL. ESSEX IS
APPOINTED LORD LIEUTENANT OF YORKSHIRE AND LORD CHAM-
BERLAIN.— THE KING GOES TO SCOTLAND, LEAVING ESSEX LIEU-
TENANT-GENERAL OF THE KINGDOM, SOUTH OF TRENT. RETURN
OF THE KING. — IMPEACHMENT OF THE FIVE MEMBERS. CHARLES
LEAVES LONDON. THE LORD CHAMBERLAIN REFUSES TO ATTEND
HIM. HIS DISMISSAL. — ORDINANCE CONCERNING THE MILITIA
ESSEX LORD LIEUTENANT OF YORKSHIRE, STAFFORDSHIRE, MONT-
GOMERYSHIRE, SALOP, AND HEREFORDSHIRE. HIS POSITION AT
THIS JUNCTURE.
THE Long Parliament met on the 3rd November, 1640.
The position of parties was greatly altered in the
short interval that had elapsed since the dissolution
of the last. The King had lost power, popularity, and
respect. Harassed and alarmed by the spirit which
their own acts had so materially helped to call up,
he and his councillors were without a plan of defence
against the attacks which they saw impending ; while
the Country party, which at this period numbered in
its ranks all the best, and wisest, and moderate men,
— Hertford, Southampton, Falkland, Hyde, all of
whom, at a later date, attached themselves to the royal
cause, — acted with united energy; and the Ultras,
backed by the army of "their dear brethren," the
Scots, suffered their countenances to relax into a
grim smile of anticipated triumph.
Y 2
324 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
Charles, shunning the eyes of his subjects, went
privately by water to Westminster, to open the
session with a conciliatory speech.
The House of Commons immediately commenced a
vigorous attack on the abuses and grievances of which
they complained, and on the authors and advisers of
the Church and State policy.
On the llth November, the Earl of Strafford was
impeached at the bar of the House of Lords, by Mr.
Pym, on behalf of the Commons. Strafford was
committed to the custody of the Gentleman Usher,
until the charges were brought forward. A com-
mittee of Lords, Essex being one, was deputed to
acquaint the King with the accusation brought against
his prime councillor.
Clarendon says, that Essex had openly declared
he would be revenged on Strafford for his rough
treatment of the Earl of St. Alban's. Whether he
was influenced by this feeling, or acted only in his
capacity as a leader of the Country party in the
Upper House, I know not ; but he took a principal
part in all the business preliminary to the trial of that
nobleman ; moved that no person should be permitted
to visit him without leave from the House ; was on
the committee for examining the evidence ; and took
part in all the conferences with the Commons.
The Earl's trial commenced the 22nd March, 1641.
In the course of the proceedings, his eloquence and
temper contrasted so favourably with the violence of
his prosecutors, as to gain him many friends ; which
the former perceiving, retired to their House, and
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 325
passed a bill of attainder against Strafford, which
was agreed to by the Lords in a very small House,
and on the 10th May received the royal assent.
The next day, the House of Lords received that
remarkable autograph letter from the King, by the
hands of the Prince of Wales, in which he prayed
them to allow him to spare Strafford's life. After
"serious and sad consideration" of this letter, the
House deputed twelve Peers, of whom Essex was one,
to signify to His Majesty that neither of the " inten-
" tions " expressed in his letter could possibly be
advised. They offered some further observation,
which Charles interrupted, saying, that what he in-
tended in his letter was with an If; " If it may be
" done without discontentment to my people. If
" that cannot be, I say again the same that I wrote,
" Fiat Justitia." Imprisonment for life was the one
"intention;" the other was expressed in the well-
known postscript : "If he must die, it were a charity to
" reprieve him till Saturday," to give him time to
settle his affairs. The Lords replied, that " their
" intention was to be suitors to His Majesty, for
" favor to be shown to his innocent children, that if
" he had made any provision for them, the same
" might hold."
Besides this attempt, Lord Clarendon relates his
own endeavours to interest Bedford and Essex, the
two principal men of that party in the House of
Lords, in favour of Straiford, so far as to spare his
life, to which the former seemed well disposed ; but to
all Mr. Hyde's arguments, Essex turned a deaf ear, and
Y 3 •
326 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
made this reply : — " Stone dead hath no fellow ; if he
" were judged guilty in a premunire, according to the
" precedents cited by him, or fined in any other way,
" and sentenced to be imprisoned during life, the
" King would presently grant him his pardon and his
" estate, release all fines, and give him his liberty as
" soon as he had a mind to receive his service, which
" would be as soon as the Parliament should be
" ended."
The attachment of Strafford was followed by that
of Archbishop Laud, of Lord Keeper Finch, and
Secretary Windebank, the two last of whom saved
themselves by flight.
Ship-money was declared an illegal impost, and
the judgments reversed ; bills were passed for trien-
nial Parliaments, the abolition of the Courts of Star
Chamber and High Commission, with many other
measures, all tending to curtail the prerogative, and
establish the authority of Parliament.
Lord Essex, though a leader of his party, was an
indifferent speaker ; he appears to have been elected
to that position on account of his popularity, the
general esteem in which he was held, and his great
experience in parliamentary business. He was on
the committee about Northern business, the Com-
mittee of Safety, and of inquiry into the proceedings
prior to the treaty of Ripon, besides many others.
On the 8th May, the two Houses sent an address
to the King, praying him to appoint the Earl of Essex
Lord Lieutenant of Yorkshire, for that " out of the
u confidence and good opinion which the gentlemen
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 327
" of that country had of the Earl of Essex, and of his
" care for the commonwealth, they will be ready to
" serve under him in defence thereof." Here again
Charles showed his remarkable talent for turning
what might have been a favour into an offence. He
deferred his answer to this address, and gave the ap-
pointment to Lord Savile1, a man of infamous cha-
racter, who on a second address from the Houses, on
the 19th, was compelled to resign his new honours,
while the King declared his willingness to confer the
office upon Essex.
There had been an intention of bringing into office
the leaders of the popular party, which was frustrated
by the sudden death of the Earl of Bedford in May.
In July, however, Hertford, created a Marquis, was
appointed Governor to the Prince, Essex, Lord
Chamberlain, Leicester, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland,
Say and Sele, Master of the Wards. These ap-
pointments, with that of Oliver St. John to be
Solicitor-General, produced the effect intended by
them; and, showing that Charles was willing to
select his advisers from among the Constitutional
party, the feeling of animosity towards him began to
subside.
On the 10th August, the King went to Scotland,
leaving the Lord Keeper Littleton, the Earl of Man-
chester, Lord Privy Seal, the Earl of Lindsey, Lord
Great Chamberlain, and the Earl of Essex, Lord
1 Thomas, second Lord Savile, first Viscount Castlebar in Ireland, was
created Earl of Sussex in 1644. He died 1646, and the titles became
extinct in his son, 1671.
Y 4
328 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
Chamberlain, Commissioners to give the royal assent
to bills during his absence. Essex was likewise ap-
pointed the King's Lieutenant, and Captain General
of all forces south of Trent.
It was during the absence of Charles in Scotland,
that the advancing strides of what Mr. Hallarn terms
the " spirit of ecclesiastical democracy," alarmed the
moderate reformers and the lovers of the Established
Church, and produced a schism in the Constitutional
party, which was widened by successive events.
We have the testimony of Clarendon, that Essex,
although he continued in the ranks of opposition, was
yet a zealous member of the English Church : " He
" was rather displeased with the Archbishop than
" unde voted to the function ; towards some of the
" less formal prelates he had great reverence ; and he
" was as much devoted as any man to the Book of
" Common Prayer, and obliged all his servants to be
" constantly present with him at it ; his household
" chaplain being always a most conformable man,
" and a good scholar."
The feelings which were fostered by the extreme
anti-episcopal party, gave rise to acts thus described
by a Mr. Wiseman, in a letter to Admiral Sir John
Pennington, of the 7th September1 : " We have had
" the most pestilent libels spread abroad against the
" Peerage, Lords and Commons of the Parliament,
" that they are fearful to be named ; and the Brown-
" ists and other sectaries make such havoc in our
1 S. P. O. 1641.
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 329
" churches, by pulling down of ancient monuments,
" glass windows, and rails, that their madness is in-
" tolerable. I think it will be thought blasphemy
" shortly to name Jesus Christ, for it is already for-
" bidden to bow at his name ; though both Scripture,
" and the practice of the Church of England, do both
" warrant and commend it."
Charles returned to London on the 25th November,
and the revival of loyal feelings was strongly marked
in the manner of his reception.1 To check this,
a Remonstrance on the state of the nation was
carried in the Commons by a small majority in a full
House. One effect of this Remonstrance was to rouse
the anger of the populace against the Bishops. On
the return of the King from Scotland, and the con-
sequent abrogation of Essex's commission, the guard,
which by his order had protected the Houses, was
dismissed. Mobs of armed men paraded the streets
to protect the Parliament, as they termed it ; others
assembled at Whitehall, to defend the King from any
violence. These parties came into frequent collision.
Mr. Smith writes to Admiral Sir. J. Pennington on
the 29th December 2 : " The Prentices and our
" soldiers have lately had some bickering, wherein
" many of the Prentices were wounded, and lost
" their cloaks and hats ; this was done yesterday at
" Whitehall Gate, as the Prentices were coming from
1 He was feasted with great pomp and solemnity, see May, 88, 89. ;
who also says the Remonstrance was worded as tenderly as was compa-
tible with the utterance of such disagreeable truths.
2 S. P. O.
330 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
" demanding an answer on their petition lately ex-
" hibited to the Parliament House. The soldiers con-
" tinue in great numbers in Whitehall. These
" wounds of the Prentices have so exasperated them,
" that it is feared they will be at Whitehall this day,
" to the number of 10,000. Neither do the Houses
" and King agree so well as I could wish, the Jesuit-
" ical faction, according to their wonted custom,
" fomenting still jealousies between the Kihg and his
" people, and the Bishops continually concurring
" with the Popish Lords against the passing any
" good Bills sent from the House of Commons
" thither."
The petition alluded to was probably that sent
from the City, complaining of the appointment of
Colonel Lunsford to be Lieutenant of the Tower, in
place of Sir William Balfour.
The Apprentices at this period wore their hair cut
round ; on the occasion of this riot, one Captain
Hyde, drawing his sword in the midst of the mob,
cried that he would crop the ears of those round-
headed dogs that bawled against the Bishops, and
thus originated the name of Roundheads.
On the 3rd January, 1642, Herbert, the Attorney-
General, accused Lord Kimbolton, and five members
of the House of Commons, Pym, Hampden, Holies,
Haslerig, and Strode, of high treason. The next
day, irritated at the accused persons being still at
large, Charles took the fatal step of going down in
person to the House of Commons to demand the
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 331
five members.1 That scene has been so often
described, that it need not be repeated here ; but
from the same letter which contains an account of it,
I have extracted an account of the King's going to
Guildhall the day after, to endeavour to reconcile the
citizens to the violent act of the 4th.2
" Yesterday it was my fortune, being in a coach,
" to meet the King with a small train, going into
" the city ; whereupon I followed him to Guild Hall,
" where the Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council
" were met. The King made a speech to them,
" declaring his intentions to join with the Parlia-
" ment in extirpation of Popery, and all schisms and
" sectaries, of redressing of all grievances of the
" subject, and his care to preserve the privileges of
" Parliament. " He had some familiar discourse with
a the Aldermen, and invited himself to dinner with
" the Sheriff. After a little space, a cry rose up
" among the Common Councilmen, ' Parliament !
" Privileges of Parliament ! ' and presently another,
" ' God bless the King ! ' These continued a good
" while, I know not which was loudest. After some
" knocking for silence, the King commanded one to
" speak if they had any thing to say. One said, ' It
1 It is to be remarked, that only the day before the King committed
this act, which without strength to enforce his will was one of sheer folly,
he had refused the petition of Parliament to be allowed a guard for their
protection, under the command of the Earl of Essex, with these words,
given on the faith of a king — " that the security of all and every one of
them from violence, was and ever should be as much his care, as the pre-
servation of himself and his children." — May, p. 91.
2 A letter from Captain Slingsby of the 6th January, in S. P. O.
332 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
" is the vote of this Court that your Majesty hear the
" advice of your Parliament.' Another presently
" answered, ' It is not the vote of this Court, it is
" your own vote.' The King replied, ' Who is it
" that says I do not take the advice of my Parlia-
" ment ? I do take their advice, and will ; but I
" must distinguish between the Parliament and
" some traitors in it, and those I will bring to legal
" trial.' Another bold fellow in the lowest rank,
" stood up on a form and cried, ' The Privilege of
" Parliament ! ' Another cried out, ' Observe the man,
" apprehend him ! ' The King mildly replied, ' I
" have and will observe the privilege of Parlia-
" ment, but no privilege can protect a traitor from
" a legal trial ; ' and so departed. In the outer hall
" were a multitude of the rude people, who, as the
" King went out, set up a great cry of Privilege of
" Parliament."
The House of Commons adjourned till the llth,
appointing a committee to sit daily at Guildhall to
consider of the means of vindicating the privileges
of Parliament, and of providing for the safety of the
kingdom. They did not omit likewise to arrange a
triumphal return to the House for the five accused
members.
To avoid this humiliating spectacle, and even per-
sonal danger from the tumultuous assemblies about
Whitehall, Charles quitted London on the 10th
January, for Hampton Court, from which place he
moved to Windsor, and afterwards to York, where
he arrived on the 19th March, accompanied by the
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 333
Prince of Wales arid Duke of York, the Queen
having gone over to Holland with the Princess Mary
in February, carrying with her the Crown jewels.
On the 14th January, the Earl of Essex acquainted
the House of Lords that the King had commanded
himself and the Earl of Holland to attend him at
Hampton Court, in their places as Lord Chamberlain
and Groom of the Stole; on which it was resolved
by the House not to dispense with their presence,
which excuse they made to the King for disobeying
the order.
On the 28th March, Essex laid before the House
the following letter from the King, repeating his
former order. Similar letters were likewise sent to
Lords Holland, Salisbury, and Savile, which were
taken into consideration as matters of great im-
portance, and it was again resolved that these Lords
should not go.
No. LIV.1
The King to Essex.
CHARLES K.
Right Trusty, and Right Well-beloved Cousin and Coun-
cillor, We greet you well. Whereas We are resolved to
keep Our Easter and St. George's Feast in this Our city of
York ; We hold it therefore very requisite and necessary,
that for Our honor and service, the chief officers of Our
house attend us here in person, Our will and command
therefore is, that you repair hither to Our Court as soon as
you may conveniently, to give your attendance in the place
and charge which you hold under Us, as a Prime Officer of
1 Lords' Journal, iv. 675.
3 3 '1 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XTIT.
Our house, and Counsellor of State ; wherein, as we doubt not
your ready observance of this Our command, so We shall ex-
pect your present answer thereunto.
Given at Our Court at York, the 23rd of March, 1642.
This was followed by another more peremptory
letter, which was laid before the House by Lord
Essex on the 12th April. By this letter it appears,
that when the King went to Hampton Court, he had
offered to resign his staff rather than quit his par-
liamentary duties, and that the King refused to
accept his resignation. This fact, in some degree,
excuses Lord Essex for having, as it were, set up the
authority of the House of Lords against that of the
King, in respect to an office in the royal household.
No. LV.1
The King to Essex.
Right Trusty and Right Well-beloved Cousin and Councillor,
We greet you well. We are so much unsatisfied with the
excuse you made for not obeying Our command, for your at-
tendance on Us here, according to the duty of your place in
Our household, that We thought good by these Our letters to
second our former command ; and that you may be the more
inexcusable, We have accompanied Our said command with
Our license and dispensation inclosed, for your absence from
Parliament, willing and commanding you, all delays and ex-
cuses set apart, to attend Us here before the 18th of this
month, when We have appointed to keep St. George's Feast.
Or, in case you shall persist in your disobedience, We then
require and command you to deliver up into the hands of the
1 Lords' Journal.
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 335
Lord Falkland, one of Our Principal Secretaries of State,
for Our use, the ensigns of your office, which, when We last
parted from Whitehall, you offered to resign to Us, rather
than you would at that time, as We commanded you, wait on
Us so far as Hampton Court ; but We did then, of Our
grace and favor, wish you to consider of it, in hopes you
would, upon further consideration, not have seconded that
disobedience.
Given at Our Court at York, April the 9th, 1642.
Not satisfied with preventing these noblemen from
giving their personal attendance on the King, the two
Houses passed resolutions that the Earls of Essex and
Holland did not disobey the King by attending Par-
liament; that the displacing them was a breach of
privilege, an injury to the Parliament and to the
whole kingdom ; that whosoever accepted those offices
should be considered to offer an affront to Parliament ;
and that such proceedings tended to discourage good
men from doing their duty, and to increase the
division between the King and his people.
The attempt made by Charles to arrest the five
members of the House of Commons who were most
obnoxious to him, was retaliated by the most de-
termined attack yet made on the royal prerogative,
which was the immediate cause of the civil war. On
the 20th January, the House of Lords rejected an
address to the King to place the Tower of London,
the forts and militia of the kingdom, in such hands
as Parliament could trust. Essex entered a protest
against this vote, which was signed by thirty-one
other Peers.
336 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
The Commons, by themselves, then addressed the
King. His answer was laid before both Houses, who
voted that the advisers of it were malignant, and the
Lords declared they would join the Commons in a
second address. The Earl of Northampton1, and
Lord Willoughby of Eresby, were sent from the
Lords to present it.
The Houses immediately proceeded to pass the
ordinance concerning the militia, and to nominate
Lords Lieutenants for the several counties. The
King refused his assent; Parliament declared that
they would dispose of the militia without the King.
On the 2nd March, it was resolved, that "the kingdom
" be forthwith put into a posture of defence by au-
" thority of both Houses," which was protested
against by the Earls of Lindsey, Bath2, Southampton,
Northampton, Lord Willoughby of Eresby, and
others, in all thirteen Peers. On the 5th March,
the two Houses passed the ordinance on their own
authority.
As the Parliament may be considered as having,
by this act, declared open war against the pre-
rogatives, if not the person, of the King, we will
pause for an instant to note the position of the Earl
of Essex at this critical juncture, when he was about
to fill so important a post as that of General of an
army levying war against his Sovereign.
The popularity and influence of the Earl were
1 Spenser Compton, second Earl of Northampton, died in 1642.
2 Henry Bourchier, fifth Earl of Bath, died 1654, when the title be-
came extinct.
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 337
so highly rated by Lord Clarendon, that he does
not hesitate to assert, that if Essex had not con-
sented to be General, the Parliament would have
been utterly unable to raise an army. Without
giving credence to this assertion in its fullest sense,
this much must be conceded, that the person of
whose importance such an opinion could be advanced,
must have been a most desirable ally to either party ;
and it might therefore have been expected that the
King would conciliate the man whose influence was
sufficient to turn the scale in favour of the party he
espoused. But in this, as in all other cases, Charles
acted with that obstinate ill judgment which was one
of his characteristics, and precisely in proportion as
the Earl of Essex received caresses and flatteries
from the constitutional party, did the King show him
coldness and disfavour.
The Parliament nominated Lord Essex Lord Lieu-
tenant of Yorkshire, Staffordshire, and Montgomery-
shire, to which were afterwards added Shropshire
and Herefordshire. As the power of calling the
population of the counties to arms was vested in the
Lords Lieutenants, these appointments added vastly
to his dignity and influence. This power should un-
questionably have been exercised under the King ;
but the party to which Essex attached himself was,
at this time, chiefly engaged in destroying the pre-
rogatives of the Crown.
Yet it is beyond a doubt, that between the opinions
of Essex himself, and those of Hertford and the
other Lords who had joined the King, there was but
VOL. n. z
338 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIII.
a shade of difference ; that Essex was no more an
advocate for the abolition of royalty and the destruc-
tion of the Church of England, than Hertford, Falk-
land, and Southampton were friendly to the exercise
of arbitrary power by the King.
Clarendon says that Essex expressed to his friends
a desire that the Parliament should be more mode-
rate, and that " the King, who had given so much,
" should receive some satisfaction ; " and that he
was prevented from making any approach towards
the King by reports of hard words Charles was said
to have used concerning him at York. In another
passage, the same author observes, that Essex, believ-
ing he should be General in the Houses as well as in
the field, and be able to restrain their passions and
govern their councils, as well as to fight their battles,
and by these means become the preserver of the King
and kingdom, launched into that stormy sea where
he found no safe harbour.
Lord Essex might have been influenced by the
feelings and expectations here described, which, with
our greater experience of revolutions, appear so
visionary. Where is to be found the man who can
say to the torrent of revolution, Thus far, and no
farther, shalt thou go ? To oppose it is a vain effort ;
the man who does so is certain to be overturned,
overwhelmed, and lost. Unguided, it rushes impetu-
ously on, uprooting all obstacles, until, its course im-
peded by the wreck borne on its own bosom, the
stream separates into a thousand channels, each of
which runs brawling along, powerless and useless.
CHAP. XIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 339
A skilful leader, while seeming to be carried with
the current, may guide and keep it within due
bounds, until it settles into a broad, majestic, and
beneficial stream.
Rarely may such a leader be found, and certainly
Essex was not the man to fill the post. His abilities
were not of a commanding order ; he was neither a
skilful tactician, nor a demagogue ; he was a proud,
plain-dealing, punctilious man of honour, forced by
circumstances to take the lead in a movement of
which he did but half approve. The result was,
that instead of staying or guiding the torrent, and
saving the kingdom, his name, his reputation, and his
influence only served as a stepping-stone to those
able and unscrupulous men, of iron will and stern
enthusiasm, who, in carrying out their passionate
declaration of undying hatred to tyranny and bigotry,
murdered their lawful sovereign, and in the place of
the reverential observances and beautiful prayers of
the Church of England, set up a familiar and profane
cant.
z 2
340 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
CHAPTER XIV.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — Continued.
PROGRESS OF EVENTS. ESSEX APPOINTED CAPTAIN GENERAL BY
THE PARLIAMENT. HE IS PROCLAIMED A REBEL BY THE KING.
THE STANDARD RAISED BY THE KING. PARLIAMENT ARMY
ASSEMBLES AT NORTHAMPTON. —ESSEX MARCHES TO WORCESTER.
— HIS SPEECH TO THE ARMY. — BATTLE OP EDGEHILL. — SUB-
SEQUENT PROCEEDINGS. ATTEMPT TO NEGOTIATE. — ACTION AT
BRENTFORD. KING CHARLES RETIRES TO OATLANDS, AND OX-
FORD.— ESSEX ESTABLISHES HEAD QUARTERS AT WINDSOR.
How Lord Essex reconciled his actions and his.
declaration of loyalty, it is not easy to understand.
It is clear that for months past Parliament had been
attacking the authority of the King, and had denied
him the exercise of his irrefragable rights and prero-
gatives. In times of intense and growing excitement,
such as we are now considering, the minds of men
are warped by their passions and prepossessions, and
as correspondence ceased or was destroyed, private
opinions are no longer laid before us ; I would there-
fore conclude, that the ambition of leading a great
party, and of being a principal means in humbling the
Sovereign by whom he conceived he had been ill-used,
added to the suspicions he entertained of Charles's
sincerity, led Lord Essex to adopt a line of conduct
which was certainly inconsistent with his professions
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 341
of loyalty. It must be remembered that the Royal-
ists evinced, by their extreme reluctance to take arms,
by their desire of accommodation, as well as by the
character of their most respected leaders, that the
cause for which they fought was not so much that
of Charles the King, as of the constitution of the
country ; for the conduct of the leaders of the Par-
liament could not but raise grave suspicions of their
intention to overturn both Church and State.
A brief narration of events will bring us from the
virtual declaration of war, by the resolutions of the
2nd March, 1642, to the actual commencement of
hostilities.
In April, Sir John Hotham, Governor of Hull, in
which town there was a great store of arms, refused
to admit the King within its gates ; Charles declared
him guilty of treason ; the Parliament voted that he
had only acted in obedience to the Houses, and that
to declare him a traitor was a high breach of
privilege.
On the 5th May, Parliament ordered those in
authority to put in force the Militia Ordinance.
The King issued orders to raise a guard for his
person, which Parliament voted to be a preparation
for war against them, and a breach of the trust
reposed in him by his people.
On the 3rd June, Parliament sent the " nineteen
" propositions " to the King, as a foundation for
ending all differences. These were rejected by
Charles as subversive of his regal rights; which,
indeed, they were so entirely, that the frarners of
z 3
342 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
them could have had no expectation that the King
would entertain them favourably.
On the 10th June, the King issued Commissions of
Array ; and on the same day, the Lords and Commons
at Westminster subscribed money and horses for the
public service. Eighteen Peers subscribed 10,300£.,
and 296 horses ; the largest subscribers were, the
Earl of Northumberland 2000/., the Earl of Essex
and Lord Brooke 1000/. and 20 horses each, the
Earl of Pembroke WOOL and 40 horses. By horses
were meant horse soldiers fully armed. As an in-
stance of the unsettled state of men's minds up to this
moment, as to which side they should espouse, it may
be mentioned that Lord Paget subscribed ten horses,
and the following day left London to join the King.1
On the 12th July, after a long debate, it was re-
solved that an army should be raised ; that the Earl
of Essex should be their General, with whom they
would live and die ; and that a petition should be
sent to His Majesty, to move him to a good accord
with his Parliament, to prevent a civil war.
This petition was answered by the King on the
9th August. He sent a letter to the Speaker of the
House of Lords, enclosing "a proclamation for the
" suppressing the present rebellion under Robert,
" Earl of Essex, and the gracious offer of His
" Majesty's free pardon to him, and to all such
" of his adherents as, within six days after the date
hereof, will lay down their arms."
u
1 From this time the names of Royalists or Cavaliers, and Parlia-
mentarians or Roundheads, came into general use.
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 343
This was read in the House on the llth. when
Lord Essex rose and said, that although it had pleased
His Majesty to proclaim him a traitor, yet his heart
was as true and upright to his King and country as
any subject's in England whatever. And as the Lords
and Commons had declared that they would assist
him, and justify his proceedings as General of the
army raised for the present expedition, so he would
use his best and most faithful endeavours and skill in
the managing and putting in execution the trust they
reposed in him, and that neither threats, favours, nor
anything else should divert or discourage him from
his intentions in the behalf of this cause, though it
were at the loss of his dearest blood.1
The following day the Houses passed a declaration
and resolutions concerning the royal proclamation,
from which the following is an extract: " That
" whereas the Lords and Commons in Parliament
" did formerly choose the Earl of Essex to be
" Captain General of such forces as are or shall
" be raised for the maintenance and preservation of
" the true Protestant religion, the King's person,
" the laws of the land, the peace of the kingdom,
" the liberty and property of the subject, and the
" rights and privileges of Parliament; this House
" doth now declare that they will maintain and
" adhere to him the said Earl with their lives and
" estates in the same cause."
1 From a tract in the Brit. Mus.
z 4
344 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
In the beginning of August, Portsmouth, influenced
by Colonel Goring, the Governor, declared for the
King ; a blockade by sea and land was established
against the place, and Goring, disappointed in his
expectation of being relieved by the Marquis of
Hertford, was compelled to capitulate. Hertford,
who had been sent with a Commission of Array into
the West, had a skirmish with the Earl of Bedford
near Sherborne, and on the 24th, another skirmish
took place on Dunsmore Heath, Warwickshire, be-
tween the forces under the Earl of Northampton, and
Lord Brooke.
On the 22nd August the King raised the standard
at Nottingham, a ceremony which was considered
equivalent to a declaration of war.
On the 15th September, Secretary Nicholas,
writing from Derby, informs Sir William Boswell that
" the King marched from Nottingham the Tuesday
" before — the 13th, — with 500 horse, five regiments
" of foot, and twelve pieces of artillery. The trained
" bands met him seven miles from Nottingham,
" whereof 500 volunteered for the King, and the rest
" were disarmed." Charles proceeded to Shrewsbury
to recruit his army, almost all the people of those
parts being Eoyalists.
Before leaving Nottingham, Charles made one more
effort to negotiate with the Parliament. He sent
the Earl of Southampton, Sir John Colepepper, and
Sir William Uvedale, with a proposal to the Houses
to appoint commissioners on both sides. The Houses
refused to treat with a King who had raised his
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 345
standard against the Parliament, and had declared
their General a traitor.
On the 9th September, the Earl of Essex set out
from Essex House to assume the command of the
Parliamentarian army.
He was attended with great solemnity to the out-
skirts of the city by the trained bands, and by many
members of both Houses. " But the love and wishes of
" the people that did attend him, were far greater than
" any outward signification could express ; to whom
" he seemed at that time, though going to a civil war,
" as much an Englishman, and as true a patriot,
" as if he had gone against a foreign enemy. Great
" was the love and honor which the people in gene-
" ral bore to his person, in regard of his own virtue
" and honorable demeanor ; and much increased by
" the memory of his noble father, the highest ex-
" ample that ever I yet read, of a favorite both to
" Prince and people ; of whom that was most true
" which Velleius Paterculus speaks with flattery and
a falsehood of Sejanus, In quo cum judicio Principis
" certabant studia populi, the people's love strove to
" match the Prince's judgment/' 1
From St. Alban's, where his head quarters were,
Lord Essex proceeded to the general rendezvous at
Northampton, at which place about 20,000 men
assembled.
He was required by his instructions from the
Parliament to restrain all impieties and profaneness,
and all plundering ; to use his utmost endeavours to
1 May, 162.
346 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
rescue His Majesty's person, and the Prince, and the
Duke of York, by battle or otherwise, out of the
hands of the desperate persons then about them ; to
present to the King the petition1 entrusted to him ;
to offer pardon to all who would withdraw from the
King, excepting the Duke of Richmond, the Earls of
Bristol, Cumberland, Newcastle, Rivers, and Car-
narvon, Viscounts Newark and Falkland, and Messrs.
Edward Hyde, Endymion Porter, and Secretary
Nicholas ; to receive contributions ; to protect the
good people ; to apprehend delinquents ; and to
protect the persons of all His Majesty's loving sub-
jects against violence and rapine by any Cavaliers of
the King's pretended army.
A committee of assistance was also appointed, to
consist of all members of the two Houses serving in
the army ; any three, with the General, to form a
quorum. They were to consult and advise on all
matters respecting the army, borrow money and
provisions, apprehend and detain, or discharge, all
persons, and to correspond with the Houses.
The army of the Parliament inarched to Worcester,
placing by the way garrisons in Coventry and War-
wick.
There are, in the State Paper Office, some letters
in the form of a journal, from one Nehemiah Wharton2,
1 The Earl of Dorset wrote to Essex from Wolverhampton on the 16th
October, that " His Majesty would not receive any petition by the hands
of such as he had, by name, proclaimed traitors ;" and Essex being the
principal of those persons, the petition was rejected.
2 Addressed to Mr. George Willingham, Merchant, at the Golden
Anchor in St. Swithin's Lane.
CHAP. XIV. ROBEKT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 347
a very zealous Roundhead, from which, being the
last news-letters I have seen, and written in a most
amusing style, I shall extract the account of the
opening of the campaign. •
On Wednesday the 14th, our forces marched into the field,
and the Lord General viewed us, both front, rear, and flanks,
when the drums beating and the trumpets sounding, made
a harmony delectable to our friends, but terrible to our ene-
mies; and in the even our regiment marched five miles N.E.
unto Spratton, where we, and as many as could, billetted in
the town ; the rest quartered the country. On Thursday,
our regiment met again, where those famous laws1 for our
army were read and expounded.
Saturday our regiment met again, and were mustered.
This even, Captain Francis returning from London, informed
me of the courageousness and constancy of the city of London,
and also of their constant supplies of money and plate ; and
also told me, that the whole city were now either real or
constrained Roundheads.
Sabbath day we peaceably enjoyed with Mr. Obadiah Sedg-
wick, who gave us two heavenly sermons.
On Monday, marched through West Haddon, Crick, and
Hill Morton, where we had a supply of drink, which upon a
march is very rare and extraordinary welcome, and came to
Rugby, where we had good quarter. The next day marched
two miles to Dunsmore Heath, where the Lord General and
his regiment2 met us, as also the Lord of Stamford, Colonel
1 Laws and Ordinances of War, by H. E. Eobert, Earl of Essex, &c.,
printed 1643.
2 Lord Essex had a body-guard of 100 gentlemen, armed as cuirassiers,
and commanded by Sir Philip Stapleton. A volume of " Banners of the
Parliament Army," Add. MSS. 5247., gives the banner of the Lord
General, an orange field with a white border, a label on the field inscribed
with the motto, Basis virtutum constantia. The gentlemen of the Earl's
348 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
Cholmley, and Colonel Hampden, with many troops of horse,
and 18 field-pieces, where we had tidings that all the Malig-
nants in Worcestershire, with the Cavaliers, were got into
Worcester, whereupon we marched six miles unto Bagging-
ton, and the next day (21st) quartered before Warwick, till
40 pieces of ordnance with their carriages, had passed by ; in
which time I viewed the antiquities about one mile on this
side Warwick, as Sir Guy, his cave, his chapel, and his pic-
ture in it, and his stables, all hewed out of the main rock, as
also his garden, and two springing wells whereat he drank,
as is reported. From hence we marched through Warwick
in such haste, I could not view the town, but had only a
sight of a castle, which is very strong, built upon a mighty
rock, whereof there are store in this country. This night
we marched two miles farther unto Barford, where our
quarter, as constantly it is since his Excellency's coming,
was very poor, many of our soldiers having neither beds,
bread, nor water, which makes them grieve very strong, for
backbiters have been seen to march upon some of them, six
on breast, and eight deep at their open order ; and I fear I
shall be in the same condition ere long, for we can get no
carriage for officers, so that my trunk and all necessaries
therein, are left at Coventry ; and, indeed, our regiment is
more slighted than any other, insomuch that I have heard
some of our captains repent their coming forth.
Thursday morning we marched in the front four miles to-
wards Worcester, when we met one riding post from Wor-
cester, informing us that our troops and the Cavaliers were
then in fight, but it was false, only to haste the captains from
Warwick. Upon this report, our whole regiment ran shout-
guard wore an orange scarf across the breast. The cuirassiers or pis-
toliers were the first rank of horsemen, and being by their place gentle-
men, were almost always of good birth and degree. They wore armour
down to the knee, and bore a case of pistols, twenty-six inches long, of
36 bore, a firelock, and a sword. — MeyricKs Anc. Armour, iii. 102.
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 349
ing for two miles together, To Worcester! To Worcester! and
desired to march all night.
They halted that night at Aston Cantlow, where
Nehemiah again complains that he could get neither
quarters, bread, nor drink. The following day,
Friday, the 23rd September, his regiment marched to
within four miles of Worcester, through " such foul
" weather, that before I had marched one mile I was
" wet to the skin." He consequently arrived too late
to be present at the skirmish of that day, in which
the Koundheads were defeated. Nehemiah, however,
consoles himself with the assurance " that the Lord
" hath given them this small victory, that in the day
" of battle they may come on more presumptuously
" to their own destruction ; and though, in that day,
" I and many thousands may be cut off, I am con-
" fident that the Lord of Hosts will triumph gloriously
" over these horses and their cursed riders."
On the representation of Colonel Brown, that officer
and Colonel Sandys, with two regiments and five
troops of horse1, were pushed on from Alcester to
occupy the passage over the Teme at Powick, about
a mile and a half from Worcester, and so cut off Sir
John Byron, who occupied that city for the King,
from receiving supplies, or retreating in that direc-
1 The horse soldier of the second degree was called a harquebusier or
carbine ; this branch was generally composed of yeomen, or the better
sort of serving men; they wore armour, with a light head-piece, a
"hargobus" three feet three inches long, of No. 20. bore, and a sword.
The last sort were called dragoons; they were a kind of footmen
on horseback ; wore an open head-piece and a buff coat with deep skirts ;
their arms, a sort of carbine called a dragon, sixteen inches long, of
musket bore, and a sword. — MeyricKs Anc. Armour.
350 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
tion. They took possession of Powick bridge on the
evening of Thursday the 22nd, and remained there
undisturbed till the following afternoon, when Prince
Rupert, who had been sent for by Byron, arrived with
a body of 700 horse ; " most of the city," writes
Nehemiah, " crying, Welcome ! Welcome ! but princi-
" pally the Mayor, who desired to entertain him ; but
" he answered, God damn him, he would not stay,
" but go wash his hands in the blood of the Round-
" heads."
The Prince immediately proceeded towards Powick,
where a skirmish ensued, in which, according to the
Roundhead version, Colonel Sandys got entangled in
a lane, of which the hedges were lined with musquetry ;
at all events they were completely routed, Colonel
Sandys mortally wounded, and the road to Ludlow
opened to the Royalists.1 On the 24th, the Parliament
forces entered Worcester, having bivouacked the night
before : " where we had small comfort, for it rained
" hard ; our food was fruit for those that could get
" it, our drink water, our beds the earth, our
" canopy the clouds ; but we pulled up the hedges,
" pales, and gates, and made good fires, his Ex-
" cellency promising us that if the country relieved
" us not the day following, he would fire their towns;
" thus we continued singing of psalms until the
" morning, when we marched into Worcester, the
1 Lord Falkland, in a letter to the Earl of Cumberland, 30th September,
says that 400 Roundheads were killed, taken, or drowned. As he claimed
but fifty prisoners, the number is clearly exaggerated. Indeed, little
reliance is to be placed on the account of casualties by either party.
CriAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 351
" rain continuing the whole day, and the way so
" base that we went up to the ankles in thick clay."
Before entering Worcester, the Earl of Essex made
the following speech to the army : —
Gentlemen and Fellow-soldiers : Ye are at this time as-
sembled under my command, for the defence of His Majesty
and the maintenance of the true Protestant religion ; I shall
therefore desire you to take notice what I, that am your
General, shall, by my honor, promise to perform toward
you, and what I shall be forced to expect that you will per-
form towards me. I do promise, in the sight of Almighty
God, that I shall undertake nothing but what shall tend to
the advancement of the Protestant religion, the securing of
His Majesty's royal person, the maintenance of the just
privilege of Parliament, and the liberty and property of the
subject ; neither will I engage any of you into any danger :
but, though for many reasons I might forbear, I will, in my
own person, run an equal hazard with you, and either bring
you off with honor, or, if God have so decreed, fall with you
and willingly become a sacrifice for the preservation of my
country.
Likewise I do promise that my ear shall be open to hear
the complaint of the poorest of my soldiers, though against
the chiefest of my officers ; neither shall his greatness, if
justly taxed, gain any privilege ; but I shall be ready to ex-
ecute justice against all, from the greatest to the least. Your
pay shall be constantly delivered to your commanders, and if
default be made by any officer, give me timely notice, and
you shall find speedy redress.
This being performed on my part, I shall now declare
what is your duty towards me, which I must likewise expect
to be carefully performed by you. I shall desire all and
every officer to endeavour by love and affable carriage to
352 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
command his soldiers, since what is done for fear is done
unwillingly, and what is unwillingly attempted can never
prosper. Likewise it is my request, that you be careful in
the exercising of your men, and bring them to use their
arms readily and expertly, and not to busy them in practising
the ceremonious forms of military discipline ; only let them
be well instructed in the necessary rudiments of war, that
they may know how to fall on with discretion, and how to
retreat with care; how to maintain their order, and make
good their ground.
Also I do expect, that all those who have voluntarily en-
gaged themselves in this service, should answer my expecta-
tion in the performing of the ensuing articles : — That you
willingly and cheerfully obey such as, by your own election,
you have made commanders over you. That you take special
care to keep your arms at all times fit for service, that upon
all occasions you may be ready to repair to your colors when
the signal shall be given by the sound of drum or trumpet,
and so to inarch upon any service where and when occasion
may require. That you bear yourselves like soldiers, with-
out doing any spoil to the inhabitants of the country ; so
doing, you shall gain love and friendship, where otherwise
you will be hated and complained of, and I that should pro-
tect you, shall be forced to punish you according to the
severity of the law. That you accept and rest satisfied with
such quarters as shall fall to your lot, or be appointed you
by your quartermaster. That you shall, if appointed for
sentries or perdues, faithfully discharge that duty ; for upon
fail hereof, you are sure to undergo a very severe censure.
You shall forbear to profane the Sabbath, either by being
drunk, or by unlawful games ; for whosoever shall be found
faulty, must not expect to pass unpunished. Whosoever
shall be known to neglect the feeding of his horse with
proper provender, to the end that his horse'be disabled, or
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 353
unfit for service ; the party for the said default, shall suffer a
month's imprisonment, and afterward be cashiered, as un-
worthy the name of a soldier. That no trooper or other of
our soldiers shall suffer his paddee to feed his horse in the
corn, or to steal men's hay ; but shall pay every man Gd. day
and night, and for oats 2s. the bushel. And lastly, that you
avoid cruelty ; for it is my desire rather to save the lives of
thousands than to kill one, so that it may be done without
prejudice.
These things faithfully performed, and the justice of our
cause truly considered, let us advance with a religious
courage, and willingly adventure our lives in the defence of
the King and Parliament.1
On the 30th, Wharton writes again : —
Worcestershire is a pleasant, fruitful, and rich country,
abounding in corn, woods, pastures, hills, and valleys, every
hedge and highway beset with fruit, but especially with
pears, whereof they make that pleasant drink called perry,
which they sell for a penny a quart, though better than ever
you tasted at London. The city is more large than any I
have seen since I left London ; it abounds in outward things,
but for want of the Word the people perish. It is pleasantly
seated, exceeding populous, and doubtless very rich, on the
east bank of that famous river the Severn, the walls in the
form of a triangle, the gates seven. There is a very stately
cathedral called St. Mary's, in which there are many stately
monuments ; amongst the rest, in the middle of the quire, is
the monument of King John, all of white marble, with his
picture thereon to the life. Sir, our army did little think
ever to have seen Worcester, but the providence of God hath
brought us hither, and had it not, the city is so vile, the
1 Parl. Hist. ii. 1476.
VOL. II. A A
354 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
country so base, so papistical, and atheistical, and abominable,
that it resembles Sodom, and is the very emblem of Go-
morrah, and doubtless it would have been worse than either
Algiers or Malta, a very den of thieves, and a receptacle and
refuge for all the hell-hounds in the country.
From Worcester, Essex sent a detachment under
the Earl of Stamford to surprise Hereford, in which
Nehemiah Whartori served. He states that they got
into Hereford by telling the Mayor that Essex was
at hand with all his army.
The city is well situated on the Wye, environed with a
strong wall, better than any I have seen before, with five
gates, and a strong stone bridge of six arches, surpassing
Worcester. In this city there is the stateliest market-place
in the kingdom, built with columns after the manner of the
Exchange ; the Minster every way exceeding Worcester ;
the city not so large ; the inhabitants totally ignorant of the
ways of God, and much addicted to drunkenness and other
vices, but principally unto swearing, so that the children that
have scarce learnt to speak, do universally swear stoutly.
Many here speak Welsh. Sabbath day, the time of morning
prayer, we went to the Minster, where the pipes played, and
the puppets sang so sweetly, that some of our soldiers could
not forbear dancing in the holy quire ; whereat the Baalists
were sore displeased.
Charles had arrived at Shrewsbury on the 20th
September, and such was the zeal of the .Royalists in
those parts, that in three weeks his army had in-
creased in numbers to above 11,000 men. With this
force he left Shrewsbury on the 12th October, and
marching by Bridgnorth, Wolverhampton, Binning-
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 355
ham, Packington, and Kenil worth, reached South am
on the 21st.1
In the first week of October, Essex pushed forward
his advance to within three miles of Shrewsbury. It
is not quite clear that he quitted Worcester himself,
as, although the accounts of the skirmish at Bridg-
north generally state that he was present, it seems
that the reports he sent to Parliament were dated
from Worcester. On the 10th, a letter from the Earl
was read in Parliament, in which he stated that he
had intelligence that the King meant to divide his
army, and leaving one part to keep Essex in play,
inarch with the other straight to London. In con-
sequence of this advice, he had sent reinforcements
with artillery to Coventry. On the 13th he had
sent a strong force to Bewdley and Kidderminster,
and intended to follow with the main body.
Essex did not receive intelligence of the King's
march until the 19th, on which day Charles was
resting at Packington. With this slight advantage
in point of distance, he could scarcely have reached
London before Essex; but it was worth the trial, and
if successful, the war might perhaps have terminated
in the first campaign. His own wishes were pro-
bably opposed by a majority of his followers, who
not only dreaded any success which might be suffi-
cient to restore the King to power, which, with an
army at his command, might become absolute, but
there was already in the royal army a schism, which
i The dates of the royal movements are throughout this narrative
taken from the Iter Carolinum, in Gutch's Coll. Cur.
A A 2
356 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
throughout the war prevented unanimity of feeling
and action. The Earl of Lindsey, whose reputation
as a soldier was second only to that of Essex, was
General of the royal army ; but when Prince Rupert
received his commission to command the horse, his
unwise uncle added to it a clause, which rendered
him independent of all authority save the King. Of
all the Royalist leaders during the civil war, none
exercised so evil an influence on the fortunes of the
King as Prince Rupert.
The Earl of Essex instantly left Worcester on
learning the direction of the King's march ; and so
rapid was his advance, that he was compelled to
leave behind him the chief part of his artillery,
ammunition, and the baggage, with two regiments of
foot and one of horse to guard it.
The royal army advanced from Southam to Edg-
cote, with the intention of reducing Banbury on the
22nd, the same day on which Essex reached Kineton.
Intelligence having been conveyed to the King of
the vicinity of the rebels, he turned aside to meet
them.
On Sunday morning, the 23rd October, 1642, the
Lord General, when going to church, was informed
that the royal army was in full march upon him.
He forthwith drew out his forces, consisting of eleven
regiments of foot, forty-two troops of horse, and 700
dragoons, in all about 10,000 men, in the Vale of
the Red Horse, between the village of Kineton
and Edgehill. It was noon before the van of the
royal army appeared on the crest of the hill ; and
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 357
by the time they had descended and formed in the
vale it was two o'clock.
The Parliament army was drawn up in three lines.
Three regiments of horse, under Sir William Balfour,
covered the right flank, on which were placed the
chief part of the field-pieces they had with them;
on the left were twenty-four troops of horse under
Sir James Kamsay. The Earl of Essex headed the
centre on foot, and pike in hand, until he was en-
treated to take a post more befitting the chief com-
mander of the army.
Like his ancient comrade, the Earl of Lindsey also
led his infantry on foot. Prince Rupert commanded
the cavalry of the right wing, Lord Wilmot that of
the left of the royal army.
The battle was begun by the rebel artillery, which
was answered from the other side, and the cannonade
continued for above an hour. At the end of that
time the Royalists advanced ; the impetuous Rupert
charged the Parliamentarian left so fiercely that they
broke at once. Confusion produced a panic on the
desertion of Sir Faithful Fortescue with his troop of
horse, who passed over to the royal side; and the
whole left wing of the rebel army took to a precipitate
flight, pursued by Rupert and his cavalry, through
and beyond Kineton, which village the Prince per-
mitted his men to plunder, and so lost the most
precious hour of the day, which, otherwise employed,
would have secured a decisive victory to the King :
for in the centre an obstinate and still doubtful
struggle was going on, in which, though the Earl of
A A 3
358 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
Lindsey was mortally wounded, and, with his son,
taken prisoner, and the royal standard was captured,
the combat had not taken a decided turn, when
Sir William Balfour, by a skilful movement on the
flank of the Koyalists, took and spiked a battery of
guns, dispersed a regiment of foot, and charging the
rear of the royal centre, completely discomfited them ;
they at once broke, and retreated on the reserve,
which was about to advance, headed by the King,
when Rupert, with his plunderers, reappeared on the
scene, but too late to regain the lost advantages.
Darkness was drawing on, and friends were fired on
being mistaken for foes. After a short space the royal
army withdrew, and, reascending the hill, left Essex
in possession of the field of battle, on which he
remained under arms all night and part of the next
day ; but the Royalists did not again offer battle, and
filing away over Edgehill, were entirely lost to view
before evening, when the Parliament army retired to
Warwick to recruit and rest.
Thus ended the first battle of the rebellion, which
is remarkable only for this, that the loss was nearly
equal on either side ; that though the Earl of Essex
remained master of the field, the military advantages
to be taken were clearly in favour of the King : but
as he did not seize them, it must be fairly termed a
drawn battle.1
The Parliamentary writers almost admit that their
1 The loss on both sides is generally stated at upwards of 5000 killed,
more than one-fifth of the whole number engaged ; a number quite incre-
dible, but much more than sufficient to disorganize more veteran armies
than these.
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 359
side had the worst. Whitelocke calls it " a small
" victory and a great deliverance." Ludlow says
that their army " returned to London, not like men
" that had gained a victory, but as if they had been
" beaten."
The day after the battle, Essex was joined by
Hampden with other regiments, to the number, ac-
cording to Ludlow, of 4000 men. It is clear, there-
fore, that had he been so minded, he might have
followed the King with almost a certainty of defeating
him ; but this was only the first of many instances I
shall have to bring before the notice of the reader, of
Lord Essex's unwillingness to push the King to
extremities — a half mode of proceeding which has
lost him his character as a general in the eyes of
posterity.
Charles summoned Banbury, which surrendered to
him without resistance, and from Aynhoe, instead of
proceeding to London, where the Houses of Parliament
and the citizens were in a state of the utmost alarm,
he went to Oxford, losing more valuable time, and
did not establish his head quarters at Maidenhead
until the 8th of November,
On the 2nd November, Essex, with 12,000 men,
and 37 pieces of artillery, marched from Northampton
towards London ; on the 5th he was at St. Alban's ;
and on the 6th, disposing the principal part of his
army about Acton, and placing a garrison in Kingston
to keep the bridge, went the next day to London,
where " he was joyfully received by the Parliament,
A A 4
360 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
" and thousands of those that were well affected did
" flock to see him."1
The Parliament had recovered from their extreme
panic2 on finding that the King was not marching to
London, and on the 3rd November the House of
Commons had voted a present of 5000Z. to the Lord
General, with a letter of " thanks for his great service
" to the Commonwealth." In a few days after his
arrival he received the thanks of Parliament, " who
" having, for his wisdom, courage, and fidelity, chosen
" him General, find he has managed their service of
" so high importance, with such care, valor, and dex-
" terity, as well by the extremest hazard of his life,
" as by all the actions of an expert and most ex-
" cellent commander, as doth deserve their best ac-
" knowledgment."3
We are now to relate a circumstance which, whether
intentional or accidental, served as an engine of mis-
chief in the hands of the extreme levelling party, who,
as yet, dared not show themselves openly, and with
which they were enabled to renew and strengthen the
impressions of Charles's faithlessness and treachery.
On the 3rd November, the two Houses had voted
a petition to the King, in which he was prayed to
reside in some convenient place, where commissioners
1 Perfect Diurnal.
2 There is a letter from Harapden, in the Ashburnham Collection,
showing the state of panic that existed. It is dated from Northampton,
31st October, to Colonel Bulstrode and others, telling them the army is
daily advancing, and if they do not disband, they will be a mutual succour,
but if they disperse, they will make themselves and the country a prey.
3 Lords' Journal, v. 411.
CHAP. XIV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 361
from the Parliament might attend him to treat.
Letters were written for a safe-conduct to the bearers
of this petition, which being forwarded, the Earls of
Northumberland and Pembroke, Mr. Pierrepoint,
Lord Wenman, and Sir John Hippesley, waited on
the King at Colnbrook on the llth November, to
which place he had advanced on the 10th. It must
be observed that, on the advance of the King, the
Houses had desired the Lord General to cover the
approaches to London, who had, in consequence,
posted the regiment of Denzil Holies in Brentford.
The King received the deputation graciously, and
said that he would occupy Windsor Castle, and there
receive the committees. They returned with this
answer ; on which Essex, asking in the House what
he should do with the army, was directed to forbear
hostilities till further orders.1 The deputation had
scarcely quitted the royal presence, when a strong
detachment of cavalry and artillery, supported by the
main body of the army, advanced from Colnbrook,
attacked Brentford, and after a bloody resistance by
Holles's regiment, which, but for the support of
Hampden's and Lord Brooke's, would have been cut
to pieces, remained masters of the town.
The next morning, the 12th, Charles sent a second
message to Parliament, to say he would receive the
propositions for peace at Brentford, pretending that
he had just heard that Essex was advancing on him
with all his army.2
1 Lords' Journal, 12th November.
2 Although there had been no formal cessation of arms agreed upon,
362 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
The enemies to peace immediately grasped this
occasion; and Parliament having desired Essex to
forbear hostilities, they certainly had some colour for
their complaints of treachery. The King replied,
that he was informed Essex was marching against
him, and he seized Brentford to prevent his being
surrounded. The falsity of this reason almost
induces one to believe that it was an intentional act
on the part of the King ; for it is evident that with
the Parliament forces at Acton, Kingston, and
Windsor, his advance to Brentford only caused him
to be more completely surrounded.
Essex, who was sitting in the House of Lords when
the news of this engagement arrived, was ordered to
" pursue the enemy with all advantage whatever,"
and immediately departed with the disposable troops.
All that night, London was sending down trained
bands and volunteers to support the army. On the
14th, 24,000 men stood in arms on Turnham Green,
face to face with the royal army.1 Rushworth says :
" The Parliament men and gentlemen that were
" officers, were all for engaging, but the soldiers of
" fortune were altogether against it ;" and although
Essex sent four regiments of foot, and two of horse,
to make a circuit, and fall on the King's left flank,
on which fact Charles grounded the defence of his conduct, the order of
the House to Essex shows in what sense they understood the matter ;
and it certainly appears that the conduct of the Parliament was more
creditable than the King's.
1 The Earl of Essex went from regiment to regiment encouraging
them, and when he had spoken to each, the soldiers would throw up their
caps and cry, Hey, for old Robin ! — Whitelocke, p. 65.
CHAP. XIV. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 363
while he attacked in front at the same time, these
troops were recalled before they could execute their
orders, and Charles was again suffered to retire
unmolested; and as if on purpose to facilitate his
retreat, the garrison of Kingston, 3000 strong, had
been withdrawn by London Bridge, leaving open
for him the road to Oatlands, where he remained
some days.
The good people of London during this day, were
careful to provide for the wants of their defenders.
The newspaper says : "It was a wonder to see how
" many cart-loads of bread, cheese, and meat, baked,
" boiled, and roasted, with great store of pies, piping
" hot, was on a sudden brought out of every street
" and parish to Guildhall ; great quantities of beer
" were also sent, besides an hogshead or two of sack,
" and three or four hogsheads of burnt claret."
The royal army retreated to Eeading, and thence,
on the 29th November, to Oxford. On the 25th,
Parliament resolved no more time should be spent in
answering the King, " whose object is to delude us
" with fair words, and to tire us out, and spend the
u stock of the kingdom." On the 28th, Essex
advanced to Windsor, and there established his head
quarters during the winter.
On the 19th December, Charles wrote to Essex
from Oxford, offering him a free pardon if he would
" forbear to proceed any further in this destructive
" war," and desiring that a Committee should be ap-
pointed to treat; the Earl replied in the following
letter.
364 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XIV.
No, LVI.1
Essex to the King.
Most gracious Sovereign, — I humbly tender my service at
your royal feet, being willing to hazard my life and fortunes
in the defence of your Majesty.
Whereas you have been pleased to declare your resolution
concerning a treaty of peace, so has it been my desire, ever
since the beginning of these differences, to embrace the same.
But having such a great trust reposed in me, and committed
to my charge by both Houses of Parliament, I cannot con-
ceive but that I am bound in conscience, according to the
law of God, to discharge that trust which is reposed in me by
your great and honorable council, being for the defence of
your Majesty's person, God's true religion, the privileges of
both Houses of Parliament, the liberties of your good sub-
jects, and the good of the Commonwealth. If it be the
pleasure of that great council that hath reposed in me, to
take the same charge from me again, and to confer it upon
some other honorable person, I shall willingly surrender up
my commission, and be ready to hazard my life and fortune
in your Majesty's service against any foreign enemy. Your
Majesty's most loyal subject, ESSEX.
During the winter, another ineffectual attempt was
made to negotiate ; both King and Parliament re-
quiring certain conditions which the other was not
willing to concede. It is probable that there was no
sincere desire for peace on the part of the majority of
the House of Commons ; but the general feeling of
the country, shown by the multitude of petitions, was
so strongly in favour of it, that they could not treat
it with neglect. A cessation of arms, while nego-
tiations were pending, was agreed upon.
1 From a collection of tracts, Brit. Mus.
CHAP. XV. EGBERT, THIED EAEL OF ESSEX. 365
CHAPTER XV.
LIFE OF EOBEET, THIED EAEL OF ESSEX Continued.
THE CAMPAIGN OF 1643. 10,000/. A YEAR VOTED TO ESSEX. —
HIS LETTERS RECOMMENDING PEACE AND DEMANDING MONEY.
DEBA.TE ON THEIR BEING READ SITUATION OF THE ROYALISTS.
— SIR WILLIAM WALLER'S EXPEDITION AND DEFEAT. — JEA-
LOUSY BETWEEN ESSEX AND WALLER. — PROCEEDINGS IN PAR-
LIAMENT. THE KING BESIEGES GLOUCESTER, WHICH PLACE IS
RELIEVED BY ESSEX. CIRENCESTER SURPRISED. BATTLE OF
NEWBURY. — ESSEX RECEIVES THE THANKS OF PARLIAMENT.—
HE DESIRES LEAVE TO RESIGN HIS COMMISSION. — SOLEMN LEAGUE
AND COVENANT.
THE campaign of 1643 opened with the siege of
Reading, before which town the Earl of Essex, with
an army of 16,000 foot and 3000 horse, sat down on
the 1 5th of April, the day on which the truce expired.
Unwilling to subject the place to an assault, the
horrors of which he had witnessed in his continental
service, Essex admitted the garrison to easy terms at
the expiration of twelve days, during which he had
repulsed, with great slaughter, an attempt of the
Royalists to relieve the garrison. This acquisition
was a source of much distress to the Parliament army,
for an epidemic broke out among the troops, which
destroyed great numbers ; while the discontent of the
soldiers at not being permitted to sack Reading, was
increased by their pay being greatly in arrears, for
the Parliament at that time was in financial dif-
366 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
faculties. Many desertions took place, and a mutiny
broke out, which was repressed by measures of great
severity.
On the 30th April, the House of Commons had
voted that the estates of the malignant, Lord Capel,
should be granted to the Earl of Essex ; but the
Lords appearing, by their constant adjournment of
the question, to be unwilling to reward the Earl in
this manner, resolutions passed both Houses in the
end of May, to the following effect : — That whereas
Robert, Earl of Essex, General of the forces raised
by the Parliament, " hath been plundered, robbed,
" and spoiled of his goods and estates, amounting to
" a great value, by divers traitors and rebels, who,
" by colour of His Majesty's authority, have levied
" war against the King, Parliament, and Kingdom :
" and whereas the debts due unto, and the rents of
" the said Earl, are, by warrant from William Curn-
" berford, the pretended High Sheriff of the county
" of Stafford, commanded to be paid to himself, who
" thereby suggest eth to derive his power for doing
" thereof by special command from His Majesty,
" styling the said Earl an active rebel," &C.1 The
Parliament taking this into consideration, ordered
that 10,000/. per annum should be paid to the Earl,
out of the monies raised on the sequestered estates of
u notorious delinquents." When it is recollected that
the Parliament were at this time unable to pay their
troops, it will not be expected that the payment of
this large sum to Essex would be very regular ; and
1 Commons' Journal, iii. 95.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL Of ESSEX. 367
we shall find, at a later date, that it was never paid
at all.
In compliance with the desire of the citizens of
London, who, as they were to raise the means of
paying the army, exercised an influential voice, but
in opposition to his own judgment, Essex marched to
Thame in June, with a view of proceeding to the
siege of Oxford. But, aggravated by continued heavy
rains, the sickness increased there to such a degree,
and so wasted his army, that he became quite in-
capable of acting offensively ; and giving up all idea
of besieging Oxford, withdrew to Great Brickhill in
the beginning of July, from which place he wrote the
following letters.
No. LYII.1
Essex to the Speaker of the House of Commons*
Mr. Speaker, — I would have given you the true relation of
the skirmish on Sunday last, between some of the horse and
the enemy near Buckingham, but Sir Philip Stapleton and
Colonel Goodwin being then upon the place, I refer the
relation thereof unto them ; since when, being informed that
the King had sent more forces to Buckingham to maintain
that place, and bring these parts into contribution, where
the enemy staid until the army came within two miles of
them, and then made haste away towards Banbury, not-
withstanding they had persuaded the people that they would
not quit the place till they had beaten ire out of the country.
I then understanding that they were fled, held it not fit to go
to the town with my army, but sent Colonel Middleton with
1 Rushwortb, vi. 290.
368 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
some horse to clear that town and coast, which they did ; and
then advised where to quarter with most conveniency for our
army, and most ready for the enemy, the Queen's1 forces being
like to join with them very suddenly.
And that our army may the better serve the Parliament
and city, and counties adjacent, and be more safely supplied
with money from London, and lie most conveniently to join
with the forces of the Lord Grey in Northamptonshire, I
was advised to march to Great Brickhill, as the most fit
place for all purposes, the enemy's chief strength being in
horse. And, this army being recruited with neither horses,
arms, nor saddles, it is impossible to keep the counties from
being plundered, nor to fight with them but when and where
they list ; we being forced, when we move, to march with the
whole army, which can be but slowly, so that the counties
must suffer much wrong, and the cries of poor people are
infinite.
If it were thought fit to send to His Majesty to have
peace, with the settling of religion, the laws and liberties of
the subject, and to bring unto just trials those chief delin-
quents that have brought all this mischief to both kingdoms ;
and, as my Lord of Bristol once spoke in Parliament, how
we may be secured to have these things performed hereafter ;
or else, if His Majesty shall please to absent himself2, there
may be a day set down to give a period to all these unhappy
distractions by a battle, in which, when and where they shall
choose, that may be thought any way indifferent, I shall be
ready to perform that duty I owe you ; and the propositions
to be agreed upon between His Majesty and the Parliament,
may be sent to such an indifferent place, that both armies
1 The Queen was on the march from York.
2 Martyn, speaking of this part of Essex's letter, said, if the King
would not withdraw, but put his finger to be cut, what was that to them.
— Merc. Aulicus.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 369
may be drawn near the one to the other, that if peace be not
concluded, it may be ended by the sword ; no officers of the
army to be of the Committee, nor no intercourse to be
between them. Sir, I am your assured friend,
Great Brickhill, 9th, July 1643. ESSEX.
No. LVIII.1
Essex to William Lenthil, Esq.) Speaker of the House of
Commons.
Sir, — Not having as yet received any commands from the
Parliament how to regulate this army in my advancing, since
my last letter to you, and intelligence being brought that
Prince Rupert and his plundering army is returning towards
Oxford, I shall be enforced as soon as the army is paid, which
will be to-morrow night (sic in orig.). I shall advance, God
willing, at farthest on Friday. I have often desired that a
Committee of both Houses might be sent to be a witness of
our integrity to the service of the State, and must acknow-
ledge the great favor both Houses shewed this army in
appointing a Committee to come down2 ; but then both armies
being afoot, I thought it dangerous for their passage, and not
knowing how the great affairs of the kingdom may dispense
with many from the service of the Houses. If it may stand
with the convenience of the House of Commons, I shall
entreat the favor that Sir Henry Yane the younger may be
an eye witness of our actions 3, he being an intimate friend of
mine, and who by his constant carriage in the Parliament,
which hath gotten him a good repute in all places, may be a
true testimony of our actions ; it being of huge advantage to
keep a good correspondence betwixt the Parliament and their
1 Tanner MSS. 62. 106.
2 Essex had asked for this committee, but when on their journey, he
sent to advise them to halt for the reasons stated in the letter.
3 Sir H. Vane was subsequently sent.
VOL. II. B B
370 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
servants the army. Pie is, besides, a man I put so much
trust in, as that, if he pleaseth, I shall go hand in hand with
him to the walls of Oxford. If any supplies come down,
they would be both welcome and needful ; however, God
willing, the army shall be led on to the most advantage our
judgment shall guide us to. It is in God's hands to give the
victory. Sir, I am your assured friend,
Brickhill, this 12th July, 1643. ESSEX.
No. L1X.1
Essex to the Speaker.
Sir, — I should not so often trouble you in your great
affairs, but that I could not discharge the duty I owe, holding
so great a charge as I do, but to acquaint you, that unless
present order be taken for the supplying the army with
money, their necessities are so great, it will be impossible
for me to keep them together. For besides their former
arrears, they are now three weeks without pay ; many sick
men recover, but finding no money they have small comfort.
I am now marching to a fresh quarter, where, if they may
have pay, recruits, and clothing, most of them being almost
naked, and our soldiers not drawn away with new levies, I
doubt not but in a short time to have a considerable army.
Sir, I am your assured friend,
Uxbridge, this 6th August, 1643. ESSEX.
One of the newspapers informs us, that on the first
of these letters being read in the House of Commons,
there was a vehement debate ; the "root and branch"
men were beginning to show themselves in their true
colours. Essex, with his desire to obtain peace, and
to avoid bloodshed, was far too moderate, while his
1 Tanner MSS. 62. 233.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 371
rank was an additional objection against him. Vassall,
member for London, moved that " the General be
" pressed to speak more plainly, and that if, after
" the expense of 2,000,000/. of treasure without any
" effect, he had a mind to lay down arms, he should
" let them know it, and there wanted not as good
" soldiers as he to take them up." l This motion,
though dropped at the time, was very popular in the
City, where Sir William Waller was generally desig-
nated as the new General, whose successful expedition
to the West had not then been cut short on Roundway
Down. As if to render impossible a reconciliation
with the King, the Commons had, on the 22nd May,
impeached the Queen of high treason ; but the Lords
did not enter into the question, which was dropped.
The result of the debate was a resolution that as,
by the royal proclamation of the 20th June2, their
existence as a Parliament was ignored, and con-
sequently they could not treat with the King as a
Parliament, and that they had bound themselves
never to lay down arms as long as the Papists were
protected, an answer should be sent to the Lord
General to satisfy him, and they would recruit his
troops as he desired.
Yet the affairs of the Parliament were never so
low, nor those of the King in so prosperous a con-
dition, as they were at this juncture. From Ux-
1 Collection of newspapers, Brit. Mus.
2 Warning His Majesty's good subjects not to be misled by the votes,
orders, and pretended ordinances of the Houses, and offering pardon
to those who would repair to him. — Rushworth, vi. 331.
B B 2
372 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
bridge, Lord Essex conducted his wasted and "al-
" most naked " army into quarters about Kingston
on Thames, where we will leave them for a time to
notice the situation of the royalist forces, and the
expedition of Sir William Waller.
In the North, Newcastle was victorious over
Fairfax; in the West, Lord Stamford had been
completely defeated by Sir Ralph Hopton at Stratton,
the result of which was the fall of Exeter to Prince
Maurice, who, with Hertford and Hopton, remained
masters of the Western Counties.
Henrietta Maria had landed in Yorkshire in
February, bringing with her supplies of money and
munitions of war. Want of ammunition had pre-
vented the Oxford army from acting early in the
season ; a supply sent by the Queen from York
removed that difficulty, and at length, having col-
lected an army, she proceeded to join her husband,
who met her at Edgehill on the 13th July. She
brought him 3000 foot, 30 troops of horse, 6 guns,
2 mortars, and 150 waggons loaded with stores, and
arrived at Oxford the same day as the news of the
victory on Roundway Down.
Although Reading had surrendered, the garrison
of 3000 men had been permitted to rejoin their
colours ; the loss of that town may, therefore, be con-
sidered to have added to the King's strength.
The defeat of Waller was followed by the capture
of Bristol, which place was shamefully surrendered
by Nathaniel Fiennes to Prince Rupert on the 27th
July.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 373
A great loss had been sustained by the rebels on
the 18th June, in the person of John Hampden, one
of the most distinguished and esteemed of that party.
Prince Rupert had made one of those rapid guerilla
expeditions for which he was celebrated, and had
beaten up a rebel post at Chinnor during the night.
On his return towards Oxford, hotly pursued, he
was forced to turn and face the enemy at Chalgrave
field. In the skirmish which ensued, the great patriot
fell mortally wounded.
Sir William Waller, after taking Chichester, had
been detached from Lord Essex's army into the
West. He defeated Lord Herbert, and took in suc-
cession Malmesbury, Tewkesbury, Chepstow, Mon-
mouth, Hereford, and Leominster, overrunning the
country and raising contributions. Having notice
that Prince Maurice, Hertford, and Hopton, whose
head-quarters were at Wells, intended to cut him off,
he returned to Bath ; many skirmishes took place ;
at length an indecisive action was fought on Lans-
down, after which, Maurice and Hertford went to
Oxford, Hopton to Devizes, in which town Waller
was besieging him, when Lord Wilmot arrived from
Oxford with 1500 horse and two guns, and on
the 13th July, a battle was fought on Roundway
Down, in which Sir William Waller was completely
defeated; his men threw away their arms and fled,
and Waller himself escaped to Bristol without the
shadow of an army, leaving artillery, baggage, and
ammunition to the Royalists.
Sir William Waller had treated his enemy with
B B 3
374 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
the greatest contempt, having, in his vain-glorious
confidence, written to the Parliament that " their
" work was done, and by the next post he would
" send the number and quality of his prisoners."
The extreme party, who perceived Essex would
never go the length they desired, had already
planned the setting up an independent General,
and had selected Waller. The latter, after his
defeat, complained that he had been " sacrificed by
" Essex, who, jealous of the great things he had
" done, which eclipsed his own glories, had, although
" lying with his whole army within ten miles of
" Oxford, suffered the whole strength of that place
" to march thirty miles to destroy him, without
" sending out a party to follow them, or to alarm
" Oxford, which would have caused their recall."
Waller's charge was so remote from the truth, that
Essex had actually intended a diversion in his favour.
On the 13th July, a letter from the Earl was read in
the Houses, in which he said, that "hearing the
" King's forces were preparing to make head against
u Sir William Waller, enraged at his late success, he
" was paying the troops with the money just arrived,
" and meant to advance on Oxford next Saturday."
It was too late when he wrote the letter to have
afforded any succour.1
Nevertheless, Waller was received by his friends
with open arms ; and the citizens resolved that he
should command an army raised by them, while
1 Perfect Diurnal, 13th July.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 375
injurious reports were put in circulation against
Essex.
Lord Essex had no sooner placed his army in a
convenient situation for recruiting and clothing, than
he sent some of the principal officers to the House of
Lords with a report of the state of the troops, and
their requisitions. He stated, out of 6000 foot
there were at least one half sick and disabled by want
of pay and clothing ; that since the last muster the
horses had diminished in number from 3000 to 2500;
that recruits of horses had been often asked for1, but
never sent ; that men deserted from his army to go
to the new one under Waller, where they hoped for
better food and clothing ; that great scandals had
been put upon the Lord General, the officers, and
army, through false suggestions and misunderstand-
ing, poisoning the affections of the people, and
hindering recruits and contributions.
He therefore demanded immediate payment of
arrears, and regular payment for the future ; that
clothing should be sent ; that 800 horses should be
sent forthwith, and a monthly supply of 200 in
future ; that the new raised men should not be put
into the new army until the old were recruited ; that
all who entertained deserters should be punished ;
that those who were guilty of scandal against his
Excellency, the officers, and army, should be severally
punished ; that his Excellency having, by an ordi-
1 Besides his own letters, there was one from the council of war
of his army to the Speaker of the House of Lords, of 19th July. —
Parl. Hist. iii. 155.
B B 4
376 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
nance of both Houses, the sole power to grant com-
missions, that none should be granted save by him ;
that, it having been reported that the losses in the
West had been occasioned by his Excellency, the
loss, and the cause of it, should be thoroughly in-
quired into.
The Lords passed resolutions to the above effect,
which being sent down to the Commons, that House
agreed to all except the last, and vindicated the
character of the Lord General from all aspersions.
On the resolution to inquire into the loss at Round-
way Down, they divided, and rejected the motion by
fifty- one votes to thirty.
On the 5th August, the Lords voted to petition
the King for peace, on account of the miseries en-
tailed upon the country by the civil war, and sent
down resolutions to that effect to the Commons,
which passed by a majority of twenty- nine. But the
Common Council sending a petition to the Lower
House against peace, they reconsidered the question,
and again divided in favour of peace, by a majority
of nine. The war party were not satisfied, and
affecting to doubt the rectitude of the tellers, insisted
on dividing again ; during the interim they whipped
in nine votes for their side of the question, which
was thus lost by two votes, and so was destroyed the
hope of accommodation between the King and Par-
liament. This was a remarkable crisis, for the mi-
nority proposed to seek the protection of Lord Essex
and the army. Their design got wind, and Pym and
Say and Sele were beforehand with them, arid so in-
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 377
fluenced Lord Essex, that, when applied to by his
friends, he replied that he could not conscientiously
act against those from whom he received his com-
mission. The Earls of Bedford, Holland, Portland \
Clare2, Lords Con way and Lovelace3, immediately
left London and repaired to Oxford, where, by a
most singular want of policy, they were so coldly
received, and so scornfully treated, that with the
exception of Portland arid Lovelace, who had always
been considered Royalists, the whole of these noble-
men had returned to the Parliament by April of the
following year.
As soon as Bristol had surrendered to Rupert, the
King marched into the West, and on the 9th of
August laid siege to Gloucester. It was soon resolved
by the Houses to relieve that city ; the recruiting
of Essex's army now went on in earnest, and the
shops of London were ordered to be closed until
Gloucester was relieved. After much intriguing, it
had been ordered that Sir William Waller should
receive his commission from the Earl of Essex, and
the army of the latter was to be reinforced by some
of the City regiments, which Waller had hoped to
obtain in independent command.
It was not possible for the King to have committed
a greater error than he did in attacking Gloucester.
Inspirited by their late successes, sanguine for the
future, his army was as much strengthened morally,
1 Jerome Weston, second earl, succeeded in 1634, died 1662.
2 John Holies, second earl, succeeded 1637, died 1665.
1 John Lovelace, second lord, succeeded 1634, died 1670.
378 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
as the Parliament army was enfeebled by sickness
and discords. He ought to have attacked London ;
had he once struck down the head, the members
would soon have fallen.
On the 15th August, Lord Essex mustered his
army on Hounslow Heath ; there were 3500 foot,
and 2500 horse. He was afterwards joined by five
regiments of foot and one of horse from the City.
Brackley Heath was appointed the general rendezvous,
at which place his force was further augmented by
Lord Grey and Colonel Harvey, with 4000 horse and
foot, arid a large number of volunteers. His army
must now have amounted to upwards of 15,000 men.
On the 2nd September he moved from Aynhoe,
directing his march by Chipping Norton and Stow
on the Wold. The cavalry of Lord Wilmot out of
Oxford, and subsequently Prince Rupert, who had
been detached from the royal army on the report of
his advance, constantly hung upon Essex's army, and
by frequent skirmishes with the rebel horse, endea-
voured to check the advance of the main body led
by Essex in person, but without effect.
On the 5th September, on the heights above Prest-
bury, Lord Essex displayed his army, and fired four
pieces of ordnance, as a signal to the besieged that
relief was at hand. That night the royal army
burnt their huts, raised the siege of Gloucester, and
retired to Sudeley, and afterwards to Eveshain.
On the 8th, Essex entered Gloucester, and was
received with great rejoicings ; for, obstinate as had
been the defence, the resources of the besieged were
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 379
nearly exhausted, and they could not have anticipated
the celerity and vigour with which the march of the
relieving army had been executed. After two days'
rest, Essex took his army to Tewkesbury, to cover
Gloucester while the place was being revictualled.
From Tewkesbury he wrote the following letter.
No. LX.i
Essex to the Speaker of the House of Commons.
Sir, — I will not trouble you with the particulars of our
march ; you shall, God willing, hear that more at large here-
after. You may be certified only hereby, that the first time
the enemy appeared before us, was at Aynhoe on the Hill,
with a very great body of horse, which Colonel Middleton
faced more than a whole day with but two regiments, and
in campania, and skirmished very often with them. The
enemy faced us afterwards at Stow on the Wold, with about
4000 horse, and retreated before us two days together, with-
out engaging himself more than by small skirmishes. Upon
Tuesday, in the evening, the King's forces seeing us ap-
proach, raised their siege from before Gloucester, whither it
pleased God we came very seasonably, for the Governor had
not above two or three barrels of powder left ; yet had he
managed his business with so much judgment and courage,
that the enemy not knowing of such want, had but small
hope of obtaining their desires. We now stay here only for
the relieving of Gloucester with victual and other provisions,
of which there is an extraordinary scarcity.
That which I must press you with earnestly at this time
is, first, that there be a sudden provision of 8 or 10,000/. to
1 Lords' Journal, vi. 218.
380 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
be sent to that garrison, without which, there will be an im-
possibility of maintaining it this winter, the discontent of the
inferior officers and common soldiers being very great, for
want of their pay and arrears ; they at this time justly ex-
pecting rather reward for their good service, than want of
what is their due. The second, that the 1000 foot which
the Parliament is already engaged by promise to send, may
speedily march thither, without which they will not be able
to fetch any provisions from the country, but the enemy will
be master to the very gates. The third, that Sir William
Waller may be speedily sent down into these parts, which is
the only means to preserve those friends you have here ; for
mine own army is in such extreme necessity for want of pay,
being now in an enemy's country, and at this time within
four or five miles of the King's army, where no provision can
be had but for ready money, and so little hope have I of a
supply from you, that, unless we can presently fight, I must
be immediately necessitated to draw into some other place,
which may be nearer supplies, and have a more free inter-
course to London.
Your assured friend,
Tewkesbury, 10th Sept., 1643. ESSEX.
On the receipt of this letter, resolutions were
immediately passed in compliance with the two first
of the requisitions ; the third was passed over without
notice.
While lying at Tewkesbury, Essex was informed
that a body of royalist troops, with a convoy of pro-
visions, was at Cirencester. He made a show of
throwing a bridge over the Severn, and sent a de-
tachment to Upton, making a feint as though he in-
tended an attack on Worcester, Having, by this
manoeuvre, deceived the royalist commanders, he made
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 381
a long and rapid march to Cirencester, fell upon that
place at one o'clock in the morning, surprised and
entirely destroyed two regiments there, and capturing
all the officers and the colours, 300 men, 400 horses,
and 40 loads of provisions, which seasonably supplied
the wants of his army.
From Cirencester, the army proceeded by easy
marches towards Hungerford. In passing Albourne
Chase, the rear-guard was attacked with great vigour
by the royal horse under Prince Rupert, who had
been sent in pursuit as soon as the real direction of
Essex's march had been ascertained. Considerable
loss was sustained by both sides in the skirmishing
which ensued; but no other result followed, and
Essex pursued his march to Hungerford, and thence,
on the 19th September, to Newbury.
On arriving within two miles of Newbury, that
place was found to be occupied by the whole royal
army; which, marching by Wantage, had reached
Newbury about two hours before. The rebel army
passed the night under arms. The King, who had
possession of the town, and a clear road in his rear to
Oxford, resolved not to fight but on advantageous
terms; while Essex, between whom and his supplies
the royal army had interposed, was equally determined
to force the passage,
At daybreak on the 20th, the Earl of Essex, at the
head of his own regiment and two brigades of in-
fantry, commenced the action by forcing the rising
ground, called Bigg's Hill, about three quarters of a
mile from the town. This spot appears to have
382 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
become the focus of the battle ; and for many hours
the possession of it was obstinately contested. The
left of the rebels, and right of the royal army, were
placed in the small enclosures and swampy ground
between the village of Enburne and the river Kennet,
where they could not act except as skirmishers. The
rebel right, under Major-General Skippon, extended
from Bigg's Hill, along the valley to Newbury Wash,
crossing the high road, and covering the approach of
their artillery under Sir John Meyrick.
Prince Rupert, at the head of the royal cavalry,
displayed his usual impetuous valour; and several
times during the day, the rebel horse, under Sir
Philip Stapleton, were forced to seek shelter in the
rear of their foot, and there reform their broken
masses; but all attempts to shake the infantry of
Essex's army were defeated. In vain did Rupert lead
up his choicest horsemen against them. The front
ranks presented an impenetrable array of pikes1; while
the rear ranks, with their matchlocks, repaid with in-
terest the fire from the carbines and pistols of the
Cavaliers. The combat did not cease until the shades
of night rendered it impossible to distinguish friend
from foe, when the Royalists drew back on the town.
The rebels maintaining the ground on which they
fought, prepared for a renewal of the battle on the
morrow ; but during the night the King withdrew
1 The pike was fourteen or fifteen feet in length. It may not be
uninteresting to the reader to be informed that there is in the United
Service Museum, a revolving pistol of the time of Charles I., which acts
on a principle identical with those supposed to be lately invented by
Colonel Colt of the United States.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ES^SEX. 383
his army, leaving open the road to Reading, and thus
tacitly admitting that he was worsted. Lord Essex
arrived at Reading on the 22nd, and after resting his
army, proceeded to Windsor.
Before he quitted the field of battle, he took
measures for the interment of the slain, by issuing
the following order to the minister, Mr. Fulke, and
the constables of the parish of Enburne.
These are to will and require, and straightly charge and
command you forthwith, upon sight hereof, to bury all the
dead bodies lying in and about Enburne and Newbury Wash,
as you, or any of you, will answer the contrary at your ut-
most peril.
Dated the 21st of September, 1643. ESSEX.
The loss on the side of the Parliament in the battle,
was stated to be 500 men ; that of the Royalists was
considerably greater, the rebel artillery having been
advantageously placed and well served, while that of
the King was not, according to Clarendon, made use
of during the day. While, on the rebel side, few
officers, arid none of note, were slain, Charles had to
lament the loss of above twenty officers ; among them
the Earls of Carnarvon1 and Sunderland2, and most
of all, Lucius Viscount Falkland3, a man whose
patriotism and virtues cast over the cause he had
1 Robert, second Lord Dormer, created Earl of Carnarvon, 1628 ;
extinct in his son, 1709.
2 Henry, third Lord Spencer of Wormleighton, was born 1620; mar-
ried, 1639, Lady Dorothy Sidney, — Waller's Sacharissa; went with the
Country party till " they asked things that did deny themselves ; " was
created Earl of Sunderland, 1643.
3 Lucius Carey, second viscount, born 1610.
384 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XY.
espoused, a lustre fully equal to that which the other
side had received from John Hampden. The number
of men killed on the King's side cannot be ascer-
tained, the accounts being so understated by his
partizans, and exaggerated by his adversaries, as to
be unworthy of credit.
On the 26th September, the Lord General being at
Essex House, the two Houses waited upon him, to
offer their thanks for the great services he had
rendered. In the House of Lords, he presented
several colours captured from the King's army, one
of which had upon it " a picture of the Parliament
" House, with two traitors' heads at the ends of it,
" and this motto, Ut extra sic intra" Another re-
presented a Cavalier in pursuit of a Roundhead, the
latter crying, Quarter ; the Cavalier replying, Qui se-
quitur vincit.1
It has been stated, that Sir William Waller received
his commission from the Lord General. Essex had
been induced to sign a commission, in which he left
blank the space for the name, which was filled up by
the authority of Parliament. It gave powers to
Waller, which rendered him in some degree indepen-
dent of his superior. On the 5th October, Essex
remonstrated against the inconvenience of Waller's
army being quartered with his, unless it were subject
to his orders. He declared to a Committee, sent to
confer with him on the subject, that he considered
Waller's commission, as it was penned, to be incom-
1 Lords' Journal, vi. 233.
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 385
patible with his own ; and that he was resolved, if he
continued to hold his office, that he would grant
commissions and command the army as heretofore ;
and he further " desired leave to resign his commis-
" sion, and retire beyond seas, in regard to Sir William
" Waller's commission, and of the many discourage-
" ments he had received in being General."1 The
Houses were not yet prepared to dispense with the
name and service of Lord Essex ; they therefore
ordered that Waller should give up his commission,
and receive another from the Lord General ; and that,
instead of receiving his orders from the two Houses,
he should receive them from the Lord General.
Essex's army was moved to St. Alban's, Waller's
quartered at Colnbrook. The following letter from
Essex shows that he looked upon Sir William Waller
as a rival set up against him, and that he was deter-
mined to resist the efforts of Waller's friends to
make him independent of himself.
No. LXI.2
Essex to the Speaker.
Sir, — -I received an order the last night, to desire me
forthwith to send a commission to Sir William Waller, to
command the forces of Kent, Surrey, Sussex, and Hamp-
shire, according to an ordinance of both Houses. I am so
ready for the advancement of the present service he is now
engaged in, and my will to satisfy the desire of the honorable
1 Lords' Journal, vi. 242. 2 Tanner MSS. 62. 490.
VOL. II. C C
386 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
House of Commons, as that I have sent down a commission
accordingly. But finding expressions in that order, that
might intimate a neglect in me, and being confident of my
own integrity to serve both Houses, and to preserve the good
opinion of the House of Commons, I shall acquaint you that
I sent a commission by Mr. Nicols, which he kept some days,
and then wrote earnestly to me for another more ample ; I,
wondering why he should keep it so long, and then send for
another, deferred my resolution until I came up ; but this
order intervening, prevented me of asking the reason. It is
true the commission was not according as I usually grant
them, but it gave him full authority for the present service.
For the reasons of my limitations in the former commission,
I forbear to give them ; but whensoever the Houses shall
command me, I shall be ready to make it appear I did no
more than I ought to do, having received so great a trust
from the Parliament, in the discharge of my duty, and then
to submit to their further pleasures.
Sir, I desire you to believe it shall be my greatest care
so to carry myself, as that I may give a real account of my
actions, whensoever it shall please the Parliament to require it.
The charge I took was not by my seeking, I knowing my
own imperfections, but not in the least way of fidelity and
constancy. And it was a great encouragement to me, the
noble and free offers of both Houses to live and die with me,
which hath put a great confidence in me, that I shall never
want your just protection and assistance ; and that you will
take care of that army that hath shewed so much faithful-
ness and resolution in your services, and that God hath been
pleased of his infinite goodness so to protect. And for my
own part, I am every day so confirmed in the justness of the
cause, that let the strength I have be never so weak, I shall
never desert the cause as long as I have any blood in my
veins, until this kingdom may be made happy by a blessed
CHAP. XV. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 387
peace, — which is all honest men's prayer, — or to have an
end by the sword, which is the intention of your assured
friend, ESSEX.
Essex House, this 2nd of January, 1644.
At the time that the affairs of the Parliament bore
an unfavourable aspect, during the preceding summer,
certain commissioners had been sent to Scotland to
negotiate a Treaty of Assistance. As a preliminary
measure, a Solemn Mutual League and Covenant was
entered into by the two nations. This Covenant,
which at first presented difficulties, owing to the
intolerance and obstinacy of both Presbyterians and
Independents, was at length drawn up in terms
sufficiently ambiguous for each party to interpret
them according to its own views. It was passed by
the General Assembly, and sent to London on the 18th
August, and, with some trifling alterations, passed
by both Houses. The contracting parties bound
themselves to the preservation and reformation of
true religion, to the extirpation of popery, prelacy
(by which was meant church government by arch-
bishops, bishops, and all ecclesiastical officers depend-
ing on the hierarchy), superstition, heresy, schism,
and profaneness, to preserve the rights and privi-
leges of Parliament and the liberty of the kingdoms,
to discover and bring to condign punishment all in-
cendiaries and malignants, and to assist and defend
all who entered into this League and Covenant.
The Covenant was solemnly taken by the House of
Commons in St. Margaret's Church on the 22nd
September, and by the House of Lords on the 16th
cc 2
388 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XV.
October. The Earl of Northumberland, and some
other Peers, who desired not the ascendancy of either
Presbyterian or Independent doctrines, absented
themselves from the ceremony ; but Northumberland
subscribed the Covenant on the 30th, and his ex-
ample was followed by most, if not all, of the others.
By the Treaty of Assistance, the Scots agreed to
send an army of 18,000 foot and 3000 horse, with a
train of artillery, into England ; for the services of
this army the Parliament at Westminster agreed to
pay 30,000£. a month, with 100,000/. as an advance,
besides a recompense at the establishment of peace.
By the end of the year 1643, this formidable re-
inforcement to the enemies of the King was as-
sembled, under the Earl of Leven, at the appointed
rendezvous on the Borders.
Sir William Waller was sent to besiege Arundel
Castle, Lord Essex's army was brought back to
Windsor, and the Earl of Manchester, who com-
manded an army raised in the Eastern Counties,
occupied Newport Pagnel.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 389
CHAPTER XVI.
LITE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — continued.
THE KING CALLS A PAKLIAMENT AT OXFORD, IN JANUARY, 1644.
AN ATTEMPT TO NEGOTIATE FAILS. NEGLECTED STATE OF THE
ARMY. OPENING OF THE CAMPAIGN. ESSEX AND WALLER
ADVANCE ON OXFORD. THE KING RETREATS, AND IS PURSUED
BY WALLER. ESSEX MARCHES INTO THE WEST. HIS LETTERS,
DETAILING HIS PROCEEDINGS. HIS DISSATISFACTION. — HE IS
REPRIMANDED IN A LETTER FROM THE SPEAKERS.
THE King's exchequer was at this time very much
exhausted. With a view to devise the means of
replenishing it, and to avert the danger threatened
by the newly formed alliance between the Parliament
and the Scots, Charles summoned a Parliament, or
Convention, of the Lords and Commons attached to
the royal cause, to meet at Oxford on the 22nd
January, 1644. Forty-three Peers, and one hundred
and eighteen members of the House of Commons,
attended this summons ; twenty-nine Lords, and
fifty-seven Commoners, were absent on the King's
service.
The first act of the Oxford Parliament was an
attempt to open a negotiation for peace by the
mediation of the Earl of Essex. On the 30th Ja-
nuary, the Lord General presented to the House of
Lords a packet he had received from Oxford. A
Committee being appointed to open it, the contents
c c 3
390 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
were found to be a letter from the Earl of Forth to
Essex, enclosing a parchment1 signed by all the Lords
and Commons at Oxford, expressing their desire for
peace; but as this document was not addressed to
the Parliament, they recommended that it should be
left to the Lord General to reply to it, which he did
in the following letter.
No. LXII.2
Essex to the Earl of Forth.
My Lord, — I received this day a letter of the 29th inst.
from your Lordship, and a parchment subscribed by the
Prince, the Duke of York, and divers Lords and Gentlemen ;
but it neither having address to the two Houses of Parlia-
ment, nor therein there being any acknowledgment of them,
I could not communicate it to them.
My Lord, the maintenance of the Parliament of Eng-
land, and of the privileges thereof, is that for which we are
all resolved to spend our blood, as being the foundation
whereon all our laws and liberties are built.
I send your Lordship herewith a National Covenant, so-
lemnly entered into by both the kingdoms of England and
Scotland, and a declaration passed by them both together,
with another declaration by the kingdom of Scotland. I rest
your Lordship's humble servant, ESSEX.
Essex House, January 30th, 1644.
Charles then addressed himself to the Parliament :
some expressions in his letter were voted to be in-
sulting ; the attempt at negotiation failed, and both
1 This document is printed in Parl. Hist. iii. 210.
2 Lords1 Journal.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 391
parties prepared for a renewal of hostilities under
feelings of increased bitterness. These efforts to
obtain peace had not been overthrown without much
debating in the House of Commons, and a dispute
with the Lords, who had refused to concur with
certain resolutions of the Commons ; indeed, the
pecuniary affairs of the Parliament were not in so
flourishing a condition as to justify their obstinacy
in continuing the miseries of civil war. The con-
sciousness of the more violent and unscrupulous
members that their offences could never really be
forgotten, must have strengthened their animosity
towards the King, and their resolution to continue
the war.
In February, the Lord General presented to the
Lords a letter from General Skippon, the Lieutenant
General of his army, stating that the troops were in a
state of mutiny for want of pay. On the 8th April, he
put in a declaration of his own, containing a powerful
remonstrance against the neglected condition in which
his army was left. He stated that, through the army
not having been recruited, he was unable to take ad-
vantage of the late victory1 obtained by Sir W.
Waller and Sir W. Balfour over Lord Hopton ;
that had they been beaten, there was no army to
fall back upon; that Newark2 was not taken, Lin-
colnshire lost, Gloucester not supplied ; that the
enemy, through his weakness, had been enabled to ex-
1 On the 29th March, near Alresford, Hants.
" Newark was besieged in the beginning of March, and relieved on the
21st by Prince Rupert, who forced Sir J. Meldrum with 3000 men to
surrender upon terms.
c c 4
392 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
tend their quarters ; and that last week " there was
" but a step between us and death, or, what is worse,
" slavery."
" For my part/' he continues, " as I first engaged
" myself in this cause, and undertook this service
" with an honest and single heart, without any
" particular end of my own, but merely to serve
" my country, and defend religion and liberty, in
" which cause both Houses of Parliament, and the
" good party of the whole kingdom, have solemnly
" protested to live and die with me, which hath kept
" up my spirits all this while, and would not suffer
" me to lay down my commission, notwithstanding
" all my discouragements, — I being not conscious to
" myself of giving the least offence to any, unless it
" were for executing my place as General in that my
" conscience told me was my duty, — so I shall be
" ready still to prosecute it with the utmost of my
" endeavours, and desire no longer to live than I
" shall be faithful in it; and though you have been
" pleased to reduce my army to 7500 foot and 3000
" horse1, when my Lord of Manchester is allowed an
" army of 14,000 2, and receives an allowance of
" 34,000£. a month for the pay of it, since it is done
" by you I submit, and with them, or a lesser number,
"if it be your pleasures, I will, as I have several
" times already, adventure my life for the service of
" this cause."3
1 By an ordinance of March 26.
2 This force had been raised in the associated counties in the end of
1643, and was confirmed by an ordinance, May 15. 1644.
3 Lords1 Journal.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 393
This remonstrance being considered, a committee
of both Houses went the next day to the City to urge
an advance of men and money. The Earl of Warwick
and Sir Henry Vane having spoken, were followed by
the Earl of Essex in these words : —
" My Lord and Gentlemen, — You have understood
" by a noble Lord, my Lord Admiral, and this noble
" gentleman of the House of Commons, the desire of
" both Houses of Parliament ; they have acquainted
" you what the King's intention is, to draw all his
" forces together, and what the Parliament doth
u intend in drawing all the forces they can south-
u ward, and what great victory God hath given
" Sir William Waller and Sir William Balfour ; so I
" am only to take this opportunity to give you all
" acknowledgments and thanks for those great aids
" that I have had always to go along with me ; for I
" must needs acknowledge that most of the things
" that have been done by me, especially the business
" at Gloucester, have been done by your help. I
" should desire the like still, and what shall come to
" me I shall use with good respects, and venture my
" life with them. I should have been very glad that
" my army had been in that case, that I might not
u have needed to take any of you from your own
" houses, knowing how much you have already been
" at, both in your estates and blood, in the service of
u religion and of this cause ; but whatsoever forces
" you please to draw out, I shall venture my life with
" them, and be ready to make a quick end of this
cause."
394 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI-
In the beginning of January, the name of Lord
Essex had been added to the " Assembly of learned
u and godly divines and others," which was ap-
pointed to settle the liturgy and government of the
Church of England. Shortly afterwards, a committee
of members of both Houses was appointed, whose
duty was, jointly with the commissioners sent from
Scotland, to consult, direct, and manage all the
affairs of the two kingdoms for carrying on the war
to the best advantage, and keeping up a good in-
telligence between the two nations, and to correspond
with foreign states. The Earls of Northumberland,
Essex, Warwick, and Manchester ; Viscount Saye
and Sele ; Lords Wharton and Roberts ; Honourable
William Pierpoint ; Sirs H. Vane, sen. and jun.,
Philip Stapleton, William Waller, Gilbert Gerrard,
William Armyn, Arthur Haslerig ; Oliver St. John,
John Crew, Robert Wallop, Oliver Cromwell, Samuel
Brown, and John Glynne, the Recorder, Esqs,, — were
appointed members of this Committee.1 From the
order and letter books of this Committee, — which
remained in the custody of John Milton, their secre-
tary, until the Restoration, were then taken from
him, and are now in the State Paper Office, — the chief
part of the correspondence and information respect-
ing this, the last campaign of Lord Essex, has been
extracted.
The first meeting of the Committee took place at
Essex House, on the 18th February, 1644. An oath
1 The Earl of Loudon, Sir Archibald Johnston of Waristoun, and
Mr. Robert Barclay, were the Scots members.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 395
of secrecy l was administered to each member ; a chair-
man was chosen every fortnight, Northumberland
being the first ; and a minister was appointed to pray
daily at the meeting and rising of the Committee.
Lord Essex appears to have attended the meetings
almost every day until he went to join the army.
In the account of this campaign, which, in its com-
mencement, promised so auspiciously, and terminated
so disastrously, for the army of the Earl of Essex, it
will be my endeavour to show that his march into
the West was not the great error that has been
commonly supposed ; and that his failure arose partly
from the fact of Sir William Waller2 being drawn off
from his attendance on the royal army, and partly
from the jealousy which that General and his friends
entertained of Lord Essex; but, perhaps, in a still
greater measure, from the general movements of the
armies being directed by a Committee sitting in
London, a course pregnant with evil, on which
Whitelocke3 justly observes : " that it was thought
" strange, at that time, that the Committee of both
u Kingdoms should, at that distance, take upon them
u to give particular orders for the services arid march
" of their armies, and not rather leave it to the chief
" commanders that were upon the place, who, upon
u every motion of the enemy, might see cause to
" alter their counsels. This increased the jealousies
1 The House of Lords rejected the oath of secrecy, but it is entered
in the Order Book.
2 Waller was certainly disabled for a time, after his defeat at Cropredy
Bridge, by the mutiny and disorganization of his army.
3 Mem. p. 90.
396 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
" between the Lord General and Waller, both gallant
" men ; but the General thought himself undervalued,
" and Waller too much exalted."
When Charles received intelligence that the army
of the Parliament was about to take the field, he
withdrew the garrison from Heading, destroying the
works, and concentrated his army about Wantage,
Faringdon, and Abingdon.
On the 14th May, Essex and Waller left London to
commence operations, the army of Essex being at
Beaconsfield, that of Waller at Farnham. On the
25th, the royal troops evacuated Abingdon at the
approach of Essex's advanced guard, who occupied
that town in person the following day. Sir William
Waller at the same time approaching Wantage, the
royal army fell back on Oxford and Woodstock,
covering the bridges over the Isis and Charwell.
Essex crossed the Thames at Sandford, and displaying
his army on Bullington Green, within sight of Oxford,
as though he intended an attack on the city1, ex-
tended himself along the east bank of the Charwell,
and taking up his quarters at Islip. some skirmishing
took place at Gosford Bridge. In the mean time,
Waller had advanced to Abingdon, where an attempt
was made by the King to surprise him in a night
attack, and defeat his army before Essex could recross
the Thames. This being repulsed with loss, it was
1 That an attack on Oxford was not seriously intended, is shown by a
letter from the Committee of both Houses, dated Derby House, 31st May,
in which they " concur with his Excellency in the danger of trinketing
(i. e. meddling) with Oxford." They also forwarded him some inter-
cepted letters.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 397
resolved that the King should immediately leave
Oxford, which he did on the 3rd June ; and marching
by Bourton on the Water, and Evesham, arrived at
Worcester on the 6th.
On the same day that the King evacuated Oxford,
Essex passed the Charwell, and Waller forced the
passage of the Isis at Newbridge. Advancing by
Woodstock, Essex halted on the 6th June at Chipping
Norton, on which day Waller, marching through
Witney and Burford, arrived at Stow on the Wold.
The intercepted letters sent to Essex on the 30th,
as mentioned in a note, contained intelligence of the
extreme distress to which the garrison of Lyme was
reduced ; and the Committee earnestly urged the
General to send relief to that place. At a Council of
War it was resolved, that as Waller's army had lighter
artillery and fewer carriages, he should go in pursuit
of the King, while Essex should relieve Lyme.
Against this decision Waller remonstrated vehemently,
urgirfg that the West was assigned to him by the
Committee. Essex ordered him peremptorily to
march according to the decision of the Council of
War, which he was compelled to obey, but sent
complaints to his friends productive of much subse-
quent mischief.
No. LXIII.1
Essex to the Right Honourable the Committee of both King-
doms, at Derby House.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — I have received your letter
of the 1st June, and therein a direction to acquaint you with
1 S. P. O.
398 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
the state of the army, which I conceive I shall do best by
sending your LL. this abstract of the last musters, whereby
you may make a near computation of our strength. My en-
deavour hath been to fight the King's army, in pursuit
whereof I have advanced as far as Islip. My army came
not all in till twelve of the clock on Wednesday night, where,
for the most part, we have been and yet are in skirmish
upon the several passes of the river of Charwell, and some-
times the service hath been hot. It appears that the enemy
declining to fight, hath endeavoured to stop us of passing that
river, and consequently of forcing him to fight, or retire
further. But I hope that if Sir Wm. Waller, according to
orders which I have already sent him on the other
the river, I shall be able to give some farther ac-
count of service upon them, if by the want of money and
ammunition I be not hindered, having already them
both, which I earnestly recommend to your especial care,
and remain your Lordship's humble servant,
Islip, 2nd June, 1644. ESSEX.
P.S. The Dutch ambassadors came this day from Oxford,
and made very affectionate expressions to myself and the
council of war, of their desires to do their utmost service in
procuring a peace between the King and Parliament. The
answer that we gave them I will not now trouble you with,
intending to send it up to you very shortly by Sir John
Bampfield.
No. LXIV.1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — Since my last, the enemy
hath drawn all his forces, both horse and foot, from the
passes of the river near Oxford, and for aught that I can
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 399
understand from all prisoners and scouts, they are in a very
ill condition if they do not help themselves. By passing to
and from the river, our horses have been upon very great duty.
Commissary General Beloe having been upon duty in the
field ever since Thursday till this night, and finding by this
morning that the enemy was retreating, fell upon their rear,
and took 40 or 50 prisoners, whereof one gentleman, a great
papist and of great estate, Sir W. Spencer. To-morrow
morning, God willing, I have appointed to march by break
of day, and then I shall be able to give your Lordships a
further account. Captain Fleming killed at Woodstock a
quartermaster of the Prince Charles hand to hand, and all
he said after he was wounded, and before he died, was, " The
devil take all the papists that had brought him to this." Sir
Charles Blunt having stroke an officer of the trained bands
of Oxford, he killed him near the King. We had not staid
here this long, notwithstanding the enemy's endeavour to stop
the passes, had Col. Harvey come up to us sooner, till whose
arrival we were not provided for the service, which now we
shall be.
Your Lordships' humble servant,
Islip, 3rd June, 1644. ESSEX.
No. LXV.1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — The relief of Lyme, which
you so earnestly recommended to me, hath taken up the best
of my care and endeavours to fulfil, which, next unto fighting
with the King's army, I suppose to be of most instant con-
cernment. The King is now fled rather than gone with an
army, having left his many and weighty carriages at Ox-
ford, and is so much made up of lighthorsemen, as an army
1 S. P. O.
400 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
with carriages must come much behind him. I have there-
fore applied myself to the relief of Lyme, which, seeing you
so recommended it to me, I durst not undertake with less
than my army. And in case the King should not with his
army go westward, your wisdom and care will provide for
what may tend to the safety of these parts ; my desires being
only, to the best of my understanding, to approve myself for
the advancement of the public service, and of my being your
humble servant,
Chipping Norton, 6th June, 1644. ESSEX.
It is a singular circumstance, and deserving of
mention, that, at this very time, while Lord Essex
was apparently the most determined enemy to the
King, he should be a petitioner to the Parliament for
the King's sister, as appears by the following letter.
No. LXVI.1
Essex to the House of Lords.
My Lords, — It hath pleased the Queen of Bohemia to
write to me, and to make known her necessities to be so
great, that she wants wherewith to defray the charge of her
house. Your Lordships know how much this kingdom is
concerned in honor to see that a prince of her birth and
near alliance to this Crown, should not fall into a condition
so much below herself ; wherefore I beseech your Lordships
to take it into consideration, and if you think fit, to commu-
nicate it likewise unto the honorable House of Commons ;
and I doubt not, but though the burden and charge of the
kingdom be now very great, yet some honorable provision
will be made herein. I hope your Lordships will pardon
this boldness in me in respect of that which I owe to that
1 Lords' Journal.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 401
Princess, for whose sake, and in whose service, I had the
honor first to bear arms. And if my intercession may in
any way advantage her, I shall take it for a great favor done
to your Lordships' most humble servant,
Abingdon, 27th May, 1644. ESSEX.
This letter, and the feelings which prompted it,
would not have tended to lessen the jealousy with
which Essex was then regarded, as an avowed advo-
cate for peace and a friend to royalty, which feeling
had, but a few days before the above letter was
written, caused orders to be sent to him, that if the
King, as was then thought probable, threw himself
on the protection of Essex, he was to take no steps
whatever except by the authority of Parliament ; so
fearful were they of his giving the King terms which
they would think too favourable, but which they
might be forced to accept.
That the narrative of Essex's march into the West
may not be broken, we will first notice the proceedings
of the King and Sir William Waller. Clarendon says,
that the sole object of the King was to avoid his
enemies. He moved from Worcester to Bewdley, at
which place he arrived on the llth; Waller, having
taken Sudeley Castle, being the same day at Evesham.
On hearing whither the King was gone, and con-
cluding that he intended to proceed to Shrewsbury,
and perhaps join Prince Kupert, who had been sent
to relieve York and fight the combined armies, he
advanced to Stourbridge. The King immediately
retrograded by Worcester and Broadway to Burford ;
and leaving Oxford on his right, reached Buckingham
VOL. II. D D
402 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
on the 22nd, creating great alarm in the associated
counties. Waller appears to have made no efforts to
overtake the King when he heard of his evasion, but
proceeded to Gloucester, and thence to Kineton, at
both which places he received reinforcements, and
on the 28th was at Banbury. The next day, he
attacked the royal army at Cropredy Bridge, and
was worsted with considerable loss of men, and eight
guns. The King's army drew off the next day to
Deddington, and so again to Evesham ; while Waller,
whose conduct is quite unaccountable, except on the
ground that his troops were mutinous, went to
Northampton, leaving the King to follow his march
unimpeded, although much weaker than himself in
men1 and artillery. Charles proceeded leisurely by
Cirencester, Badminton, Bath, Wells, Ilchester, Chard,
and Honiton to Exeter, where he arrived on the 26th
July, and where we will, for the present, leave him.
On the 8th June, the Committee wrote to Essex
that they were very much in the dark, and desired to
know, by the bearer, what were his intentions, and
what appeared to be those of the enemy. Two days
later, when they must have been aware that the two
armies were proceeding in execution of the reso-
lutions of the 6th, they again wrote to him, that the
House of Commons had resolved that it was more
convenient for Waller to go into the West, and for
1 Waller reported on the 5th June, that the King had 1500 foot and
3000 horse, and on the 17th, that the King was gone to Burford, and,
there being nothing for him to do, he was resolved to march immediately
into the West. — Letter-Book of the Committee.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 403
him to be employed elsewhere ; but that to avoid
giving encouragement to the enemy, he was, fbr the
present, to remain where he was. They hoped he had
sent a considerable body of horse to relieve Lyme,
and begged that, if not already sent, he would
do so forthwith.
No. LXVIL1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — By all informations, the city
of Oxford was in great want of victuals, and might easily
have been reduced, if the present necessity of following the
King's flying army and relieving the West could have spared
my army and Sir Wm. Waller's forces, but by reason of
the rivers less force could not have done it, but would have
left some side open for victuals to come in. Your Lordships
will understand, by Sir Arthur Heselrigge, that all the
King's foot he had left went to Herefordshire, which, in all
likelihood, is for Bristol. For raising of horse, I believe
Captain Grenvile, with a little encouragement, will be able
to make, by his own and Capt. TyrelPs troops, a regiment
to be employed as you shall please ; but for sending horse
from my army till I see what force is like to be raised by
the enemy in the West, and Sir Wm. Waller's forces being
so far parted that our horse continually decay both with
marching and duty, I cannot spare any. The packet for
the Prince Elector I have sent, according to your Lordships'
commands, to Oxford. Concerning the Northampton forces,
I do not know how they may return, but with much danger;
and, my Lords, I do desire your Lordships to take it into
consideration, that when I departed the city, I was promised
my Lord Grey's regiment of horse, and Col. Purefoy's, the
1 S. P. O.
D D 2
404 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
last of which I was content to spare for Gloucester, but since
he is returned home, who your Lordships may please to
employ about Oxford, Northampton, or where else, such as
are most likely to do service : but I do not understand how
it is possible for my horse to break through Prince Maurice,
his army of horse and foot ; and if they could, and should
join with the men of Lyme in pursuit of Prince Maurice, I
know not what my army should do without horse the whilst,
or how the horse should ever return to my foot again ; for
if the enemy break down apace, my horse are shut up for
ever. I am commanded, therefore, by the discipline of war
and rules of reason, to march further with my foot, for fear
my horse should receive a blow ; I must not retreat, for
then the enemy will be encouraged and strengthened. Sir
Ralph Hopton will have time to raise men and money, and
my foot, who have cheerfully undergone this march for the
recovery of the West, will be quite disheartened if once we
come to face about; they will certainly be like a routed
army, broken all to pieces, and melted after they are broken.
Moreover, you are misinformed concerning the strength of
the enemy ; for there is a party of horse and foot gone to
them with monies from Salisbury within these two days, and
they may draw out some from Weymouth, Bristol, &c., and
make them dragooners, to cut us off in the strait passes,
when they perceive we have sent none but horse. The
enemy's strength of horse is far beyond that which you speak
of, and we hear that Hopton marcheth toward them with
some horse and 2000 foot, most of them newly raised. I
shall not stand to dispute how well Sir William Waller is
beloved in the West ; you know something of Bristol and
Plymouth. I am sure the Lord Roberts is not hated there ;
he hath your ordinance for Cornwall. He is the more deeply
engaged, because he hath a considerable estate in those parts;
and he is entrusted with a higher place in the army than the
major of a brigade. He is cordially tender of the good of his
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 405
country, and the western gentlemen understand their own
interest so well, that they will not be displeased with an
army which adventures itself for their relief without putting
them to any extraordinary charge. If Sir William Waller
go thither, he will indeed free them from paying contribution
to the enemy, but will command them to pay contribution to
himself; though I know he hath received large sums already
from the western gentlemen for the paying of two or three
regiments, which have done them but little service as yet,
the other regiments under his conduct being paid by the city
of London, or the associated counties.
For my own part, I am resolved not to spoil the western
countries, because I go to relieve them, and that is, as I
conceive, the way to reduce them. I respect not pay, and
am ready to serve the State and the West, though it cost
me dear : yet I am confident they will not suffer us to perish
in their service. Sir William Waller is engaged to look to the
associated counties by ordinance of Parliament, and his faith
past to those distressed counties. Now there are two con-
siderable garrisons in those counties, Basing and Winchester,
which are not yet removed. He will do well to perform what
he hath already undertaken, before he undertake a new
business. He was engaged in pursuit of the King's army,
and his care for the present should be to hinder the levying
of forces and raising of monies in Worcestershire; if you
think fit to call him off, he will be sooner at Oxford than we
can possibly be, and then he may help Major Browne to
beleaguer Oxford. When that service is ended, Major
Browne may requite him, and help to clear Sir William's
associated counties, for Oxford is Sir Wm. Waller's direct
way to Basing and Winchester.
Pardon me, if I make bold to order and direct my own
major, for in truth I do not see how Sir Wm. Waller can
take care of all the counties along the sea side, from Dover
D D 3
406 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
to St. Michael's Mount : he refused to protect a county or
two, and said that was only to lie at receipt, and yet he
thinks it service honorable enough for his General. If you
think fit to set him at liberty and confine me, be pleased to
make him General and me the major of some brigade, that
my soldiers may have free quarter, free plunder, and fair
contributions besides, as his have, without control.
Finally, that army which hath the greatest strength of
foot will be most able, by God's blessing, to reduce the
West ; and I believe that I have the most resolute foot in
Christendom, Take heed how you disaffect them, for if you
lose them, either by commanding me to lie still, or putting
them on ordinary services which are below them, you will
repent too late, and I too soon. If you encourage me to
advance farther into the "West, I hope in a reasonable time
to relieve Lyme and distress Weymouth ; but if you call
back Sir Wm. Waller from pursuing the King, and stop me
in my march to the West, we are like to lose the benefit of
both armies this summer; because we are put upon cross
services, which lie far out of our way, and are denied the
benefit of those fair opportunities which God hath put into
our hands. Consider what I have said, and if, by following
your advice, the West be not reduced, Hopton's army be
recruited, and Lyme lost, let not the blame be laid upon
your Lordships' innocent, though suspected servant,
ESSEX.
Blandford, 14th June, 1644, six in the morning.
No. LXVIII.1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — In your letters dated May
30th, you desired me to send such a strength to the West as
might be able not only to relieve Lyme, but to recover the
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 407
whole West again, by preventing the levies of men and
money now raising by a new association in those parts, and
this, as you then assured me, was the joint request of the
western gentlemen ; and, for your satisfaction and theirs, I
resolved to march away with my whole army westward,—
a strength little enough, in my judgment, to effect what you
desired, and I acquainted you with my resolution in my
next letters in answer to yours. I conceived that you were
not displeased with my march, because you were silent for
eight days together, and your silence seemed to me no less
than an approbation ; but now I am marched up as far as
Blandford in Dorsetshire, you direct me to make a stand,
and send away a considerable party of horse for the relief of
Lyme. Give me leave to believe you are uninformed of
late, or else I had not received such an unexpected counter-
mand, after my unwearied endeavours in the pursuance of
such instructions as I received from your own hands.
For, first, Lyme cannot be relieved by a party, and if it
could, that party must principally consist of foot, for horse
can do very little service in those narrow passages ; yet, con-
trary to my own opinion, and the judgment of the Council of
War, I have sent some horse, and you shall see cause ; for the
Northampton troop, although they be civil men, and pass
upon their duty, yet, if your Lordships will be pleased to
recall them, upon notice thereof from your Lordships, I shall
discharge them. Concerning that information of the King's
drawing towards Northampton, there is little danger of that,
seeing they are gone quite another way. Whereas you in-
tended to send ammunition to Aylesbury, I now desire, as I
have formerly written, that ammunition and money, which I
much need, may be sent to Southampton, whence, by the
help of Col. Norton, it may be safely conveyed to me, which
I earnestly desire to have. Your Lordships' humble servant,
Lamborne, 10th June, 1644, on my march. ESSEX.
D D 4
408
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CIIAP. XVI.
No. LXIX.1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — Although I have just
grounds to conceive that what benefit soever is received by
me or this army would be but little valued, yet nothing
shall make me neglect my duty, which makes me acquaint
your Lordships that the town of Lyme, which has shewed
so great constancy and valor in maintaining their obedience
to the Parliament, is now relieved. In what extremity they
were, your Lordships may perceive, by the copy of the letter
I received from the Earl of Warwick, which is here inclosed.
As I was marching to Amesbury on the llth of this
instant, I sent the General and Lieut.-General of the horse,
hearing that the enemy was possessed of Salisbury, where
they put them in such a fright that they never staid till they
came to Blandford, to which place I sent the Lieut.-General
and Commissary-General of the horse, with near 1000 horse ;
but they being sent out in the night, one regiment of the
strongest, not being in the way, did not come till the fight was
done : but 400 of my horse put the Queen's regiment, and
others that made up near 1500, as all in these parts report it,
to such a plight, as that they ran to this town ; but the towns-
men, who are exceeding well affected to the Parliament, kept
them out, and they never staid till they came to Sherborne.
My Lords, I have only one humble request to your Lord-
ships, that you will give my Lord Admiral encouragement
for his great and indefatigable care he has taken for that
town of Lyme, which has been a great means of the pre-
servation of it.
My Lords, I never came in any parts in my life where I
found more real expressions of their affections, and doubt not
1 S.P.O.
CHAP. XVI. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 409
that if I may have no hindrance from above, I shall quickly
reduce these parts to the Parliament's service. Your Lord-
ships by this time know, that from whence Sir Wm. Waller
is, that, notwithstanding your directions to him, both Lyme
would have been lost and an army raised before he would
have come for the relief of the one or the prevention of the
other. And, for my sending a party of horse for the relief
of Lyme, whosoever gave your Lordships that information
were in a great error, it being an impossible thing to have
been done. My Lords, I am your LL.'s humble servant,
Dorchester, 16th June, 1644, ESSEX.
past one in the morning.
This letter was acknowledged by the Committee
on the 12th June, when they gave the General
orders to march into Oxfordshire and straiten Ox-
ford, to facilitate its fall, for which purpose they
were preparing forces in London. They must have
been aware that he would be too far advanced to
obey these directions without the worst result. His
next letter is a reply to theirs of the 10th June, and
contains an indignant remonstrance against the treat-
ment he has experienced.
Prince Maurice had not awaited an attack from
Essex ; on the 15th June, having information that
that nobleman was at Dorchester, he raised the
siege of Lyme, and retired to Exeter.
Within a few days afterwards, Weymouth, Mel-
combe Eegis, and Sarfoot Castle, were surrendered
by the Royalists, and Essex wrote a letter to the
Speaker of the House of Lords, giving, in detail,
reasons why his army should not be recalled from
advancing into the West ; and, said he, " if, after all
410 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVI.
" my sad consultations, faithful endeavours, and, by
" God's blessing, happy success, you shall call me
" back as one that is not fit to be trusted any
" further in a business of such high concernment,
" I will come and sit in Parliament, as not knowing
" any military employment which is worthy of my
" presence." The unanimous opinion of a joint
Council of War of land and sea officers was, that it
would be exceedingly prejudicial to the cause were
he to retreat.
There was a good deal of angry debating on this
subject, in the course of which his friends insinuated
that more care was taken of Waller's army than of
the Lord General's, and that the necessary supplies
were purposely withheld from the latter ; while the
opposite party asserted that Lyme might have been
relieved by a party of horse, without the whole army
being carried so far. In the end, it was resolved
that he should proceed to follow up the advantages he
had gained, and the resolution was made known to
him in the following severe letter of reprimand.
No. LXX.1
The Speakers of both Houses of Parliament to Essex.
My Lord, — We are commanded by the two Houses of
Parliament to acquaint your Lordship, that the Committee
of both Kingdoms have reported to them the designs of carry-
ing on the war, with the letters sent to your Lordship in
prosecution of those designs, and the several answers; and
that they are of opinion, if the resolution of the Houses and
1 Rushworth, vi. 683.
CHAP. XVI. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 411
the direction of the Committee of both Kingdoms had been
followed, the public affairs had been in a better condition
than now they are, especially in these parts.
And we are also to let your Lordship know, that, in your
letters to the Committee of both Kingdoms, of the 14th,
16th, and 17th of this instant June, and that other to the
Houses, there are many expressions might well have been
forborne, and do not question but you do now wish they hajd
not been written.
But to make the best use of their affairs as they now
stand, they find themselves necessitated to use new counsels,
and would have your Lordship to take all advantages on the
enemy, and use your best endeavours for reducing the West.
And although they find themselves much discomposed by
your Lordship's going into the West, in respect of the pay of
the army, yet the Houses are in present consideration thereof1,
and will endeavour to settle it to the satisfaction of both
armies, and do expect that such directions as your Lordship
shall from time to time receive from them, or the Committee
of both Kingdoms, be for the future observed. And this
being all we are commanded to signify unto your Lordship,
we remain, my Lord, your Lordship's humble servants,
GREY OF WARKE.
6th July, 1644. W. LENTHAL.
1 On the 3rd July, 20,000?., with shoes and other supplies, were sent to
Arundel to be shipped from Portsmouth for the use of Lord Essex's army.
412 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIT.
CHAPTER XVII.
LIFE OF EOBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX Continued.
GOOD CONDUCT AND DISCIPLINE OF ESSEX'S ARMY COMPARED WITH
OTHERS. — THE QUEEN LEAVES EXETER. LETTERS REPORTING
THE ADVANCE INTO DEVONSHIRE. THE COUNCIL OF WAR DE-
TERMINES TO GO INTO CORNWALL. ESSEX IS PURSUED BY THE
KING. MOVEMENTS IN SUPPORT OF ESSEX. THE KING WRITES
TO ESSEX. — BLOCKADE OF THE REBEL ARMY IN LESTWITHIEL
AND FOWEY. — CAPITULATION.
ONE of the causes of complaint which Lord Essex
had against Sir William Waller, was, what he termed,
raising contributions from the country, — in other
words, plundering. We have already seen how
careful Essex was to mitigate the horrors and
miseries of war in this respect, even to the occasional
discontenting of his troops ; and we have it on the
authority of Lord Clarendon, that by "his great
" civility and affability towards all men, and the
" very good discipline in his army, he wrought
" very much upon the people, insomuch that his
" forces rather increased than diminished. It can
" hardly be imagined how great a difference there
" was in the humor, disposition, and manner of the
" army under Essex, and the other under Waller, in
" their behaviour and humanity towards the people,
" and, consequently, in the reception they found
" among them." It is not at all improbable that,
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 413
among his other reasons for undertaking the Western
service himself, Essex may have been influenced by a
desire to spare the inhabitants of that part of the
country, as yet comparatively untouched, from the
tender mercies of Waller and his " ungentlemanly
" and barbarous " troops.
The Queen had some time previously been sent to
Exeter for security, where, on the 16th June, she
gave birth to a Princess.1 On hearing of the advance
of Essex, she sent to him for a safe-conduct to Bath
or Bristol ; to which he replied, that if Her Majesty
pleased, he would not only give her a safe-conduct,
but accompany her himself to London, where she
might have the best advice for her health, but as for
the other places, without directions from the Par-
liament, he could not comply with Her Majesty's
desires. Henrietta declined to avail herself of the
Earl's obliging offer, and shortly afterwards pro-
ceeded to Falmouth, and embarked for France.
The letters of Lord Essex will best relate his
proceedings during his advance towards Exeter.
No. LXXL2
Essex to the Committee of both Kingdoms.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — Part of the enemy's forces
having been against Barnstaple, the success whereof your
Lordships will see by the enclosed, hath caused me to send
a party of horse and foot for their relief, and I am advancing
with the rest of the body myself to Tiverton, and so to steer
my course according to the intelligence I have from them.
1 Afterwards Duchess of Orleans. 2 S. P. O.
414 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
Her Majesty has left Exeter, and, as my intelligence is, bends
for Pendennis Castle, and Prince Maurice has left Kerton,
and goes farther towards Cornwall. Unless necessity compels
me, I shall be forced to stay some short time hereabouts, to
raise the country, and to furnish the army with what your
Lordships have said is coming down ; wherein I intend to
expect their love, rather than use much exaction, knowing
that it is much more for the service of the Parliament to gain
their affection, than using any compulsory way. I find a
great affection in the country to the Parliament, and to free
themselves from their Egyptian slavery ; but there is a great
want of arms, and the gentlemen being not yet come down
from London, which would be a great encouragement to them.
Here is yet but few of the gentlemen of power, but Col.
Were, whom I find both very ready and well beloved in the
county. In a short time I shall be ready to give you a more
exact account of our affairs than now I can. Your humble
servant,
Collumpton, 3rd July, 1644. ESSEX.
No. LXXII.1
Essex to the Committee of both Kingdoms.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — Although the counties of
Somerset and Devon shew great affection for the Parliament,
and to be rid of the Egyptian slavery, yet there are two
things great hindrances to the aid we should have of the
country. The first is their desire to serve under their own
countrymen, and not to be listed in my army, and those few
country gentlemen that are here wanting arms to arm them ;
so that although there be multitudes of bodies of men appear,
yet little use can be made of them for the present, till arms
and the gentlemen who have the power over them be come
1 S. P. O.
CHAI-. XVII, ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 415
down. The second is, the garrisons of the enemy keep the
country greatly in awe, both for hindering of contribution,
and their rising in Somersetshire, Bristol, Bridgewater, Castle
of Taunton, and Castle of Dunster. For the preventing of
these inconveniences I have taken the best care I can, my
army being much divided; the Lord Roberts being still with
three regiments of foot and two of horse at Barnstaple ; a
regiment of foot and a troop of horse at Weymouth ; Sir
Kobt. Pye with three troops of horse at Taunton, to secure
Lieut. Col. Blake in raising of Col. Popham's regiment, and
to prevent mischief by the castle. Sir Kobt. Pye, with
his great care and industry, hath reduced the Castle of
Taunton. I shall forbear to write any particulars of it to
you, herein being enclosed the articles of surrender, and
what was found in the castle ; jt being so well provided, that,
next to the blessing of God, nothing but their own panic
fears could have made us masters of it, which is of great con-
cernment to us, it being the only strength we have in these
two counties. As soon as the convoy is returned which is
sent to Lyme for the money, I hope we shall give a good
account of our forwardness to serve the Parliament, and not
to neglect any care or hazard that may reduce these parts
to the full subjection of the Parliament.
Until of late, that necessity hath pressed the army for want
of pay, I am confident never people suffered less by an army
whilst I could make any shift for their subsistence ; but I
must confess this country hath suffered somewhat of late for
want of the soldiers' pay ; but now money is coming down, I
doubt not but the countries will find it rather an ease than a
burthen by the army. When the convoy brought those few
to Bridgewater which were left, the commanders there sent
out this scandalous relation concerning the armies in the
North, by which you may see they have no way to keep
their plundering army on foot, but by raising those lying
416 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
reports; and yet that part which concerns Cols. Popham
:md Ludlow, though the strength they are said to have was
false, yet the want was too true : the design I was ignorant
of, I never having heard from them since Sir Will. Waller's
brigade and I parted. My Lords, I must crave pardon for
my tediousness, and rest your humble servant,
Tiverton, 10th July, 1644. ESSEX.
No. LXXIII.1
Essex to the Committee of loth Kingdoms.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — I must take it as a great
favor from you the importing to me the news of the great
victory2 obtained in the North, which is a great comfort to all
honest men, and a terror to the malignant. And yet they
have the impudence to make triumphs in all their quarters,
especially at Exeter, and give it out that the triumph which
I made here was only to deceive the country. Whereupon
I sent them the information that came from his Excy. the
Earl of Leven and the rest of the commanders- in-chief
there, with this offer to Sir John Berkeley and the rest of
the Council of War at Exeter, that if their news proved
true of the routing of our forces the 2nd of this month, I
would pass my honor to deliver up Weymouth and Melcombe
Regis into their hands, so that the chief commanders in the
West would engage themselves, upon their honors, that if
Prince Rupert were routed the same day, they would deliver
into my hands, for the Parliament's use, Exeter; which I
sent yesterday by a trumpeter, being our public day of
thanksgiving, who is not yet returned — I being unwilling to
1 S. P. O.
* The great victory was that of Marston Moor, fought on the 2nd July,
in which Prince Rupert was defeated with immense loss by the English
and Scots armies under Manchester, Fairfax, and Leven.
CHAP. XVIT. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 417
let that false report be spread in these parts, knowing that
they have no other way to keep up their party, but by
spreading of those false rumours to uphold their courage.
The 20,0007. is come safe to the army, and if, by your
Lordships' care, the army be provided with continual pay, I
doubt not but to give a very good account both of our actions
against the enemy, and civility to our friends, which other-
wise, let the officers take what care they can, soldiers cannot
be kept from plundering. Necessity hath compelled us to
stay a longer time here than we intended, as well for the
extremity the soldiers were in for want of pay after their
long and continual marches, and my army being so divided
for the assistance of the country, and in hope the gentlemen
would have come down to assure those counties with raising
of forces, whilst I was in other parts ; for whilst I am
marching farther up into Devonshire, Sir Ralph Hopton
would be at liberty to raise forces in Somerset and Dorset :
but if any of the Somersetshire gentlemen would come down,
I am confident that county would quickly shew their affec-
tions to the Parliament. Whereas information was given
that upon the relief of Lyme, there would be 1000 or 1200
to join with this army, the regiments of Col. Popham
and Col. Were were not above 200 men in all. I find
the counties generally willing, but their hindrance is want of
arms. Upon the hanging of Capt. Howard taken at Barn-
staple, (formerly employed under Capt. Pym, who had a
troop in the west county,) who, being a lieutenant, ran away
with twenty horse at one time, they hanged Capt. Turpin on
Saturday, a sea captain taken in seeking to relieve Exeter,
and since condemned by Justice Heath1, by oyer and terminer,
but had been held a prisoner ever since ; and at my being
1 Chief Justice Heath was impeached by the Commons on the receipt
of this letter.
VOL. II. E E
418 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
here they sent to exchange him for Sergeant-Major Willis,
which exchange was so unreasonable as I refused it, not
thinking they had been so bloody-minded to execute a man
in cold blood that had been so long condemned. I am in-
formed it was by Prince Maurice's command ; but, if it please
God, I may have time to make them repent it. My Lords,
if your Lordships would take it into your care to have Col.
Weyms speedily exchanged, it would be a great advantage
to Sir Will. Waller's army, which otherwise his train of
artillery may be in some disorder. And, besides, I have had
very good intelligence that when he was brought to the King,
he told him he had not as yet disposed of his place, which
makes me believe that no act will be left untried to win him
to them. And though I hope his own honor will preserve
him, yet a man of his abilities is not to be lost. My Lords,
to end where I began, with the great blessing of which God
has given us in the North, it is not one of the least comforts
that this blessing befel us where the forces of the two king-
doms were united together. My Lords, I am your humble
servant,
Tiverton, 15th July, 1644. ESSEX.
My Lords, — The garrison at Wareham were very forward,
and marched very far into the country both with horse and
foot ; but the Governor of Weymouth fell upon them after
they had come to the turnpikes of Dorchester, killed and
took about eight score of them, whereof six or eight were
mere Irish rebels, which he has since hanged, and is gone
before Wareham ; but I have advised him, in seeking to take
that, he should not neglect the care of Weymouth.
The following reply was made by Sir John Berkely
to the proposal of Essex.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 419
No. LXXIV.1
Sir John Berkely to Essex.
My Lord, — In the posture we are, it is very possible I may
be deceived in our intelligence, and, considering the practice of
some, not impossible but your Lordship may be. I am confi-
dent your Lordship hath no intention to abuse the people ; I
am most sure I have not. It must be acknowledged your news
is very unpleasant to men of my affection, and will not prove
very prosperous to those of your Lordship, if I am not mis-
taken in them, or my arguments of them. I still incline to
believe our own, but not to that degree of difference as there
is between Exeter and Weymouth ; however, I shall receive
the assurance of either with the most equal mind, and in the
worst event shall never want the satisfaction of having dis-
charged my duty to my country with an heart as much un-
touched by private ends as any man's living, and as much
your loving humble servant,
JOHN BERKELY.
On the 16th and 17th July, the Committee wrote
to Essex informing him that the King had marched
westward, and that they had directed Sir William
Waller to send a strong detachment towards Dor-
chester. On receiving this, Essex must have felt
secure that the hopes which he expressed in the
following letter were realised, and that he might
safely march westward without fear of being cut off.
No. LXXV.2
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — My Lord Koberts returned
from Barnstaple yesternight, and we were resolved to have
1 Rushworth, vi. 686. 2 S. P. O.
£ E 2
420 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
marched this day toward Prince Maurice, and so westward ;
but upon notice the King was come to Bath, a council of
war was called yesternight, and had a long and serious
debate, whether we should continue in our former resolutions,
or turn back and march towards the King. It seemed a
business of so great consequence, that we staid here this day
to take it into consideration, and for further intelligence ;
but having little more of the last to ground upon, we have
taken resolution to continue our former purposes, having
had several messages from Plymouth of the great distress
they are likely to be in if not suddenly relieved, being in
great want of money to pay their soldiers and forage for
their horses, which are kept in by the enemy from going
abroad; hoping that Sir Win. Waller with his army and
additional forces will take care of the King's army. And if
I returned, all these parts would have turned against us.
Now these armies are all in these parts, little contribution can
be expected ; therefore I hope your Lordships will take care
for the present pay of the army that it may subsist, other-
wise we shall be brought into present extremities. I hope
there shall be nothing left undone by us, that may give real
testimony of our true hearts and readiness to adventure our
lives in the service of the Parliament. I have sent your
Lordships here inclosed a letter I have received from the
Earl of Forth, a paper, and mine answer to it. My Lords,
I am your Lordships' humble servant,
Tiverton, 18th July, 1644. ESSEX.
I believe by my going farther westward, the passage will
be straitened for expresses, whereby I shall not be able to
send to your Lordships so often as I would.
The letter from the Earl of Forth enclosed a copy
of a message from the King to the Houses, con-
taining propositions for peace, the original of which,
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 421
it was intimated to Essex, was placed in the hands
of the French agent for delivery. Notwithstanding
this, the House of Commons, on the flimsy ground
that they only received a copy of the message,
refused to consider it, and took no notice whatever
of its having been forwarded to them.
Prince Maurice had retreated before the approach
of Essex ; the latter made a feint from Tiverton, as
if he would return towards the King, which drew
Maurice east again, and he suffered some loss in a
skirmish between Oakhampton and Exeter.
In the mean time, Lord Hopton had joined the
King, and information arrived that the united force
was marching westward. The Council of War as-
sembled at the head-quarters of Lord Essex to con-
sider these three points; whether he should march
to encounter the King ; whether he should sit down
before Exeter ; or whether he should proceed to re-
lieve Plymouth, and thence into Cornwall. They
decided upon the last, because, if Grenvile, who was
before Plymouth, were routed, the King could get
no recruits there; because, Cornwall being Lord
.Roberts' country, it was probable great numbers
would come in to Essex ; and lastly, because it was
supposed that Waller, or some other force, was sent
into the West, in the King's rear, and would cut him
off. The last reason was undoubtedly good, and had
such a force been sent as Essex desired, and as the
Committee informed him they had ordered, the result
would have been very different.
At the same time, considering the jealousy that
£ £
422 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
then existed between the extreme party in Parliament
and Essex — the former believing that Essex had re-
solved not to fight any more against the person of the
King — that General cannot be acquitted of great
want of caution in marching into a cul-de-sac before
he had accurate intelligence that Waller was on the
King's track. On the other hand, it seems extremely
probable that the Parliament purposely kept back
that force, in order that Essex might be compelled to
fight the King, little dreaming how great an injury
they were inflicting on themselves.
This view is borne out by Lord Holies1, who tells
us that the violent faction, having failed in an en-
deavour to win Essex by large and splendid promises,
if he would unite himself to the " godly party," were
resolved to ruin him ; that when Essex proceeded to
the relief of Lyme, and sent Waller after the King,
some of that party went so far as to say, that it were
better Lord Essex and his whole army should be lost
than that the Parliament should be disobeyed, and
that, if they could prevent it, neither he nor his army
should be cared for any more. Therefore, the Com-
mittee of both Kingdoms, in which they had a ma-
jority, were, for a long time, inattentive to the
repeated demands of Essex for a diversion to be
made in his favour, by pressing the rear of the
King's army, which might easily have been done in
time to save him, and " did most wilfully, maliciously
a and treacherously, suffer General and army to be
" lost."
1 Mem. of Denzil Lord Holies, in Select Tracts relating to the Civil
Wars, p. 265.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 423
No. LXXVI.1
Essex to the Committee of both Kingdoms.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — I being drawn to this place
for the relief of Plymouth, which by God's blessing is now
relieved, and being advised to march yet further westward
into Cornwall to clear that county, and to settle the same
in peace, I have thought fit to send you Sir Philip Staple-
ton, and with him Mr. Herbert, one of the commissioners
appointed for my army, to give you an account both of the
condition of my army, and of the state of these western
counties ; and I shall desire you to advise with them in the
recommending of such things unto the House, as you shall
think requisite for the advancement of the service.
My Lords, in the night I received your Lordships' letters2
concerning Guernsey and Jersey, and am ready with my
life and force to act for their relief; but in regard of my great
distance and the condition of things here, I refer it to those
gentlemen to inform your Lordships further therein.
My Lord, your humble servant,
Tavistock, 26th July, 1644. ESSEX.
On the day the above letter was written, King
Charles arrived at Exeter, where he was joined by
Prince Maurice; their united forces amounted to
about 8500 foot, and 5000 horse, with which he
immediately pushed on, after a day's rest, in order to
destroy the army of Lord Essex before the expected
arrival of Sir William Waller. He advanced by Oak-
hampton, Lifton, and Trecarrol, to Liskeard, where
he arrived on the 6th August.
On the approach of Essex, Sir Richard Grenvile
i S. P. O. 2 Of the 17th July.
£ £ 4
424
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
had raised the siege of Plymouth, and retired into
Cornwall, whither the Earl, misled, as appears from
the next letters, by false information, followed, in
expectation that the country would rise in favour of
the Parliament, whereas it proved that, with few
exceptions, Cornwall was entirely Royalist. He
then, for the reasons which he assigns, retired from
Bodmin to Lestwithiel.
No. LXXVIL1
Essex to the Committee of both Kingdoms.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — After the relief of Plymouth,
having no committees sent down from the Parliament to
advise us what course we might take to be most beneficial
for their service, we called a council of war to consult about
it, and by the persuasions of the western men assuring us
there was no other way of reducing the West to the obedience
of the Parliament than by clearing of Cornwall, and they
undertaking that we should want no victuals, and that a
great part of the country stood well affected, we marched to
Bodmin. But hearing of three armies against us, the King,
Palsgrave Maurice, and Hopton marching from the East,
and nobody that we can learn attending on them; the
county unanimously, unless some few gentlemen, rising
against us, we must expect another upon our backs from the
West ; and the soldiers' great necessity for wanting bread,
hath forced us to choose this place to make good till we can
be provided with victuals from Plymouth or hereabouts to
enable us to march, and then we shall sell our lives at as dear
a rate as may be, never seeing soldiers more willing to
undertake any thing, nor to undergo their wants with more
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 425
patience. There is some flying report in the county that
Sir Wm. Waller should be advancing into these parts ; but
understanding by your last letters of the 17th of last month,
that your Lordships had appointed him to send only a party,
and that to advance no further than Dorchester, makes us
that we can trust in nothing at present but God's blessing,
the courage of our officers and soldiers, and our faithfulness
to the cause. Your Lordships' humble servant,
Lestwithiel, 4th August, 1644. ESSEX.
We learn from the Journals of Parliament, that on
the 17th July1, a letter had been read from Waller,
stating his intention to march to the West in pursuit
of the King, and that the Houses ordered that he
should not do so. As the army of Sir William
Waller, after his defeat at Cropredy Bridge, became
disorganized, a mutiny breaking out, and men de-
serting in numbers, while the City regiments returned
home on the 12th, I am inclined to suppose this
letter was intended to deceive the Essex party, and
that he was well aware he would be prohibited from
moving.
It was not until the middle of August, when letters
arrived from Essex showing but too clearly the
difficulties lie was in, that, too late to be of any
service, General Middleton was despatched with
about 2500 horse, and orders to straiten the King's
quarters, and to divert his forces, to assist the Lord
General, and keep up a communication with him.
1 Both Waller and Middleton wrote letters to the Parliament, in which
they called " the God of Heaven to witness that they desired nothing so
much as to march to the relief of the Western army ; " yet they did not
move.— Whitelocke, 101, 102.
426 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
Waller, who was at the same time ordered to prepare
to march into the West, answered that he was willing
to march, but wanted horses. These orders were
given on the 23rd ; on the 28th Middleton was at
Honiton. The Earl of Manchester was at the same
time ordered to draw to the southward to support
the movement. Had this been done at the beginning
instead of the end of August, it is probable the King
might have been crushed in the West, as completely
as his army was destroyed in the North ; but it was
then too late.
As the indignities which Essex had sustained from
his employers were publicly known, Charles deter-
mined to make an attempt to detach him from the
cause of the Parliament. With his own hand he
wrote such a letter to the Earl, that for him to have
entered into some further correspondence would cer-
tainly have been pardonable ; nothing can more
strongly demonstrate the rigid sense of honour, and
unswerving conduct of the Earl of Essex, than his
reception of this letter, "under all the circumstances
of his ardent desire for peace, and his sensitive
feeling that Manchester and Waller had been unduly
favoured, and his own authority ill-supported. He
appears rather to have been affronted at an attempt
to tamper with him, and answered sullenly, " That
" according to his commission, he would defend the
" King's person and posterity, and the best advice he
" could give him was to go to his Parliament."
Lord Essex's nephew was the bearer of the letter.
CHAP. XVH. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 427
No. LXXVIII.1
Essex to the Speaker of the House of Lords.
Right Honorable, — My Lord Beauchamp going for
France, desired to see me before he went ; and, at his coming,
brought me this enclosed letter from the King, to which I
answered, that as I had received my trust from both Houses
of Parliament, so I could not give any answer without their
direction; and touching that passage of His Majesty for
preparation by my Lord of Hertford's letter, I received
none ; but when my sister Hertford wrote to me about her
son's journey, she sent me the copy of that which the King
sent to the Parliament by the French agent, and was sent
me by my Lord of Forth, which I also sent to the Committee
of both Kingdoms.
I have not time to write more, we having the forces of the
King, Prince Maurice, and Lord Hopton before us, and
Sir Richd. Greenvile behind us, and may be joined ere this
come to Foy. As there shall any thing happen, I shall give
your Lordships advertisement. My Lord, I am your humble
servant, ESSEX.
Lestwithiel, 8th Aug. 1644.
I have sent you here inclosed a letter we cannot decipher.
No. LXXIX.2
The King to Essex (enclosure).
Essex, — I have been very willing to believe, that whenev
there should be such a conjuncture, as to put it in your power to
effect that happy settlement of this miserable kingdom, which
all good men desire, you would lay hold of it. That season
is now before you ; you have it at this time in your power
1 Lords' Journal, vi. 670. 2 Ibid.
428 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
to redeem your country and the crown, and to oblige your
King in the highest degree; an action certainly of the
greatest piety, prudence, and honor that may be, and such an
opportunity as perhaps no subject before you ever had, or
after you shall have, to which there is no more required, but
that you join with me heartily and really, in the settling of
those things which we have both professed constantly to be
our only aims.
Let us do this, and if any be so foolishly unnatural as to
oppose their King's, their country's, and their own good,
we will make them happy, by God's blessing, even against
their wills.
To this, the only impediment can be, want of mutual con-
fidence. I promise it to you on my part ; and as I have
endeavoured to prepare it on yours by my letter to Hertford
from Evesham, I hope this will perfect it, when, as I here
do, I have engaged to you the word of a King, that you
joining with me in that blessed work, I shall give both to
you and your army such eminent marks of my confidence and
value, as shall not leave a room for the least distrust amongst
you, either in relation to the public or to yourself, unto
whom I shall then be, your faithful friend,
CHARLES E.
If you like of this, hearken to this bearer, whom I have
fully instructed in particulars; but this will admit of no
delay. C. E.
Liskeard, 6th August, 1644.
The King, on finding Essex obstinate in his re-
fusal to treat, called a council of war, to decide
whether he should force the Earl to fight; it was
determined to await the junction of Sir Richard
Grenvile, in the mean time pushing forward the
horse to straiten the quarters of the Earl. This was
CHAP. XVH. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 429
done on the following day, and the King removed
his head quarters to Boconnoc, a house belonging to
Lord Mohun, within three miles of Lestwithiel.
From that place another attempt was made to open
a negotiation with Essex by the principal officers of
the royal army, which has excited the indignation
of Lord Clarendon, although the promoters obtained
the sanction of the King.1
This letter was enclosed in the following one from
the two generals of the King's army, and sent over
with a trumpet to the Earl at Lestwithiel.
No. LXXX.2
Prince Maurice and the Earl of Brentford to Essex.
My Lord, — Notwithstanding the small satisfaction His
Majesty hath received from your Lordship to his late letter,
he is yet pleased to give us and the commanders and officers
of both armies leave to send to your Lordship this enclosed,
with the assurance that this shall serve for a safe-conduct to
all such persons as shall be appointed by your Lordship to
meet us as desired. Your Lordship's humble servants,
MAURICE.
Boconnoc, 9th August, 1644. BRENTFORD.
The enclosed letter, which was signed by eighty-
six officers of the royal armies, after stating that the
King's leave had been obtained to send that letter,
hinted that doubts of the King's sincerity in the
1 The King's consent to this letter was obtained with difficulty ; it
appears to have originated with Wilmot and other mutinous and dis-
affected persons in the royal army. — See Hallam, Const. Hist. i. 583., note.
2 Lords' Journal, vi. 671.
430 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
performance of his promises, was the cause of Essex's
refusal to treat with him ; and they declare, on their
faith and honour, their resolution to maintain with
their lives whatever the King shall promise. They
desired that Essex and six others should meet their
General with an equal number, to consider the means
of reconciling the national quarrel.
To this the Earl returned the following concise
reply.
No. LXXXI.1
Essex to Prince Maurice and the Earl of Forth.
My Lords, — In the beginning of your letter, you express
by what authority you send it. I, having no power from
the Parliament who employed me, to treat, cannot give way
to it without breach of trust. Your humble servant,
Lestwithiel, 10th Aug., 1644. ESSEX.
Had Lord Essex been a less scrupulous traveller
in the paths of truth and honour, and by entering
into a negotiation at this time, turned the tables on
those who were betraying him, it is difficult to
imagine what might have been the result. Since the
victory of Marston Moor, the Independents had
spoken more openly, and had shown that their views
extended to the abolition of monarchy and nobility,
and had thus widened the breach between themselves
and the moderate party ; that is, all who desired to
reform, but not to overturn, — a definition which
included very many of the King's adherents. The
1 Lords' Journal, vi. 671. Essex addressed the Earl of Forth, as
though he did not recognise the title of Earl of Brentford, newly conferred
on him.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 431
Scots had also discovered that, in the eyes of the
" godly," a Presbyterian was but little better than an
Episcopalian. The country, harassed and impo-
verished, longed for peace. There was one stumbling-
block in the King's way, ever recurring and forcing
itself on the minds of men, which, probably more
than any army the Parliament could bring into the
field, obstructed his approach to that desired goal ;
the doubt whether any promise, however solemn, any
stipulation, however binding, would be faithfully
adhered to by Charles the King, when firmly re-
seated on his throne.
Well might the Parliament, on the receipt of these
letters, vote their thanks to the General for his
fidelity in this affair, conscious as they must have
been, how ill his honourable conduct had been re-
quited.
On the approach of Sir Richard Grenvile from the
West, shortly after the above correspondence had
passed, the combined operations for the blockade of
Lord Essex were carried on with greater vigour than
might have been anticipated, from the quarrels and
jealousies that existed among the royal commanders.
The two following letters from the Earl recount his
proceedings.
No. LXXXIL1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — The last letter I received
from your Lordships was of the 1 7th of the last month, since
1 S. P. O.
432 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
which time I have made several despatches to you, and shall
omit no occasion whereby I may shew obedience to the Par-
liament. The two last letters were sent by the way of my
Lord Admiral. The first was His Majesty's letter to me, the
second was that from all the officers of the King's army ; and
now I send you the originals of some scattered papers that
were thrown upon the heath by the enemy's horse. Braver
men than are here I never knew, this army being environed
by four armies, in great want of victuals, and the county
consists so upon passes, that we can neither force them to
fight but when they list, nor march off. And for aught I
can perceive, their intention is to starve us ; yet both horse
and foot keep their courage and constancy, for all the great
extremity they are put to. The foot as yet never came to
fight on either side ; but for our horse, they skirmish daily,
and we beat them, though they be three for one. Intelli-
gence we have none, the country people being so violent
against us, that if any of our scouts or soldiers light in their
hands, they are more bloody than the enemy. What forces
come to the enemy's assistance, we can never come to have
notice of; here are some skippers that are newly taken that
are come from the coast of Brittany, who speak of 14,000 or
15,000 men preparing there to come over, but I can give
but little credit to it, knowing how the French are engaged
in war ; only the King staying in this country, and forsaking
all the rest of his counties, that he hath some foreign hopes
either from France or Ireland. If any forces had followed
the King, as we expected when we came into these parts,
by human reason this war would have had a quick end;
but since we are left to the providence of God, I cannot
despair of His mercy, having found so much of it in our
greatest straits. My Lords, I am your Lordships' humble
servant,
Lestwithiel, 16th Aug. 1644. ESSEX.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 433
No. LXXX1II.1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — The time I have now will
not permit me to write long lines ; but because I know not
what reports may be made, I have thought fit to despatch
the messenger to your Lordships with this only.
The enemy on Wednesday last set upon us in several
quarters, gained nothing, but possessed themselves of an
house and an old castle2, which some Devonshire foot quitted
without dispute ; not very considerable, but that it causeth
the duty to be harder. The Sergeant Major-General, en-
deavouring to regain the castle with some of my own foot,
who behaved themselves as bravely as ever I saw men,
was shot through his buff coat by the short ribs without
any hurt, thanks be to God ; and with another shot he had
his glove torn, and the skin of his hand only raised. Yester-
day there was little done, only some pelting in some of the
guards. The enemy has now made a work, and boasts they
will beat us out of our quarters ; but, by the mercy of God,
who has been so often abundantly gracious to us, and in
whom we trust, what they get of us shall be at so dear a rate
that they will be much weakened. Our soldiers, both horse
and foot, are very cheerful and resolute. I marched into
these parts by the advice and at the desire of some in this
army that are of this country and also of Plymouth, and
for no ends of my own, and had there been forces awaiting
on the King, I should not have doubted of giving a good
account of the war, had they been but 4000 horse and
dragoons. But besides the King's army, with Hopton's
coming up to Prince Maurice and Grenvile, the country
itself is exceedingly malignant, that they add much to the
1 S. P. O. 8 Restormel,
VOL. II. F F
434 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
enemy's strength. This country is full of passes, which
causeth the duty to be much the harder. Whereas it was
reported that the Plymouth forces were 1500, they are not
above 600 foot, and between 200 and 300 horse ; all these
foot I am fain to quarter at Fowey and thereabouts, with
some of their horse for guarding of provisions. If there come
not forces, this army will be in much hazard, for besides the
powerful enemy we have to deal withal, we are to keep
Fowey and the passages of the river. The ways in this
country being so strait, and no turnings for an army, that
they who are first in them must either beat the other and
make their way through, or be starved. This messenger
very diligently came hither with his letters when the enemy
was first drawing down to us, and has been an eyewitness
of all that hath happened since, and is able to give your
Lordships an account thereof. There came another at the
same time who had lately expressed himself concerning the
backwardness of this army, but before he had scarce delivered
his message, he went his way without taking leave.
Your Lordships' humble servant,
Lestwithiel, 23rd Aug., 1644. ESSEX.
Grenvile had taken possession of a seat of Lord
Roberts', about three miles above Lestwithiel, called
Lanhydroc, and also of Resprin Bridge, by which he
communicated with the royal head-quarters at
Boconnoc.
On the East, the King commanded all the passages
over the river from Boconnoc to Fowey, and gained
possession, without fighting, of a house of Lord
Mohun's facing the town, and of a small fort on the
eastern promontory of the river mouth, commanding
the entrance, which was only half a musket-shot
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 435
across. These important posts had been evacuated
by a rebel detachment on the approach of the
Royalists.
In another letter Essex writes, that from Wednes-
day, the 21st, to Friday, the 30th of August, his
troops were in continual fight on the west, and
always repulsed the attacks of the enemy; but,
nevertheless, the material advantages were on the
King's side, whose cavalry had extended from St.
Blazey to Polkerris, and threatened the communication
between Lestwithiel and Fowey.
Tidings arrived that the forces coming to his relief
had been defeated; a check received by Middleton
near Bridgewater, had been thus magnified, and all
hope of succour was destroyed. Their forage was
almost consumed; provisions for but a few days
remained. Essex resolved that the horse, 2500 in
number, under Sir William Balfour, should force
their way through the King's army. Goring, the
General of the King's horse, was in the midst of a
debauch with his boon companions, when intimation
was brought to him of the march of Balfour, with
orders for him to pursue the fugitives. He treated
the alarm with ridicule, and the orders with contempt ;
so that the daring feat of breaking through the
enemy's lines, was executed with scarcely the inter-
ruption of a musket-shot during the night of the 30th.
On the 31st, the infantry retreated from Lestwithiel
to Fowey; the rear-guard commanded by Skippon
was fighting all day with the royal troops, which
marched in pursuit, as soon as it was known that
FF 2
436 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
Essex had evacuated Lestwithiel. Notwithstanding
all his gallantry, the Major-General was forced to
abandon four guns on the retreat. On the west,
however, matters were in a far worse condition ; for
the regiments of Colonels Weare and Butler had taken
to flight, and left Menabilley undefended.
On the morning of Sunday, the 1st of September,
Mr. Dean came to the Earl of Essex, " two hours
u after day, and told me that, if they should offer to
" move any of the army from their posts, they would
" never stand, and that he thought they should all be
" surrounded before noon. Upon these considerations
" I thought it fit to look to myself, it being a greater
" terror to me to be a slave to their contempts, than
" a thousand deaths."1
Sending to the Major-General a recommendation to
retire to the posts of Menabilley and Polkerris, or, if
he were unable to do so, to make the best terms he
could, Essex, accompanied by Lord Roberts and some
other officers, embarked in a boat at Fowey, and pro-
ceeded to Plymouth.
No. LXXXIV.2
Essex to General Skippon.
Sir, — I had sent to you before this, but that the wind
blew so stiff no boat can put to sea; but I write this, that
upon the first opportunity it may come to your hands. Sir,
be assured no worldly thing should have made me quit so
gallant men, but the impossibility of subsisting after I heard
1 Letter of Essex to Sir Ph. Stapleton, in Rush-worth, vi. 703.
* Ibid. 704.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 437
that those regiments I put most trust in, namely, my own,
the Lord Roberts', and Colonel Butler's, had quitted their
posts on Gallant side, and so that way was opened for the
enemy to cut off all provisions from you that should come
from Menabilley Bay and Polkerris ; and that you were
unable, according to my desire, to draw up thither, for fear
your men should quit their colors, if moved. Sir, if you
live, I shall take as great care of you as of my father, if
alive ; if God otherwise dispose of you, as long as I have a
drop of blood, I shall strive to revenge yours on the causers
of it. The horse are come safe ; nothing but fear of slavery
and to be triumphed on, should have made us have gone.
Sir, I am yours till death,
Plymouth, 2nd Sept., 1644. ESSEX.
P. S. — Upon notice that you subsist, and how long you
can, no hazard shall be let slip.
General Skippon had not waited to hear from the
Earl at Plymouth. As soon as he received his
message on the morning of the 1st, he called a Council
of War, and addressed them as follows: —
" Gentlemen, — You see our General and some
" chief officers have thought fit to leave us, and our
** horse are got away ; we are left alone upon our
" defence. That which I propound to you is this :
" that we, having the same courage that our horse
" had, and the same God to assist us, may make the
" same trial of our fortunes, and endeavour to make
" our way through our enemies as they have done ;
" and account it better to die with honour and faith-
" fulness, than to live dishonourable."
1 Rushworth, vi. 704.
r r 3
438 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
But few of the Council agreed in opinion with the
gallant old General, and a treaty of capitulation was
resolved on ; and not only resolved, but, on the very
same day, terms were signed by the Generals of both
armies. By them the rebels agreed to give up all
their artillery and arms1, excepting the swords and
pistols of officers ; on which they were to be con-
voyed by the royal troops in safety to Poole,
agreeing not to bear arms again before they arrived
at Southampton.
One is struck by the remarkably easy terms granted
in capitulations, as much as by a certain want of
vigour and energy in pressing their adversaries,
which is observable on both sides. It would seem
they never forgot, up to this time at least, that
they were brethren fighting against brethren. In
the relation just ended, another question arises ;
what was the Earl of Warwick2 doing at Plymouth
with the fleet, when, within thirty miles of him, was
the army of his party in a state of distress, which the
presence of a few men-of-war off Fowey would have
relieved at once ?
Essex did not write an account of his disasters to
the Committee of both Kingdoms; his indignation
against that board was only shown in his letter to
1 Thirty-eight guns, including the four captured, and about 6000 stand
of arms, fell to the royal army by this capitulation.
* Whitelocke, p. 102., says that Warwick made " a gallant attempt to
relieve Fowey, but extremity of weather would not suffer him to land
one man;" but surely if Lord Essex could leave Fowey in an open boat,
the same means might have embarked a portion at least of the army, had
the fleet been off Fowey.
CHAP. XVII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 439
Sir Philip Stapleton, which was read in Parliament.
In it he says : " How our poor army was neglected
" and oppressed, is well known to you, and shall be
" to the world ; for never were so many gallant
" and faithful men so long exposed without succor."
And again he says, " this business shall not sleep, if
" it be in my power.''
Colonels Weare and Butler were accused of having
caused the late disaster by their misconduct; the
regiment of the former having quitted its post on
the 30th, and Butler, who had been a prisoner in
the royal camp, and was only exchanged two days
before, was accused of having tampered with the
army on his return, by spreading certain reports.
Both were committed to the Tower.
An inquiry into the reasons why Waller or a com-
petent force was not sent into the West on the King's
going there, instead of lying idle about Abingdon,
being by no means agreeable to his party, it was
stifled by sending to Essex the following letter from
the Parliament.
No. LXXXV.1
The Speakers to Essex.
My Lord, — The Committee of both Kingdoms having
acquainted the Houses of Parliament with your Lordship's
letters from Plymouth, they have commanded us to let you
know that, as they apprehend the misfortunes of that acci-
dent, and submit to God's pleasure therein, so their good
affections to your Lordship, and their opinion of your fidelity
1 Lords' Journal, vi. 699.
r r4
440 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVII.
and merit in the public service, is not at all lessened ; and
they are resolved not to be wanting in their best endeavors
for the repairing of this loss, and drawing together such a
strength under your command, as may, with the blessing of
God, return our affairs to a better condition than they are now
in ; to which purpose they have written to the Earl of Man-
chester to march with all possible speed towards Dorchester
in Dorsetshire with all the forces he can of horse and foot.
Sir Will. Waller is likewise ordered to march speedily unto
Dorchester with all his horse and foot.
The Houses have appointed 6000 foot arms, 500 pair of
pistols, and 6000 suits of clothes, shirts, &c., to meet your
Lordship at Portsmouth, for the arming and encouragement
of your forces; and they are confident your Lordship's
presence in those parts, for bringing the forces together in a
body, and disposing of them, will very much conduce to the
public advantage. Your Lordship's most affectionate friends,
GREY OF WARKE.
Westminster, 7th Sept. 1644. WM. LENTHAL.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 411
CHAPTEK XVIII.
LIFE OF ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX — Concluded.
MOVEMENTS OF THE ROYAL ARMY. PROCEEDINGS OF LORD ESSEX.
HIS ILLNESS. — SECOND BATTLE OF NEWBURY. CONSULTATION
AT ESSEX HOUSE CONCERNING CROMWELL. SELF-DENYING ORDI-
NANCE. ESSEX RESIGNS HIS COMMISSION. HIS CONDUCT AS
GENERAL. — SEQUESTRATED LANDS ASSIGNED TO HIM. — PROPOSAL
TO MAKE ESSEX AND OTHERS DUKES. HIS ILLNESS AND DEATH.
— LORD CLARENDON'S CHARACTER OF LORD ESSEX. — HIS FUNE-
RAL. — LITIGATION ABOUT HIS WILL.
IN a few days after the capitulation of General
Skippon, the royal army commenced its march, and
arrived on the 10th September before Plymouth ; a
summons was sent to Lord Roberts, who remained
in command of the garrison, which being rejected
by him, several unsuccessful attempts were made to
take the town by assault ; on this Charles raised the
siege, and continued his march to Exeter, at which
place he arrived on the 17th. Goring, who had been
detached against Barnstaple and Ilfracombe, took
those places on capitulation, the garrisons marching
out with the honours of war, and having a convoy to
Portsmouth ; the ordnance, amounting to seventy
pieces, being left to the Royalists.
The King having summoned the Oxford Parliament
to assemble on the 9th November, slowly pursued his
march in that direction; Waller, who had joined
442 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
General Middleton, and the horse under Balfour,
retreating before him. The King was at Salisbury
on the 15th October, and arrived at Newbury on the
22nd.
The Earl of Essex, who had proceeded by sea from
Plymouth to Portsmouth, wrote from the latter place,
on the llth September, that he was collecting his
forces again ; and on the 14th he says, " Our poor
" naked foot came the last night to Southampton
" and thereabouts.7' He also says, in reference to
the orders which had been given to Waller to march
to his relief, and to the assurance he had received
from the Committee that " nothing should be wanting
" that might contribute to his Lordship's speedy as-
" sistance," — "I hope, hereafter, those who have dis-
" obeyed your commands shall be questioned ; for if
" they had been put in execution, the war had been
" ended before now, and I not put to so shameful a
" retreat, — it being never before this time in the
" enemy's power to have the least advantage over
" my army."1
The jealousy entertained against Essex was, for the
moment, quelled by the disastrous event which had
been its result, and the Parliament exerted them-
selves to recruit and arm his men with so much
diligence, that on the 17th October he was again
enabled to take the field, and on the 21st he was joined
near Basingstoke by Manchester and Waller, while
5000 men of the City trained bands were on their
1 Letter-book, S. P. O.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 443
march towards him. At this critical moment, when
the King was ^within a few miles of Essex, and a
decisive action looked for, an indisposition, which
had been gradually growing upon him, increased to
such an extent, that he was compelled to quit the
army, and go to Reading.
The cause of his retirement from the head of the
army at this critical juncture, is satisfactorily ac-
counted for by Sir John Meyricke, who, writing to
Sir Samuel Luke from Reading, on the 26th October,
says : " I am much troubled to tell you that my
" Lord General is now at Reading, and fallen ex-
" treme ill of an impost ume in his back parts, much
" to be feared, unless timely prevented, will turn to a
" fistula ; that it should please God to visit him at
" this time, troubles his mind extremely, and, I fear,
" may endanger his life, but God's will must be." 1
The illness of Essex being reported to the Houses
on the 26th, the following letter was addressed to
him by their order.
No. LXXXVI.2
The Committee to Essex.
My Lord, — We are very sorry to hear of your Lordship's
indisposition, and that you have by so long striving against
it, so much increased it. We are sensible of the want of
your presence at the army, yet desire your Lordship, however,
to take special care of your health, that you may preserve
yourself both to your friends and the public. We send this
messenger express to be certified of your health, and desire
1 Ashburnham MSS. 2 S. P. O.
444 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
your Lordship to despatch him immediately with the state
of it.
Derby House, 26th Oct. 1644.
No. LXXXVIL1
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — It is a comfort to me in this
sad time of mine affliction in mind and body, to see that I am
continued in your care, being at this present so useless a
servant to the State.
The particulars of my disease I shall crave pardon that I
defer the account of till Doctor St. John, old Mr. Bowden of
Reading, and Langley mine own chirurgeon, shall set down
the true state, as much as they can perceive of it as yet ;
only thus much, I think it has been much occasioned (the
inconveniency I am like to suffer) by striving so long with
it, thinking it the greatest worldly misfortune that would
have befallen me at this present : but it is God's doing, and
I must with all humility submit to his pleasure ; so acknow-
ledging your Lordships' great favor in sending hither, I rest,
my Lords, your Lordships' most humble servant,
Reading, 27th Oct. 1644. ESSEX.
On the day the above letter was written, the second
battle of Newbury was fought ; the absence of the
Lord General, whose superior rank was acknowledged
by all, produced results of the highest importance.
The jealousies entertained towards each other by
the Generals of the rebel army, were so well known,
that the Committee had written letters to the prin-
cipal commanders, urging them to forget their ani-
1 S. P. O.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 445
mosities, and for the sake of the common cause to
act with zeal and unity.
To a want of the agreement thus urged upon the
commanders, may be ascribed the indecisive result of
the battle, in which the army of the Parliament,
although greatly superior in numbers to that of the
King, not only gained no material advantage, but on
the following day, when Charles had retired, leaving
his artillery and wounded in Dennington Castle, they
suffered a repulse before that castle ; and on the 9th
November, the rebel leaders having passed the
interim in accusations and recriminations at Newbury,
the King, joined by his horse under Rupert and
Northampton, relieved Dennington before their eyes,
removed his artillery to Oxford, and offered battle,
which was declined. The Committee of the Two
Kingdoms replied to the despatch of Manchester,
Waller, and Balfour, reporting these facts, that they
were " sorry to hear the enemy met not that opposi-
" tion that was expected from an army that God had
" blessed lately with so happy a victory." Essex,
who had arrived in London the day before, attended
this meeting of the Committee on the 10th.
The Parliament was justly displeased, and ordered
an inquiry into the conduct of the^ Generals, and the
state of the army, while they kept their monthly fast
with more than usual strictness.
In the House of Commons, Cromwell accused
Manchester of disaffection, and of studiously avoiding
all opportunities of obtaining victory over the King's
446 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
forces1 ; while Manchester retorted on him in the
Upper House, with a charge of disobedience of orders
on the day of Newbury, which prevented a decisive
victory being gained. It appears that Cromwell
already aimed at supreme power, and that he had
sounded Manchester, who proved deaf to his persua-
sions, and refused to betray the trust reposed in him
by the Parliament ; his overthrow was therefore re-
solved on, with the rest of the moderate leaders.
The following is the last letter written by the
Lord General before his return to London.
No. LXXXVIII.2
Essex to the Committee.
My Lords and Gentlemen, — I received the enclosed from
Major-General Browne, and very readily recommend his
requests to your Lordships, desiring such stragglers as can be
apprehended may be made exemplary.
I give your LL. many thanks for your enquiry after my
recovery, which I thank God begins, though with a small
progress ; I can now sit up half an hour or an hour in a day
without much pain. My Lords, I am your LL. most humble
servant, ESSEX.
General Browne's letter stated, that four-score
troopers had run away from Abingdon to London,
pretending their want of pay, whereas they were not
more than four or five weeks in arrear. He begs
1 The resolution not to fight on the 9th November, was, however,
taken in a full council of war, Cromwell being one of its members. — Lud-
low, i. 132. Baillie, ii. 76.
« S. P. O.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 447
that " they may be made exemplary in punishment,
" who never were nor will be serviceable as soldiers."
The jealousies and quarrels of the commanders pro-
duced their usual effect ; the troops became discon-
tented and mutinous, and many desertions took place.
The Committee, in their letters to Essex, deplore his
absence from the army, and desire him to order all
officers to remain with their respective charges, on
pain of death.
We will now proceed to relate the origin and
progress of the celebrated Self-denying Ordinance,
which, by removing from civil offices and military
commands all the moderate men, enabled Oliver
Cromwell to plant his foot firmly on the ladder to
power, which he climbed so successfully and so
rapidly, that in a few short months, to use the words
of Mr. Hallam, " Fairfax and Cromwell triumphed,
" not only over the King and the monarchy, but over
" the Parliament and the nation."1
Of the two parties into which the rebels were
divided in November, 1644, the Presbyterians were
the most numerous ; but the Independents not only
possessed the most able and energetic leaders, but all
the most popular preachers belonged to that party :
hence they made up in influence what they wanted
in numbers.
The conduct of the army at Newbury had been
submitted to a Committee ; and it soon became known
that the Independents, who scouted the idea of peace,
1 At the battle of Naseby, 14th June, 1645. — Const, Hist. i. 592.
448
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
were resolved to get rid of Essex and the other
advocates for it, and that this Committee recom-
mended that the army should be remodelled, thus
solving their chief difficulty, which was the mode of
setting aside the Earl of Essex without giving offence
to him and to the army, in which he was much be-
loved. Cromwell was as popular with one portion of
the army, as Essex was with the other ; and on the
former insinuating some misconduct on the part of
Essex's own army at Newbury, the Earl conceived a
jealousy of his intentions, and a consultation was held
at Essex House, late one night, in the beginning of
December. The Scots Commissioners, Whitelocke,
Maynard, Denzil Holies, Sir Philip Stapleton, Sir
John Meyricke, and some other friends of Essex were
present.1
Lord Loudon, Chancellor of Scotland, opened the
proceedings in a speech specially addressed to
Whitelocke and Maynard, in which he desired their
opinions, whether Lieutenant General Cromwell
ought not to be proceeded against as an incendiary,
as that term was understood in the Solemn League
and Covenant.
Both Whitelocke and Maynard replied to the same
effect : that they considered Cromwell to be a man
of quick and subtle parts, who had lately gained no
small interest in the House of Commons, while he
had some friends in the House of Peers, and was
of ability to manage his defence to the best advantage ;
1 Whitelocke, 116.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 449
that it would be necessary to have clear proof that
he had raised the fire of contention in the State, which
was their definition of the word incendiary, before
proceeding against him, and that such persons as the
Chancellor of Scotland and the Lord General ought
not to appear in it, if there was any doubt.
This advice was followed, and the matter dropped ;
but Whitelocke says, there was cause to believe
some person present had informed Cromwell of
what passed, who, perceiving the danger to him-
self of further delay, lost no time in prosecuting his
plans.
On the 9th December, the House of Commons
resolved itself into a Committee of the whole House,
to consider the sad condition of the kingdom by the
continuance of the war, and how the war should be
effectually prosecuted, if the negotiations then pend-
ing did not come to a successful issue. For a con-
siderable time silence prevailed, each waiting for his
neighbour to break it. At length Cromwell rose,
and made a speech, in which he declared the general
belief, that those in command and in high places
desired nothing less than a termination of hostilities,
in order that they " might be continued in grandeur"
and power. He therefore urged the necessity of
putting the army on " another method.'*
After a debate, it was moved by Mr. Zouch Tate,
and resolved, that during this war no member of
either House should have any military command, or
hold any civil office, under the Parliament. A Com-
VOL. n. G G
450 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
mittee was appointed to prepare an ordinance in the
terms of the resolution.1
Some of the movers of this resolution confessed
that their object was to remove the Lord General,
who would otherwise obstruct their designs ; he
being a favourer of peace, and too strong a supporter
of monarchy, nobility, and other old institutions,
which they desired to alter.2
Cromwell was not sure of his majority, and reli-
gion was called in to exert herself in his favour.
The House ordered a fast, and agreed to the preachers
proposed by the Independents. The fast was ob-
served by the House in Lincoln's Inn Chapel, no
strangers, not even the officers of the House, being
admitted, that the preachers might speak more freely
respecting the Self-denying Ordinance, on which they
were to implore a blessing.
On the 17th December, the Ordinance was re-
ported to the House, and a proviso that it should not
extend to the Earl of Essex rejected by a majority of
seven.3
On the 21st December, the Ordinance was sent to
the Lords; and so impatient were the Commons,
that three days afterwards they sent a message,
desiring the Lords to expedite the measure. It was
referred to a select Committee, composed of Essex,
1 Commons' Journal, iii. 718. Parl. Hist. iii. 326.
8 Whitelocke, 118.
3 The numbers were, on the question that this proviso should be added
to the Ordinance —
Yeas 93. Tellers, Sir Ph. Stapleton and Mr. Holies.
Noes 100. " Sir H. Vane, junior, and Sir J. Evelyn, junior.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 451
Warwick, Denbigh, Manchester, and six other Peers.
On their report a conference was demanded, and the
Lords gave their reasons for not assenting to the
Ordinance : that it deprived the Peers of the honour
of serving their country, which in all ages had been
their constant practice, and laid a blot on them, by
treating them as incapable and delinquent persons,
who had highly demerited ; that it only excepted
such few of the Gentry and Commons of England as
were members, therefore the case was not alike
between the two Houses.
The Lower House refused to take these reasons into
consideration, alleging that a breach of privilege and
of the custom of Parliament had been committed by
the Lords, in sending down reasons unaccompanied
by the Ordinance and the proposed amendments.
The Lords demanded another conference, in which
they stated that they found the Commons had quite
mistaken the matter of the former conference ; that
the Lords considered the Ordinance, as it stood,
was unfit to be passed, and had prepared no amend-
ments ; that, on a former occasion, the Commons
having complained that the Lords had rejected an
ordinance concerning an oath of secrecy to be taken
by the Committee of both Kingdoms, without giving
their reasons, they had, on this occasion, demanded a
conference, to afford them that satisfaction.
On the 13th January, 1645, Mr. Pierrepoint, ac-
companied by the whole House, being sent up with a
message to urge the immediate passing of the Ordi-
G G 2
452 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
nance, the question was put, and the Ordinance
thrown out, in a House of nineteen Peers, besides the
Speaker.1
The next move of the Independents in the House
of Commons, was a resolution by vote of the 21st
January, that Sir Thomas Fairfax should be ap-
pointed to command all the forces on the new esta-
blishment. It is to be inferred, from the numbers on
this division, that some means had been used to inti-
midate the moderate party, and deter them from
voting.2 They also proceeded in the new modelling
of the army, which was to consist of 6000 horse, 1000
dragoons, and 14,000 foot. To this Ordinance the
Lords proposed amendments, which were agreed to
by the Commons on the 17th February, and Sir
Thomas Fairfax was sent for, and complimented by
the Speaker on his appointment.
But although the army in the field was thus
placed under Fairfax's command, Essex was not yet
superseded in his office of Lord General, and the forts
and garrisons were under his orders. The House of
Commons, on the 25th February, reappointed the
former Committee to prepare another Self-denying
Ordinance, similar to the former one. This was
passed with much less opposition than before, and
sent to the Lords on the 31st March. St. John,
Whitelocke, Pierrepoint, and Crewe, who had been
1 Lords' Journal, vii. 113. 115. 117. 129. Commons' Journal, iii. 726. ;
iv.11.13. 16, 17.
2 Noes 69. Tellers, Sir Ph. Stapleton, Mr. Holies.
Ayes 101. " Sir H. Vane, junior, Lt. Gen. Cromwell.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 453
thought to belong to Essex's party, appeared in
favour of the Ordinance. Some who were for peace,
but thought that it could never be obtained until
they had completely vanquished the King, followed
the same course. The Scots Commissioners, influenced
by the Marquis of Argyle, who had formed a friend-
ship for Sir H. Vane, had slackened in their opposi-
tion. The determined advance of the Independent
leaders, Fiennes, Vane, Cromwell, Haslerig. Martin,
towards their goal, probably had its effect in making
the undecided and the timid fall back.
About the same time, an ordinance conferring
additional powers, and the command of the forts and
garrisons, on Sir Thomas Fairfax, was sent to the
Lords, who made several amendments, and added a
clause to it concerning the safety of the King's
person. The Houses were again brought into collision
by this ; but the Lords persisted, and appointed a
Committee to give their reasons for adhering to the
additional clause ; when, on the 1st April, the Earl
of Essex cut away the difficulty, by desiring that he
" might have leave to-morrow to present and deliver
" up his commission, so there would be no obstacle
" to the passing of the clause placing the forts and
" garrisons under the command of Sir Thomas
"Fairfax."1
1 Lords' Journal, vii. 298. Whitelocke, p. 140., says : " Some of Essex's
friends were against his laying down his commission, but others told him
that mischiefs and contests might arise if he kept it, whereof himself was
sensible ; and as he had great stoutness of spirit, so he had great goodness
of nature and love to the public, which persuaded him to lay down his
commission."
Q O 3
454 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
This he did on the 2nd April, giving in with it the
following declaration : —
Having received this great charge in obedience to the com-
mand of both Houses, and taken their sword into my hand, I
can with confidence say, that I have, for now almost three
years, faithfully served you, and I hope without loss of any
honor to myself or prejudice to the public, supported therein
by the goodness of God, and the fidelity and courage of a
great many gallant men, both officers and soldiers ; but I will
neither trouble you nor myself, by repeating either the diffi-
culties or danger we have overcome, or the service I have
done you.
I see, by the now coming up of these ordinances, that it is
the desire of the House of Commons that my commission
may be vacated ; and it hath been no particular respect to
myself, whatever is whispered to the contrary, that hath made
me thus long omit to declare my readiness thereto, it being
not unknown to divers men of honor, that I had resolved it
after the action of Gloucester, but that some importunities,
pressed on me with arguments of public advantage, and that
by those of unquestionable affection, overruled me therein.
I do now do it, and return my commission into those hands
that gave it me ; wishing it may prove as good an expedient
to the present distempers as some will have it believed, which
I shall pray for with as hearty a zeal as any that desire my
doing this which now I do.
I think it not immodest that I intreat both Houses, that
those officers of mine which are now laid by, might have their
debentures audited, some considerable part of their arrears
paid them for their support, and the remainder secured them
by the public faith, and that those of them that remain ques-
tioned, may be brought to some speedy trial, whereby they
may receive either the punishment or the justification that
is due to them ; under which notion I remember only three,
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 455
of whom I must testify, that they frankly and courageously
have adventured their lives and lost their blood lor the
public, and that with continued fidelity for aught ever I
could observe.
My Lords, I know that jealousies cannot be avoided in the
unhappy condition of our present affairs ; yet wisdom and
charity should put such restraints thereto, as not to allow it
to become destructive. I hope that this advice from me is
not unseasonable, wishing myself and my friends may,
among others, participate the benefit thereof ; this proceeding
from my affection to the Parliament, the prosperity whereof
I shall ever wish from my heart, what return soever it brings
me, I being no single example in that kind of that fortune I
now undergo.1
What the motives may have been which actuated
Lord Essex on this occasion, we have no means of
judging ; but it is evident, from the above declaration,
that he was not well satisfied with the treatment he
had experienced. Having gained their end, his ad-
versaries had no objection to bestow on him the most
flattering expressions of their gratitude ; perhaps
they were surprised at having so easily gained the
victory. The two Houses waited on him the next
day at Essex House, to thank him for his patriotism,
with the highest encomiums on his conduct, and the
strongest expressions of their sense of his past
services.
The soldiers who had served under the immediate
command of Lord Essex, did not at all approve of
this change of generals. Their love for him was
known, and any danger arising from the measure had
1 Lords' Journal, vii. 300.
G G 4
456 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
been provided against, by dividing his army into
small detachments. The horse, which were quartered
in Hertfordshire, made some show of resistance l ; on
which Oliver St. John proposed to " cut them to
" pieces," and indeed is said to have written privately
to the Hertfordshire Committee, desiring they would
raise the country and destroy those men. But the
Parliament was not so violent arid bloodthirsty ; and
sending down some of their old officers, who bore the
earnest desire of Lord Essex to the soldiers, that they
would submit to the ordinance, and serve the newly-
appointed officers as faithfully as those who had been
removed, the insubordinate regiments were persuaded
to give their obedience to the newly appointed officers.
The Earls of Denbigh, Manchester, and Warwick,
followed the example of their chief. A Committee
1 This was not the only portion of his army that was inclined to rebel
against the ordinance, as appears by the following extracts from corre-
spondence in the Ashburnham Collection, which thus afford an additional
proof of the disinterested and patriotic conduct of Essex. Had he
thought proper to head these troops, what might have been the result ?
Sir Sam. Luke writes from Newport Pagnell, of which place he was the
Governor, on the 25th February : — " Sir Thomas Fairfax has arrived in
London, who hath the nomination of his own officers. My L. General
continues still as he did, and nothing is farther acted for the removing of
him. There have been great mutinies and discontents amongst his sol-
diers, insomuch as they have refused to march with Sir Will. Waller.
They sent down Sir Will. Balfour and Major- General Skippon to
them, to see if they could persuade them." Again, Captain Oxford to
Sir S. Luke : — " His Excellency's army not only denieth marching with Sir
William Waller, but is coming with a hasty retreat to this place ; what
the event will be, God knows. Sir W. Waller sent up word to the
House, that so soon as the Newport men knew they were to march under
him, 1 00 of them ran away." A detachment of 300 men had been sent
from Newport a short time before. — Ashburnham MSS. 229. of Stowe
Catalogue.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 457
was appointed to consider what mark of honour
should be set upon the Earl of Essex, to remain as a
testimony to posterity, and an acknowledgment from
the Parliament of the great and faithful services he
had done ; as well as to consider the services of the
other officers who had been set aside.
On their report, it was ordered that, for the future,
the 10,000/. a-year formerly voted, should be paid to
Essex in equal quarterly payments, and that the sum
of 4300£. arrears of his entertainment on the esta-
blishment should be paid up.
With respect to the negotiations for peace, to which
reference has been made, it is only necessary to state,
that Commissioners on both sides met at Uxbridge on
the 30th January, 1645. The Parliamentary Com-
missioners were directed to devote three days to each
of the following subjects, — Religion, Militia, and
Ireland : to make and receive all communications in
writing : and only to treat during twenty days. As
there was no serious intention on the part of the
prevailing party in Parliament to make peace, it is
needless to say that the time expired without that
result being attained.
It was by no means the intention of Cromwell and
his friends that he should obey the Self denying Ordi-
nance ; before it passed, therefore, he was sent on
service into the West ; and when the day was ap-
pointed on which the officers were to give up their
commissions, Fairfax desired that Cromwell might be
permitted to remain with him a few days, and shortly
after, in a second letter, that he might be permitted
458 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
to serve out the campaign. On the llth May, the
House ordered that he should retain his appointment
forty days longer; on the 18th June, he was con-
tinued for three months ; on the 8th August, for
four months ; on the 17th October, for four months ;
and on the 23rd January, 1646, for six months ; each
of these periods commencing at the expiration of the
former. Before the periods of time so voted were
completed, the army ruled the country, and Cromwell
ruled the army.
Although I have from time to time, in the course
of this narrative, expressed opinions respecting the
conduct of the war by the Earl of Essex, it will be
desirable here, at the termination of his services, to
make a few observations.
It has been the custom of all writers on this
period, to pass by the Earl with a few slighting
remarks on his slowness, his want of energy, his in-
competence as a general ; a custom so invariable,
that I incline to believe later authors have followed
like sheep in the track of their predecessors, without
making any investigation for themselves.
Lord Essex was certainly not one of those brilliant
meteors which occasionally shoot across the intellec-
tual atmosphere, and which were wholly wanting in
the days of Charles I. ; but if he were of so dull a
nature and so mean a capacity as the above epithets
would imply, how did it occur, that from amongst
others of equal rank, of equal experience, of equal
and of greater wealth, he was unanimously and un-
hesitatingly selected by the Parliament and people of
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 459
England as their General ? — or how can we give any
credit to that assertion of Clarendon, that unless Essex
had accepted the command, the Parliament would have
been unable to raise an army ? Had he been able so
completely to deceive the people at first, surely he
could not have retained till his death such influence
as the following passage indicates : " He was the
" head of our party here, kept all together, who now
" are like by that alone to fall to pieces. The House
" of Lords absolutely, the City very much, and many
" of the Shires, depended on him." 1
Had he been so incompetent a general, it could
not have needed " cunningly to contrive a side wind
" to remove him from his commands," in which words
Whitelocke 2 designates the Self-denying Ordinance
and its main object.
Was he feeble because he never crushed the King's
army, as unquestionably he might have done; or
because he was neither an Independent in religion,
nor a republican in politics ?
The conduct of Lord Essex in the first Scots
insurrection, in 1639, and in the brilliant exploit of
relieving Gloucester, are sufficient to show that the
want of energy in pressing Charles, did not arise
from any natural defect. By what means he pro-
posed to obtain peace and a constitutional govern-
ment, how he proposed to limit the royal preroga-
tives claimed by Charles, cannot be known ; he had
not a ready tongue, and writing was little practised
during the Civil War. But we are told that some
1 Baillie, ii. 234. 2 P. 118.
460 LIVES OF THE EAHLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
members had begun to conceive they never should
have peace until the King were in their hands, and
on that account voted for changing the managers of
the war; it is therefore evident that Essex was for
treating with the King while free.
It certainly does appear strange, that the Earl of
Essex should so completely have made himself the
champion and leader of rebellion, as he did, by ac-
cepting the post of Captain-General of the rebel
armies which he occupied, and thereby seem to defy
the King's anger and power, and yet retain so much
loyalty and respect for that King, as to avoid in every
possible way being personally opposed to him, or
pressing him to defeat and humiliation. It was im-
possible for him to reconcile the two lines of conduct;
had he subdued the King, he was aware there would
be little security against the utter extinction of the
kingly office, while it was equally certain, that until
he was defeated, it would be impossible to treat
effectually with Charles.
He consequently failed, like moderate men in all
revolutions, and was succeeded by leaders who had
none of the scruples which held him back, and who
inflamed the minds of their followers to a pitch of
frantic enthusiasm.
The order and discipline maintained in the army
under his immediate command, cannot be too highly
commended. Kapine and violence were as little
known among his troops as among those of Cromwell
at a later period, who has been so much bepraised for
it ; and respect and regard consequently attended
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 461
Essex in all the countries through which he marched,
which certainly is more than can be said for the
other.
On the 26th September, 1645, an ordinance was
passed1, entirely altering the manner in which Lord
Essex was to receive the annuity of 10,000£., so
frequently voted and so badly paid, as appears by the
preamble.
" The Lords and Commons, calling to mind the
" heroic valor, prudent courage, and unspotted fide-
" lity of Robert, Earl of Essex, in discharging the
" high and important command of Captain-General of
" the Forces raised by the Parliament ; and that,
" although by an ordinance of the 26th May, 1643,
" the said Lords and Commons, taking notice of the
" great losses and sufferings of the said Earl, both in
" his personal and real estate, and of his faithful
" service both to the Parliament and Kingdom, did
" order and ordain, that 10,000£. per annum should
" be paid to the said Earl and his assigns, out of the
" monies raised by seizing and sequestering the
" estates and goods of delinquents, yet the same hath
" not been paid to the said Earl, as in right it ought
" to have been."
They proceed to order that the arrears shall be
paid immediately after the payment of 5000/., due to
" our brethren of Scotland," and shall in future be
paid in four quarterly payments. For this payment
they assign the following :
1 Commons' Journal, iv.
462 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
Manors, lands, tenements, and hereditaments, late parcel of
the estates of Arthur, Lord Capel1, a delinquent in arms
against the Parliament, viz : —
The mansion houses of Cayshebury and Little Haddam, with
the parks and lands adjoining ;
The manor of Cayshoe ;
The rectory and parsonage impropriate of Watford ;
The lands called Langley Park ;
The manors of Parkbury, Walkerne, and the third part of
Bushey, all in Herts, and of the clear yearly value of
7807. above all charges and reprizes.
Also, the manors of Rayne, Stebbing, Barking Park, Por-
ter's Hall, Berwick Berners ;
The farm of Blake End, all in Essex, and of the value as
above, of 4507.
Also, the manors of Gooderstone with Oxberrow, and Little
Framisham, Norfolk, of the value of 1007.
Also, the manors of Icklinghani Berners, and Aspall Ston-
ham, Suffolk, value 607.
Also, lands at Warden Abbey, Bedfordshire, value 2507.
And, houses in Whitefriars, 807.
Also the following, late the property of Sir John, Sir Thomas,
and Sir Charles Lucas, knights ; viz. : —
St. John's Abbey, Colchester;
The manors of Shenfield, Mile End, Greensted, Fordham,
Lexden, Horseley, in Essex, being of the clear yearly
value of 11007.
Also, late the property of Thomas Fanshawe, Esq., of
Barking : —
The late dissolved abbey of Barking ;
1 Was it by way of retribution, that the title of Earl of Essex — which
from the Conquest had been held by the ancestors of the Devereux, with
the exception of the short period during which Thomas Cromwell bore
the title — was, after the Restoration, bestowed on Lord Capel ?
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 463
The manors of Jenkins and Porters, of the value of 600/.
Also, late the property of William Peter, Esq., the manors
of Stanford Rivers, and South Okenden, Essex, of the
value of 600/.
Also, Glemham Hall, Suffolk, late the property of Sir Thos.
Glemham, value 6007.
Also, late the property of the Earl of St. Alban's, a papist,
Somerhill or Tonbridge, Kent, and Barley, Herts, value
4:201.
The other 5000/. was to be paid quarterly, out of
the treasury at Guildhall ; and if the lands produced
less or more than 5000/., the Earl was to make it
known, that he might receive the deficiency, or refund
the surplus.
It appears that the tenants on some of the estates
were not disposed to be thus summarily transferred
to a new lord by an order of Parliament ; for on the
5th December it was reported, that some of the
committees in those counties where the above lands
were situated, refused to obey the ordinance.
On the 24th November, 1645, the House of
Commons resolved itself into a Committee, which sat
from day to day urjtil the 2nd December, to consider
and resolve on certain propositions to the King, for a
safe and well-grounded peace. Amongst these reso-
lutions were the following, which afford curious
ground for speculation on the motives of their origi-
nators : that the Earls of Northumberland, Essex,
Warwick, and Pembroke, should be created Dukes ;
Manchester and Salisbury, Marquises ; Viscount
Say and Sele, Ferdinando Lord Fairfax, Lords
Roberts, Wharton, Willoughby of Parhain, to be
464 LIVES OF THE EAELS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
created Earls ; Denzil Holies, a Viscount ; Sir Thomas
Fairfax, Sir William Waller, Lieutenant General 0.
Cromwell, Sir Henry Yane, sen., Sir Philip Stapleton,
and Sir Arthur Haslerig, to be created Barons. That
the case of the four Dukes and of Lord Manchester be
referred to a Committee, to consider of some means
for the support of their honours. That estates in
land should be given in fee simple of the following
value : —
To Sir Thos. Fairfax £5000 per annum.
To Lt. Gen. Oliver Cromwell - 2500 „
To Sir Will. Waller 2500 „
To Sir Ph. Stapleton 2000
To Sir A. Haslerig - 2000
To Sir Wm. Brereton - 1500
To Maj. Gen. Philip Skippon - 1000 l „
The King desired to treat ; the Houses refused to
enter into negotiations, but resolved to proceed by
acts of Parliament, of which seven were proposed.
1. For settling Presbyterian government, and ex-
tirpating Episcopacy.
2. For prosecuting the war against the Irish rebels.
3. For the militia to remain in the power of the
Parliament.
4. For the payment of the debts of the kingdom.
5. For bringing delinquents to punishment.
6. That no honours be given, but to such as have
testified their affections to the public.
7. Concerning the privileges of London.2
1 Commons' Journal, iv. 354. 360. 2 Whitelocke, 190.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX, 465
Messages from the King, and answers from the
Parliament, on the question how the arrangements
for peace were to be made, passed between Oxford
and London from time to time, until May, 1646, in
the beginning of which month Charles gave himself
up to the Earl of Leven, at Newark.
There remains but little to say of the Earl of
Essex, during the brief remnant of his life. He con-
tinued, after his resignation, to be a member of the
Committee of both Kingdoms, and was a member of
the Committee for managing the Admiralty affairs,
The Journals show that he was a constant and
regular attendant in Parliament until the 4th Sep-
tember, the last day that he appears to have been
present. If we may judge from the expressions of
Baillie and Whitelocke, he appears to have united
himself to the Presbyterians, and was the head of
that party which opposed the extreme measures and
doctrines of the Independents, and which, at his
death, seems to have found no member of sufficient
weight to succeed him as their leader.
Ludlow is the only writer who assigns any cause
for his last illness : it is stated by him, that Lord
Essex died of a fever, brought on by over-exertion
in the chase of a stag, in Windsor Forest.1 He had
the satisfaction of being attended by his sister and his
dearest friends during his last hours. Lady Hert-
ford had been permitted to come to London from
Oxford in May, and in July, Lord Hertford had leave
1 Ludlovv's Mem. i. 185.
VOL. II. H H
466 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
to reside at the Earl of Essex's house at Eltham, or
where else he pleased ; and the Earl of Holland's hand
was so fast locked in the dying grasp of his cousin,
that he extricated it with difficulty. He departed
this life at Essex House, on the 14th September, 1646 ;
and the following day both Houses of Parliament,
after voting that they should attend his funeral, ad-
journed out of respect to the memory of the deceased.
I believe that the character of the Earl of Essex
will have been elevated in the mind of the reader
of the foregoing pages, above any former impression
he may have entertained ; I shall not, therefore,
run the risk of weakening that impression, by en-
tering into any summary of his character, but con-
tent myself with giving some extracts from Lord
Clarendon's account, who cannot be suspected of any
bias in his favour, and who points out his failings and
weaknesses with great distinctness.
" He was of a rough proud nature, the most
" popular man of the kingdom, and the darling of the
" swordmen. His pride and ambition were not
" accompanied with any ill nature, and he had a
" faithfulness and constancy in his nature, which
" always kept him religious in matters of trust ; in
" a word, he might be imposed on in his understand-
" ing, but could not be corrupted by hopes or fears.
" He was, in his friendships, just and constant, and
" would not have practised foully against those he
" took to be enemies. He was more the idol of the
" people, than the idolater of them. A weak judg-
" ment, and a little vanity, will hurry a man into as
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 467
" unwarrantable and as violent attempts, as the most
" insatiable ambition will do. His vanity disposed
" him to be his Excellency, and his weakness to
" believe he should be General in the Houses, as well
" as in the field. The new doctrines and distinctions
" of allegiance, and of the King's power, were too
" hard for him, and did intoxicate his understanding,
" and made him quit his own to follow theirs, who,
" he thought, wished as well as, and judged better
" than, himself. He was no good speaker ; but
" having sat long in Parliament, and being well
" acquainted with the order of it, spoke better there
" than any where else ; and was always heard with
" attention and respect, and had much authority in
" the debates. He was as much devoted as any man
" to the Book of Common Prayer, and obliged all his
" servants to be constantly present with him at it.
" None were more disposed than the Earl of Essex to
" take away the Bishops' votes, and all temporal
" privileges and power, believing that it would do the
" Church no harm, if the Bishops had fewer diversions
" from their spiritual charges."
On the 1st October, the House of Commons voted
that 5000/. should be paid to the executors of the
late Earl, out of the rents assigned to him, to discharge
his debts and the expenses of his funeral ; and on the
20th October it was resolved, that all the members
should meet at Essex House at 10 o'clock on the
22nd, having previously divided on the question,
whether the Earl of Hertford, or any other person
who had borne arms against the Parliament, should
HH 2
468 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
be permitted to attend the funeral.1 The Lords
ordered, that those Peers who had not time to provide
themselves with robes, might be absent if they
pleased. They also issued an " order to the Stewards
" and Constables of Westminster, at their perils, to
" pave and cleanse the streets from Temple Bar to the
" west end of the Abbey Church, against the day of the
" funeral, that the Lords, Commons, and all others in
" that procession, might pass in the streets without in-
" convenience, by reason of the foulness of the ways."
They likewise appointed two heralds to officiate as
Clarencieux and Norroy, and directed the Justices to
call out such of the trained bands of Westminster as
they chose, to prevent the disorder likely to occur by
the concourse of people.2
There are several printed accounts of the ceremony
of the funeral, from which I have made some extracts.
He, or rather his effigies, lay in state for many days
in the great room in Essex House, in white boots,
scarlet breeches, a buff coat (the same he wore at
Edgehill), in his Parliamentary robes, with his sword
by his side, his General's staff in his hand, his coronet
on his head.
At the upper end of the Abbey, where the commu-
nion table stood, a hearse was erected, " with a canopy
1 Ayes 36. Tellers, Sir Ph. Stapleton, Mr. Whitelocke,
Noes 48. " Sir W. Array n, Mr. Bond.
The House of Commons likewise ordered that 4500/., arrears of annuity
payable to the Countess of Essex, and charged on the Staffordshire estates,
should be sequestrated, and paid to the executors, who were to give 500/.
to Major- General Mathews, and the rest among the servants of the Earl
as a reward and recompense. — Commons' Journal, iv. 679.
2 Lords' Journal, viii. 533. Commons' Journal, iv. 696. 699.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 469
" on pillars about twelve feet high, gilt with gold, and
" hung with velvet, ornamented with the escocheons of
" arms of the Earl." The Abbey was hung with black,
and the pavement and seats covered with black, from
the belfry to the upper end.
A grave was dug in St. John Baptist's Chapel,
where Bohun, Abbot of Westminster, had been buried
(temp. Rich. II.), whose crosier was dug up in making
the vault, which was two and a half yards long, one
and a half yard wide, and of height proportioned,
was arched over with freestone, and lay next by the
side of Lord Hunsdon's vault.1 A curtailed account
of the funeral procession and ceremony is placed in
the Appendix2, and will be interesting to the curious
in such matters, as affording an example of the
ceremonial observed in a state and military funeral
of the utmost magnificence at that period.
After the ceremony, the hearse and effigies, with
the standard, guidon, banners, great banner, bannerets
and hatchments, with eight pieces of armour placed
about the hearse, were placed at the upper end of the
Church, where, it was ordered, they should stand as
they were set up in the chancel, for a month after the
funeral. They were not removed immediately on the
expiration of the term ; and on the 26th November,
some evil-disposed persons concealed themselves in the
Abbey, when it was locked up at night, and destroyed
and defaced the effigies, cutting and hacking all the
1 From the Perfect Relation of the memorable Funerals of Robert, Earl
of Essex and Ewe, &c. 1646.
2 (G.)
H H 3
470 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIIL
clothes, excepting the robes, which were thrown on
the ground, breaking the sword, and throwing down
the hatchments. The same persons also defaced and
injured the monument of William Camden, but did
no further mischief. An inquiry took place without
eliciting anything, and the violence was ascribed,
according to the opinions of people, either to the In-
dependents, or to " prelatical persons and Jesuited
" Cavaliers.''
On the day after the funeral, Sir Walter Deve-
reux, Bart., of Castle Bromwich, took his seat in
the House of Peers as fifth Viscount Hereford, the
titles of Earl of Essex and Viscount Bourchier being
extinct, and the baronies of Ferrers of Chartley,
Bourchier, and Lovaine, falling into abeyance be-
tween the Marchioness of Hertford and Sir Robert
Shirley, son of Lady Dorothy Devereux.
There was a great deal of litigation about the
property of the Earl of Essex, whose will was proved
and administered by order of Parliament ; disputed,
and after the Restoration reversed. I have not been
able to discover the decree of the Court ; but what-
ever may have been the law of the case, it is quite
evident, from the original will itself, which I have
examined, and from other evidence, that the Earl
never intended to alienate from the family of Deve-
reux the estates in Herefordshire, which had been
in their possession from the reign of John, if not
earlier.
The original will is preserved among the archives
CHAP. XVIII. EGBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 471
of the Court of Delegates, by which Court, in 1663,
sentence was given in favour of Lady Hertford, then
Duchess of Somerset, in her suit against the Earl
of Northumberland1 and others, executors of her
brother's will.
The will, after reciting certain deeds by which the
estates were vested in trustees, for the use of the
Earl of Essex, leaves a blank for the disposition,
which is filled in by the Earl's own handwriting, in
these words : "I bequeath the lands of Herefordshire
" to my dear sister the Marquis of Hertford, for her
" natural life ; the inheritance to Sir Walter Deve-
" reux, and his heirs male, for want of such, to
" return as it is formerly settled by deed. For
" Essex House, and the tenements, to my nephew,
" Sir Charles Shirley, and his heirs male, and for
" want of them, to my nephew Eobin, and if both
" lines fail, to my sister Hertford's issue."
It appears from this extract, which does not agree
with the words immediately preceding, that Essex
intended Lady Hertford to enjoy for her life the
whole of his property, excepting Essex House, and
that all the rest, with the exception of the Hereford-
shire estates, was bequeathed absolutely to her.
We find by. the Journals2, that on the 17th Oc-
tober, 1646, complaint was made of the conduct of
» The will was dated the 4th of August, 1642, and Algernon, Earl of
Northumberland, Robert, Earl of Warwick, John Hampden, and Oliver
St. John were appointed executors.
2 Commons' Journal, iv. 696.
H H 4
472 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
certain persons at Essex House. Mr. Devereux be-
ing examined, stated that he went to Essex House
that morning, and desired Mr. Isharn1 to deliver to
him an indenture or conveyance concerning some
lands which were entailed on him ; that Mr. Isham
told him it was no longer in his power, for that my
Lady Marchioness of Hertford had sent for him up
into her chamber about midnight, and that not only
the writings, but likewise all the monies, amounting
to 3 TOO/., and the goods there, were seized and taken
out of his possession.
The House ordered that all the papers, money, &c.
should be delivered to Northumberland, Warwick,
and St. John ; but Mr. Devereux never recovered his
deed of entail !
We come now to some curious details about the
will, for which I am indebted to the depositions
and briefs in the subsequent suits, which are pre-
served in the old library at Longleat. The will was
written on two sheets of paper, stitched together with
black thread, the marks of which in the corners of
the two sheets are, at this day, distinctly visible.
In 1644, or 1645, some discontent arose in Essex's
mind against St. John, which probably was caused
by the part the latter took in the Self-denying
Ordinance ; he also, being on the committee at Gold-
smiths' Hall, seems to have put some difficulties in
the way of Essex's obtaining payment of his arrears,
which the Earl took very unkindly, and from that
1 Zacheus Isham was solicitor and treasurer of the household to the
Earl.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 473
time, till his death, St. John never visited Essex, nor
did he, as formerly, consult St. John.
One day, coming home, he called for his will to be
brought to him, saying that he had trusted St. John,
but would do so no longer, and now revoked the
trust; he then tore asunder the two sheets, and
gave one to his Secretary to be copied, and put
the other in his pocket. It was the custom of Lord
Essex to call for one Wren, his barber, and deliver
to him such papers out of his pocket as he had least
occasion for, to be laid by ; and there were at Eltham,
where Essex had a house, and where he often went
to hunt, some trunks full of such papers, among
which was discovered that sheet of the will which he
had put in his pocket. The two sheets were brought
together again, and after the case had been heard by
Sir Nathaniel Brent, was referred to a Committee of
the House of Commons, and, on their report, the
executors were ordered to administer.
After the restoration of Charles II., the Duchess of
Somerset sent a petition to the King, stating that she
had lost a very great inheritance from her brother, and
without his royal grace was likely to be defrauded of
his personal estate also. The petition goes on to
state, that after the death of the Earl of Essex,
Oliver St. John had set up a cancelled will, whereby
he, and others by his persuasion, possessed them-
selves of all her brother's personal estate, valued at
30,00(W. That, for fifteen years, she had opposed
the probate of the said will in the Prerogative Court,
the Court of Chancery, and the King's Bench, in
474 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII,
which last she got a verdict ; and since His Majesty's
restoration she had thrown over the pretended will
in the Prerogative Court, and had been sworn ad-
ministratrix. The prayer of the petition was, that
St. John should be called on to return by a certain
day, or in default, the forfeiture he would suffer
might repair the losses she had sustained by him.1
Long before the final decision of the case, a division
of the property, at least in name, had been agreed
upon, which was ultimately carried out.
The Marchioness of Hertford had, for her moiety,
Drayton Basset in Warwickshire, Pembridge, Earl's
Land, Lyon's Hall, Murcuth, Webley, Byford, Bo-
denham, Fanhope, Koss and Ross Foreign in Here-
fordshire, Llanthomas in Brecknockshire, estates in
Pembroke and Cardigan, Essex House, and a moiety
of the barony of Farney, Monaghan.
Sir Robert Shirley had, the Chartley estate, New-
castle under Lyne, the tenements adjoining Essex
House, and the other moiety of Farney, with a rent-
charge out of the lands of Hafodwyn, Blaenarion,
and Penarth, in Cardiganshire.
The executors of the Duchess of Somerset sold
Essex House, the Pembrokeshire estates, and Llan-
thomas, to pay her debts, legacies, and funeral ex-
penses. The other part of her property was be-
queathed by her to Thomas Thynne, of Longleat,
the husband of her grand-daughter, Lady Frances,
daughter of Heneage Finch, second Earl of Win-
1 From the copy of the petition at Longleat.
CHAP. XVIII. ROBERT, THIRD EARL OF ESSEX. 475
chelsea. Thomas Thynne was created Viscount
Wey mouth in 1682, and was succeeded by his
nephew, the ancestor of the Marquis of Bath, the
present possessor of these estates. The other moiety
has become divided between two branches of the
Shirley family, the Earl Ferrers, and Evelyn John
Shirley, Esq., of Eatington, Warwickshire.
I trust I have not wearied the reader with this
sketch of the manner in which the possessions of the
Earls of Essex went to enrich other families. It is
not uninteresting to mark the singular accidents by
which wealth is occasionally both accumulated and
dissipated.
My task is done, and I take my leave of the reader,
and of my subject, with one of the epitaphs written
for the great monument it had been intended to erect
to the memory of the Earl of Essex, but which the
events of a revolutionary war soon banished from the
memory of men ; no line marks the spot beneath
which his ashes rest.
Let no rude foot presume to tread,
But with great awe upon this dead,
Lest that his genius rise from hence
And terrify his insolence.
But, reader know, whoe'er thou be,
Here Essex sleeps, whose ancestry
Were famous worthies ; all their worth
Was joined in him, and at his birth
The heavenly motions did agree
Their best infusements all should be
476 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX. CHAP. XVIII.
Injected in him, that his fame
Might be his heir, and keep his name
Alive on earth, and equalize
His1, whose resoundeth to the skies.2
1 Achilles.
2 Vol. 669. f. 10. Public Acts and Orders, British Museum.
APPENDIX.
(A.)
THE State Paper Office contains a volume, "131. Ireland,"
of the accounts of the Earl of Essex for the half-year from
April to November, 1575, audited by Thomas Jenison, the
Queen's auditor of accounts, of the most remarkable interest
and curiosity. It contains, besides the accounts of the Irish
expedition, that of William Barroll, the receiver of the Earl's
estates in England. It appears from these, that while the
income of the Earl of Essex was about 49007., his current
expenditure was 6500/., besides all warlike stores, provisions,
buildings, &c., not included in these accounts.
Some extracts may prove interesting : —
£ s. d.
A year's rent of Bugbrook, Northampton - 64 1 4-£-
Hallingbury, Essex 72 6 8
Tollesbury, Essex - - 132 13 4
Wakering, Great and Little 133 19 10
Newington, Clifton, Brayfield,
Bucks - 62 15 6
Cotesbach, Leicestershire - 28 0 0
Bodenham, Hereford 50 0 0
Keyston, Huntingdon 47 2 10
Chartley, Stafford - - 120 0 0
Bennington, Hertford - 19911 6
Sale of forty acres of wood in the Park of
Tollesbury, Essex 87 16 0
From the Earl of Huntingdon, in full pay-
ment of the purchase of the manor of
Newbold, Leicester - - - 1000 0 0
478 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
£ s. d.
The contra account is very long and curious :
For my Lord of Hereford, two plain shirts - 1 10 0
A pair of green velvet garrigascons with gold
lace, and a pair of parnescie stockings to the
same - 3 12 0
A tasta hat with a lace - Oil 0
Two pair of garters - - 0 6 0
A doublet of canvass, cut, laid with green lace,
lined with green taffeta sarsenet - 0 18 6
Mr. Walter Devereux :
A coat of popingay green, laid over with lace - 1 1 0
Necessaries for the said Lord of Hereford, Mr.
Walter Devereux, and Gabriel Montgomery :
A dozen handkerchiefs - 1 0 0
A trunk to put all their said apparel in - 0 12 0
Nine pair of Spanish leather shoes - - 0 9 0
A dozen pair of socks - - 0 4 0
Bedding and furniture for chamber against the Earl
his coming to the Court out of Ireland, viz. :
One bristle tick - 1 12 0
Eleven stone of down - 4 15 0
Bristles tick ready made - - 7160
Four score stone of feathers for the same beds,
at 4s. the stone - - 16 0 0
Six pounds of down for pillowbers - 0 6 0
One covering of leaves, 1 6 ells - 228
Three coverings of wool silks, 16 ells - 350
Two large Spanish blankets - 1 12 0
Four pair of white blankets - 3 2 0
Two fine quilts of carded wool - 220
One leather chair - 0 15 0
Two close stools ~ - - - 0 17 8
APPENDIX. 479
£ s. d.
A bedstead of walnut-tree - - 1 14 0
Two pair of coarse sheets - - 1 4 0
Three dozen napkins - 1116
Apparel for the Earl :
Six shirts whereof one black worked - - 9 12 4
Three handkerchiefs - - 5 9 4
Three pair of bands and ruffs - 400
Russet satin, 12s. 6d. per yard
Black velvet, 1 5s. „
Jeane damask, 12s. 6d. „
Uncut velvet, II. Is. „
Black lace double wreathed, 2s. per oz.
Russet and black tuft lace, 3s. „
Carnation stitching silk, 2s. „
Three pair silk garters with parchment lace - 210
Three dozen gloves - - 1 15 4
A velvet hat with a band - 1 5 0
Furring a damask gown with black coney, and
10 dozen and seven coney skins to do. - 409
A pair of pantufles of Spanish leather - 030
A chain weighing 5| oz. at 21. 15s. the oz. - 19 4 3
Two pair of gilt spurs - 0160
A rapier, girdle, and dagger - 1 14 0
A gelding bought at Penkridge fair - - 1 1 0 0
Two saddles of Spanish leather, whereof one
guarded and seated with velvet, with gilded
buckles, studs, and other furniture - 9 10 0
Allowance to the Countess of Essex, per an-
num, for her private expenses - 200 0 0
From the Irish accounts of wages, victuals, &c. :
s. d.
Wages. — Nich. Malbie, Serjeant Major 5 0 per diem.
Edw. Goodrich, Scout Master 3 0 „
480 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX.
Wages. — Thos. Oldfield, Curate Knock- s. d. per diem.
fergus - -10,,
Fras. Jawdrell, Apothecary 10 „
Wm. Norreys, Captain of 100
horse - 4 6 „
George Devereux, do. 50 horse 30 „
John Norreys, Captain 200 foot 60 „
George Bourchier, do. 100 foot 30 „
Horse soldiers - 0 llf „
Foot do. - -06,,
Francis Drake, Captain of the
Falcon - 42 0 per mens.
Pilot - - 15 0
Boatswain - 11 8 „
Mariner 6 8 „
£ s. d.
Wheat, 102 quarters, cost 125 11 2
Barley or beare, 80 quarters - 58 11 8
Beeves, 398 324 5 10
Muttons, 1046 - 157 11 2
Porkes, 46 - - 19 8 0
Lambs, 172| 8 14 9
Kids, 38 1 16 4|
Sack, 3 butts, 59 gallons - - 43 12 2
Gascony wine, 6 tuns, 1 gall. - 79 10 0
Aquavits, 12 gall. - 400
Beer, 32 tons, 3 hhds. - 78 9 10
Cheate bread, 639 doz. - 34 12 2
Manchets, 130 doz. - 920
Biscuit, 1500 Ibs. - 10 17 9
There are several items of which the quantities are not
given, but the totals, they being for the same period of time,
afford curious points of comparison of prices ; as —
APPENDIX. 481
£ s. d.
Butter for the same period, cost - 50 10 6
Groceries and confectionary - -150910
Sauces, as vinegar, salad oil - 14 18 9|
Fruits and herbs - 15 12 1 J
Poultry - 75 7 8}
Fresh fish - 19 9 2£
Suet and neats' tongues 7 12 2
Eggs 9 19 1
Milk 1 17 3
Soap 4 1 6
Salt - 46 17 9
Coals - 15 10 10
Wood - 39 0 0
There is another account by the Auditor, in July, 1573,
declaring the provisions for warlike purposes, ships, victuals,
necessaries for fortification and ordnance, which at that time
had cost 15,154/. 17s. 9d., to be equally divided between the
Queen and the Earl.
(B.)
(Lansd. MSS. 23. 67.)
Expenses of the Funeral of Walter Devereux, Earl of Essex.
£ s. d.
Forty men's charge for 46 days, to and for the
21 Nov., at 12 d. per man, per day - 92 0 0
Fire, candle, and drink, for them1 that ward by
day, and watch by night - 800
1 Since this work went to press, I have received an extract from an
ancient Welsh MS. styled " Llyfr Silin " (the Book of Silin), for which
I am indebted to W. W. L. Wynne, Esq., of Sion, near Oswestry, by
which it appears that the body of the Earl of Essex was conveyed
through Harlech. The difficulty of such an undertaking as a funeral
progress from Holyhead over the Carnarvonshire and Merionethshire
Mountains at that period, will account for the long interval between the
death and burial of Lord Essex, and the first item in this account pro-
bably gives us the time occupied in the journey.
VOL. II. I I
482
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
For the charge of three days for 200 persons, to
be found honorably in household
To be given in alms -
To the church and singing men
Forty poor men's gowns -
Hire of bays for church, hearse, and street
Timber frame of the hearse
The heralds and painters
Riding charge of officers going and coming
Carriage down of all stuff
"Wages of thirty gentlemen for half a year, at
61. 12s. 4d. the year
Twenty yeomen for half a year, at 47. the
year
Charge of finding the office
Black.
Chief mourner's black
The Earl and his company's
black
My lady's black
Mr. Vernon and Mr. Devereux
Other principal mourners' and of-
ficers' black, in number 14
Twenty gentlemen mourners, in
gowns of 4 yards each, at 8s. 4d.
per yard
The Bishop, 8 yards
One hundred yeoman's coats, at
Twenty-six gentlemen in cloaks
of 3 yards each, at 13s. 4c?. -
Black for the hearse, 40 yards
at 7s. -
100
40
10
40
10
4
200
40
20
40
13
d.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
- 100 0 0
£
s.
d.~
24
0
0
40
0
0
50
0
0
12
0
0
84
0
0
> 405 0 0
53
6
8
8
0
0
66
8
4
52
0
0
15
0
0_
£1122 6 8
APPENDIX.
483
This charge, considering the value of money, appears enor-
mous, but probably was not so for the funeral of an Earl. The
charges of the Earl of Leicester's funeral amounted to 40007.
(C.)
(Lansd. MSS. 23. 66.)
Abstract of the Will of Walter Devereux, Earl of Essex.
An imperfect will is in the Prerogative Court of the
Diocese of Dublin; in which, dated June 14. 1576, he
desired to be buried at the nearest church.
Appoints thirty feoffees, by whom all injuries and damage
to be recompensed ; to pay debts and legacies, the following
lands are devised to them, till the heir be 22 years of age.
Com. Hereford.
Com. Pembroke.
Com. Brecknock.
Com. Stafford.
Com. Leicester.
Com. Middlesex.
Com. Warwick and
Leicester.
Com. Huntingdon.
Com. Suffolk."
The manors of Webley, Lionhales,
Moorcourt, and Byford ; one garden
in Hereford, and one in the parishes
of Dilwyn and Pewen, called Hide-
fields.
The manors Lantefey, Talbenny, Lan-
goney, Hodgeston, and Mancloug-
hor, and lands in Gildeford.
The manor of Pipton.
The manors of Chartley, Hukston,
Frodeshall, and Gaiton.
The manors of Cotesbach, Shawell,
Twycross, and two granges, called
Newhouse and Pinnewall.
Tenements in Long Lane, London.
The manor and monastery of Merevale.
The manor of Keyston.
The manors of Bilston, Drinkeston,
Shelland, and Louvaines.
ii 2
484
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
Remainder to Robert, Viscount Hereford, and the heirs
male of his body ; for default of such heirs male, to Walter
Devereux, second son, and his heirs male ; for default of such
heirs, to the heirs male of the body of the said Earl ; and for
default of such heirs male, to the right heirs of the said Earl
for ever.
For jointure and dower to the Countess :
Com. Hertford. The manor and park of Bennington,
and two tenements in Hitchin.
The manor of Dimmock.
The manor and seignory of Monkton.
The manor of Llanthomas.
The manors of Oldhall, Bourchier's
Hall, in Tollesbury, and the granges
called Baker's, Goldanger, and
Swaines in Wyvenho.
To the Countess for life, and after her decease to the
feoffees, till the heir be 22 : remainder as before.
To descend to the Lord Hereford by cause of inheritance
without remainder or entail :
Com. Gloucester.
Com. Pembroke.
Com. Brecknock.
Com. Essex.
Com. Bucks.
Com. Essex.
Com. Northampton.
Com. Brecknock.
Middlesex.
The manors of Newington, Clifton, and
Brayfield.
The manors of Wakering, Little Wa-
kering, Hallingbury Bourchier, the
park of Hallingbury, a farm called
Motes.
The manor of Bugbrook.
The manor of Penkelley.
Lands at Charing Cross, purchased of
George Carlton.
The feoffees to have the Earl's leases of the parsonages of
Lantefey and Worthem in Pembrokeshire, and Colwich,
APPENDIX. 485
Stafford, and the pastures of Utceter Moors, and Mowhed,
Stafford, and Strata Florida, Cardigan, till the heir be 22,
To Walter Devereux, second son, were left the manors
of Bodenham and Woodhouse, co. Hereford, for life, with re-
mainder to the heir apparent as before.
Legacies.
To the Countess, all plate, jewels, and household stuff
which is in her possession.
To the ladies Dorothy and Penelope Devereux for their
advancement in marriage, 20007. each, to be paid on their
reaching 21 years, or within a year after marriage; in the
mean time, 1007. a year to each, for their maintenance. If
one of them die before payment of the legacy, Walter De-
verux to have it ; if both die, the second to determine. If
Walter Devereux die before he is 22, that legacy also to de-
termine. Walter Devereux to have 507. a year for his edu-
cation till he is 22.
His brother George Devereux, to enjoy Lantefey, till the
conditions agreed between them be executed ; afterwards, he
and his wife to have a pension of 1007. a year. A legacy to
his brother of 3007.
To his sister Vernon, 1007., and a basin and ewer.
To Edward Waterhouse, 1007. for a monument, 2007. for
other purposes, a scarlet bed with the furniture, and the
Earl's picture.
To Gabriel Montgomery, 400 crowns.
To Mrs. Clifford's daughters, 4007.
To his servants, a year's wages, 3007., and above the year's
wages, 6207.
To Captain Malbie, the leases of Lecale.
To Kobert Harrison and his wife, and to the longer liver
of them, 57. a year.
To Thos. Asheton for his life, 407. a year.
ii 3
486
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
If the Countess refuse the lands assigned her, and claim
the benefit of the dower, to forfeit the legacy, the same to
accrue to the heir apparent. For administration of all goods
not devised, appoints his two sons executors.
The Names of the
Will., Lord Burghley.
Thos., Earl of Sussex.
Henry, Earl of Northumber-
land.
Edw., Earl of Rutland.
Henry, Earl of Huntingdon.
Anthy., Viet. Montague.
Edwin, Bishop of London.
Robt., Bishop of Winchester.
Arthur, Lord Grey.
Chas., Lord Howard of Ef-
fingham.
Sir Francis Knollys.
Sir Jas. Croft.
Fras. Walsingham.
Sir Walter Mildmay.
Feoffees.
Sir William Devereux.
Sir Andrew Corbet.
Sir John Savage.
Sir Will. Drury.
Gilbert Gerrard.
Thos. Bromley.
George Bromley.
Robt. Corbet.
George Fetipais.
Edw. Waterhouse.
Richard Broughton.
Thos. Asheton.
Thos. Newport.
John Steadman.
Walter Barroll.
Thos. Rawlins.
In a schedule he appointed his lands in Ireland to be held
the same way : the necessary buildings and fortifications to
be made under the advice of the Lord Deputy ; bequeathed
1000/., or as much more or less, as Lord Burghley and the
Earl of Sussex shall think good, to fortify some principal
place.
Totals of Debts.
To Her Majesty - - £6000
To his creditors - 7000
Legacies under the will 6420
£19,420
APPENDIX.
487
(D.)
(Lansd. MSS. 25. f. 45.)
The Charge of the Right Honorable Robert Earl of Essex,
from the 22nd Sept. 1577, to the Annunciation of our Lady,
1578, disbursed by Thos. Newport and others.
Household charge at
Chartley.
Expense from Chart-
ley to the Court.
Wages due at Christ-
mas
Before the Earl's
coming to London.
Sithence the Earl's
coming
£ s. d.
In weekly charge of
household for the Earl
and his servants, from
the 22nd Sept. till the
12th Jan., 15 weeks,
about 47. the week - 60 0 0
Charge of the Earl in his
journey from Chartley
to London, and from
thence to the Court,
and his servants during
their attendance as ap-
peareth by the accounts
of Thomas Newport - 29 17 3
Robert Wright, school-
master for one quarter 500
Piliard the Frenchman
for the like - 2 10 0
Edward Wright, tutor
for the like - 0 13 4
Apparel bought by Mr.
Barroll since the death
of the late Earl, and
other necessaries for
the now Earl - - 15 13 4
Of Thomas Tennant, at
the Falcon, Ludgate
Hill, a felt hat lined
with velvet 0 11 0
ii 4
488
LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
Extraordinary charge.
d.
6
0
0
0
Renewing a velvet cap 0 4
For new lining his hat 0 1
Of Mrs. Coxton in Essex
side, four shirts at 10s. 20
Six handkerchiefs at 20d. 0 10
Of Peter Hoxton, mil-
liner of Fleet Bridge,
two pairs of socks - 010
A pair of hose of race - 194
Given to Mrs. West for
the Earl's lodging, and
some charge defrayed
at Somerset House - 200
Spent by the Earl in
little rewards, play,
&c., at his being at
Hampton Court - 300
Given to the Earl si-
thence, and to Wright,
tutor, to defray sundry
trifling charges, and
play ing money sithence
his coming to London 300
Disbursed to Wright, tu-
tor, towards his charge
in his sickness, by the
Earl's commandment - 200
For the accidents of ar-
mory - 040
For the seal of arms - 250
Washing for the Earl
during his abode in
London - - - 1 15 0
APPENDIX. 489
(Lansd. MSS. 25. f. 46.)
The Parcels which my Lord of Essex bought at his Entrance
in the Chamber at Cambridge.
£ s. d.
Imprimis, twenty yards of new green broad say es 2 16 0
Item, the frame of the south window in the first
chamber - 0 6 4
For more glass in the same -040
For forty foot of quarters under the hangings - 0 2 0
Paid to Mr. Bird at my entrance for parcels
which appertain his proper bill and acquittance 100
Two casements with hingells in the south window 026
New hangings in the study of painted cloth - 0 16 0
For painting both chamber and study overhead - 0 5 0
Shelves in the study - - 0 1 0
A conveyance into the bed-chamber out of the
study - 0 2 6
A place making for the trindle bed to draw through
the wall - 0 1 4
For boarding a place for fuel, and making a light
into it -060
A table in the study - 0 3 4
Furniture in the little study - 0 1 6
Little irons to hold open the casements with - 0 0 8
My part of the door between Mr. Forcet and me 0 3 6
A rest at the chimney - - - 0 0 4
A footstool at the window - - - 0 0 4
Two shelves more in the frame of the study - 0 1 0
Item, a lock and three keys to the outward
chamber - 0 3 4
A table in the bed-chamber - 0 2 6
Summa totalis - ^ 0 10
Signed, GERVASIUS BABINGTON.
490 LIVES OF THE EAKLS OF ESSEX.
£ s. d.
For painted cloths in the chamber, and painting
the bed-chamber - 1 18 4
For a settle in the chamber 0 8 0
For a great green cloth curtain in the chamber
window - - 0 6 0
For two tables and two forms in the chamber - 1 0 0
For curtain-rods in all the windows *• 0 2 0
For a piece of new painted cloth in the chamber - 0 3 0
For iron holding open the casements - 0 0 6
For painting the study - - 0 0 6
For a great desk of shelves for books in the study 070
For a little window and casements, a shelf with
two ledges and hingells in the study - - 0 7 0
For a lock on the study door - - 0 1 8
For a green cloth in the study window - - 0 2 0
For a shelf in the study 006
For making the door betwixt Mr. Babington and
me, my part - - 0 3 6
For removing the falling door - - 0 2 0
For a little window in the upper chamber - 0 1.0
For mending the boards in the outward chamber 008
For another key to the outward chamber - 0 0 8
£4 19 4
EDWARD FORGET.
Defrayed for the Right Honorable the Earl of Essex, from the
Feast of St. John the Baptist, A°. Dom\ 1577.
£ s. d.
Five pair of shoes - 0 5 0
One pair of winter boots - 0 6 0
For my Lord at the salting according to custom 070
For arrows for my Lord - 0 2 6
For three frames of wainscot for maps - - 0 4 6
APPENDIX. 491
£ s. d.
For rushes and dressing of the chamber - - 0 4 0
For horsehire for those that attended on my Lord
at several times - - - 0 1 9 0
His Lordship's commons for the quarter - - 2 14 0
His Lordship's sizing do. - - 1 15 0
His Lordship's breakfast do. - 1 3 0
Meat on feasting nights and times extraordinary 150
To the laundress for his washing - 0 6 8
The same for Mr. Montgomery - - 0 3 4
For my Lord to the chief reader - 0 2 0
For the Book of Johan. Bodm. de politica - 0 5 0
For Ramus' logic with a commentary - - 0 1 8
For Ramus on Tully's orations - - 0 4 0
For Sturmius de elocutione - 0 4 0
For Questiones Bezae theologicae - 0 1 8
For Grimalius de optimo senatore - 0 2 4
For Isocrates in Greek - - - 0 4 0
For the Chronicles of Holinshed - 1 6 0
For a standing desk for my Lord his study - 0 6 0
For amending the glass windows and casements - 0 3 0
To the barber for his Lordship's trimming - 0 2 0
For a broad riding hat - - 0 8 0
For the carriage of his Lordship's trunk, with his
apparel from London to Cambridge - - 0 2 4
For two dozen of trenchers - - 0 0 10
For a load of wood and the cutting of the same - 0 510
For a load of coals - 0 18 0
For ink and quills - 0 0 6
For the carriage of my Lord, his stuff from Cam-
bridge to Keyston - - - 0 2 4
For the board of his Lordship's two servants in
the town for half a year - 9 0 0
492 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
(Lansd. MSS. 25. f. 52.)
The Charge of the Earl of Essex for One whole Year, from the
\\th January, 1577, to the 16th January, 1578, as follows.
£ s. d.
His diet and his company before his going to
Cambridge for seventeen weeks, ending 17th
May, 1577, at 47. the week- - 68 0 0
Their diet at Mr. Clifford's for seventeen weeks,
ending 23rd January, 1578, at 33s. 4d. 28 6 8
His servants' wages before going to Cambridge
and other extraordinary necessaries - - 1728
Apparel made at London this year - 88 0 3
Beady money delivered to Mr. Wright his tutor
to be by him employed for the Earl - - 117 0 0
Books bought for the Earl - 7110
Linen bought for the Earl's chamber - 900
Beady money delivered to the Earl's own hand
in the said time - - 17 13 4
£352 14 7
(Lansd. MSS. 25. f. 48.)
Expense for my Lord of Essex his Commons, and his People,
for Eight Days.
£ s. d.
Friday night. — Eggs 2d -|
Butter 6d 1 0 1 4
Plaice 6d J
Saturday, dinner. — Mutton - 9d-
Butter 8d
Eggs 2d
Mackerel - 5d ' (
Plaice 5d
Chicken - 6d •-
APPENDIX.
493
£ s. d.
Supper. — Eggs 2d^
Mackerel - 4d
Mutton - 12d
-026
Eabbits - 8d
Conger 4d_
Sunday, dinner. — Mutton - 12di
Beef 12dJ
Supper.— -Veal 18d-»
Lamb 16d |
Pigeons - 12d
Eabbits - 8dJ
020
>0 4 6
Monday,
dinner. — Mutton - 2s Od 1
Lamb -12.
032
Supper. — Mutton -14'
Lamb -14.
•028
Tuesday,
dinner.— Beef -26'
Mutton -10.
,036
Supper.— Mutton - 0 10 -
Lamb - 0 11
Eabbits - 0 10 .
027
Wednesday,
dinner. — Mutton -12-
Eggs - 0 4
Mackerel - 0 4
0 2 1
Butter - 0 3 •
Supper. — Mutton - 0 8
Plaice - 0 6
JO 1 2
Thursday, dinner. — Mutton - 2 0
Beef - 2 4
JO 4 4
Supper. — Veal - 1 4
Mutton - 1 9
JO 3 1
Friday, dinner. — Mutton
020
494 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
£ s. d.
For the whole week. — Bread - 0 6 10
Drink - 0 5 2
Coals - 0 5 8
Wood - 0 1 4
Candles - - 0 0 11
Total - -£2 15 9
(Lansd. MSS. 25. f. 55.)
A Tailor's Bill at Easter, 1577.
£ s. d.
For my Lord and Mr. Japarell's doublets, one ell
of canvass - -010
Ij oz. of lace for the same doublets - 0 3 6
5 doz. of buttons for the same, 5d. per doz. - 0 2 1
fib. of bombast for the same - 0 1 0
2 oz. of lace - 0 4 0
Linen linings for them two pair of hose - 0 3 4
2£ yards of cotton for the said hose - 0 1 8
2 oz. of silk for two doublets, and 2 cloths and hose 038
For pinching and cutting of my Lord's doublet
and hose - - 0 1 6
For making my Lord's doublet - - 0 3 0
For making of his L.'s hose -050
For making of his L.'s cloak - - 0 7 0
For making of Mr. Japarell's doublet, hose, and
cloak - - - 0 8 0
£249
APPENDIX. 495
(E.)
Instructions and Articles set down by us Robert Earl of
Essex, and Charles Lord Howard, High Admiral of
England, Generals of Her Majesty's forces in this action,
both at sea and land, to be observed by every Captain
and Chief Officer of the navy, as they will answer it
at their perils ; and that every ship's Company may not
be ignorant thereof, we do hereby straightly charge and
command all Captains to give order that at service time
they be openly read twice every week. — (S. P. O.)
IN primis, that especial care be taken to serve God by using
of common prayer every day twice except urgent cause
enforce the contrary; and that no man, soldier, or other
mariner do dispute of matters of religion unless it be to be
resolved of some doubts, and in such case that he confer with
the minister of the army, for it is not fit that unlearned men
should openly argue of so high and mystical matters ; and if
any person shall forget himself and his duty herein, he shall
upon knowledge thereof receive open punishment to his
shame, and after be banished the army ; and if any shall
hear it, and not reveal it to the General or to his Captain, or
to some other especial officer, whereby the knowledge thereof
may come to the General, he shall likewise receive punish-
ment, and be banished the army.
Item, to forbid swearing, brawling and dicing, and such like
disorders as may breed contentions and discords in the ships ;
wherein, for avoiding God's displeasure, and all the incon-
veniences] that come thereof, picking and stealing shall be
severely punished, and if the fault be great, the General shall
be acquainted therewith, that martial law may be inflicted
upon the offenders. Great care to be taken to preserve
victuals, and to observe such orders therein as shall be given
by particular directions from the General, and that every
496 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
captain of each ship receive an account once a week how his
victuals are spent, and what remains, that their provisions
may be lengthened by adding more men to a mess in time.
All persons whatsoever, within any ship, shall come to the
ordinary services of the ship without contradiction.
Special charge to be given for avoiding the danger of fire,
and that no candle be carried in any ship without a lanthorn,
which, if any person shall disobey, he shall be severely
punished ; and if any chance of fire, or other dangers, which
God forbid, should happen to any ship, the others near unto
her, shall by their boats and all other their best means, seek
to help and relieve them.
The powder shall be carefully preserved from spoil and
waste, without which there cannot be undertaken any great
service.
Order and especial charge to be given that the topmasts be
favoured, and the heads of the masts, and that care be had
not to bear too high when the ship goeth by the wind, and
especially in a head sea, for the spoil of the masts may greatly
hinder and endanger the enterprizes, which otherwise, with
God's help, shall be performed with safety.
All such as are in the ships under government, or those
that have charge of a squadron, shall, as near as in them
lieth, keep together, and not for chase of other ships,
or any other cause, go out of the squadron, but by the
commandment of the Admiral of that squadron, unless the
General shall send for them, and by message appointeth
them to any service, or that by weather they shall be
separated, and then as they may they shall endeavour to repair
to the place appointed by such instructions as shall be set
down. And if there be any sail perceived of any of the
ships of any squadron, it shall be lawful for the next ship
having the wind to give chase, the ship descried being to the
windward, and the like of any that shall be nearest to bear
up if the sail be descried to the leeward ; but because upon
APPENDIX. 497
every chase all will be apt to follow, and so be led away upon
every occasion from the fleet, it shall not be lawful for any
second ship to follow any chase, one having undertaken the
,same, unless the Admiral of the squadron hang out two flags,
one over another ; if it be necessary that three do follow,
then shall the General or Admiral of the squadron hang out
three flags one over the other, which shall be warrant for
three of the next or fittest to follow, as aforesaid : but if the
Admiral bear up and come upon the wind himself, then may
all the squadrons give chase and follow, which if it seem con-
venient to the Generals of the army to hang out the flag of
Council, the same shall be a warning that the chase is mis-
liked, and that then all give over and keep their course.
Every ship shall, towards the evening, seek to come as
near as conveniently she may to speak to the Admiral of the
squadron, to know his pleasure, and what course he will keep ;
and that the Admiral of the squadron do bear up or stand
upon a wind to speak with the General, if conveniently he
may, the rest of the squadrons may, notwithstanding, keep
their course and distance ; and if the Admiral of the squadron
cannot recover the head of this fleet before night, the rest
shall then follow the light of the Vice-Admiral of the said
squadron.
That every squadron keep a good breadth one from another,
and that the squadrons do in themselves keep a reasonable
breadth one from another, that they fall not foul one of
another, whereby danger may grow ; and that the great
ships have especial regard not to calm the smaller ships ; and
if any of those smaller ships shall negligently bring themselves
in danger of the greater ships, the Captain and Master espe-
cially shall be severely punished ; and further, that either the
Admiral or the Rear- Admiral of the squadron be always in
the rearward of his fleet.
When there is a flag of council of the red cross out in the
VOL. II. K K
498 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
General's ship, half mast high against the main mizen, then
the Captains and Masters of every ship shall repair on board
that ship where the flag is so hanged out ; and when the flag
of arms shall be displayed, then shall the selected company
only come on board.
If a ship happen to spring a mast, to fall into a leak, or
such mischance, which God forbid, a piece shall be shot off,—
if it be in the night, two pieces, — and bear two great lights,
one a man's height and a half above another.
Every Captain and Master of the fleet shall have especial
regard that no contention be found betwixt the mariners and
soldiers ; and in time of sickness, if any do happen among
them, such good things as are to be had, and needful for
them, to be distributed unto them in such convenient sort
as may be.
If any shall happen to lose company, the token shall be to
strike and hoist the main topsail twice ; if it be foul weather,
then to hoist and strike the main mizen twice, or as often as
they list, and to wear the white pendant on the mizen yard ;
and if any shall lose the company of the General, he shall
find him at such place as he shall have instructions for at
the sea.
If in chasing of any ships, she happen to be fetched up, if
she be in amity with Her Majesty, she shall be entreated, and
brought to the General ; but if she be an enemy, there shall
be made no spoil of the goods in her, but the Captain and
Master of her to be taken on board, and put into her some
sufficient persons to bring her forthwith unto the General,
or such as shall be assigned, that order may be taken what
shall be done with her. When any shall be appointed to
give chase, and any enemy's ship surprised that shall have
treasure or merchandise of value in her, shall take great care
that those commodities in her be preserved ; in respect
whereof, and for your loyal and faithful service to be done in
APPENDIX. 499
this journey, Her Majesty's bounty, favour, and pleasure is,
that a third part of that which shall be taken from the enemy,
so it be not King's treasure, jewels, or a carrick, shall be
employed to the commodity and benefit of the whole com-
pany, over and above his ordinary wages, according to his
desert.
No Captain or Master shall suffer any spoil to be made
aboard any ship or bark that shall be taken of them or any
of their companies, upon pain to be displaced of their offices,
or some great punishment, according to the offence given,
because the rest of the company have interest in everything
that shall be taken ; therefore the value of every such thing,
be it of great or small importance, must especially be re-
garded and considered of : and whatsoever soldier or mariner
obeyeth not accordingly, shall be spoiled of that which he
hath gotten, and his person extremely punished.
Whosoever shall enter on board of any ship, he shall give
account to those things which shall be wanting and taken out
of her, for that no other company shall board her, unless there
shall be need of their help. If we happen to meet with any
great fleet, supposed to be the army of the King of Spain,
you . shall yourself endeavour to come as near to your Gene-
rals, or to the Admiral of your squadron, or, in our absence,
to the Vice- Admiral or Rear- Admiral of the fleet, to know
what you shall be directed unto, as you shall answer it at the
peril of your lives.
The watch shall be set every night at eight of the clock,
either by trumpet or drum, and singing the Lord's Prayer,
some of the Psalms of David, or clearing the glass ; and after
the watch is set, no trumpet or drum shall be heard, or any
piece whatever shall be shot off, without such great cause be
offered as is before signified, or such like.
You are to take especial care of your wutch by night, and
that the soldiers do watch well in harbour, as at the seas, one
K K 2
500 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
third part of them every night ; and that there be a captain
of the watch appointed, who shall take care that no fire or
light be suffered, but only such candles in lanthorns as are
allowed to the quarter masters, or otherwise upon necessity ;
and that in harbour, a certain number be appointed to keep
diligent watch in the forecastle, or beak head of the ship, for
fear of cutting of cables, which is a practice much used in
hot countries.
If at any time the Generals have occasion to give chase,
and that order be given to any other ship to carry their flags
until their return unto the fleet, all the other ships shall
follow the flag in whatsoever ship it be placed ; and that
whatsoever ship may be next, the same shall take up your
General's boats when we give chase, or the boats of any Ad-
mirals of squadrons, or others whatsoever.
No man upon pain of death shall presume to land in any
country until his return into England, without order from
us the Generals, or such as we shall appoint to command,
No person shall depart out of the ship where he is placed,
without special leave of his Captain ; and no Captain or
Master shall receive any such person without the knowledge
of us the Generals, or such as we shall appoint.
In fogs, if any happen when your ships are becalmed, you
shall cause some noise to be made by drum, by trumpet, by
shooting of a musket or caliver now and then, or by some
other like means, that by hearing you to be near, one may
take heed lest he fall foul of another.
No person whatsoever shall dare to strike the Captain,
Lieutenant, Master, or other officer, on pain of death ; and
furthermore, whatsoever he shall be that shall strike any in-
ferior person, he shall receive punishment according to the
offence given, be it by death or otherwise.
There shall be no report or talk raised in the fleet, wherein
any officer or gentleman in the same may be touched in repu-
APPENDIX. 501
tation or matter of importance spoken without his author,
who shall be severely punished, as an evil member amongst us.
(F.)
A Device wade by the Earl of Essex for the Entertainment of
the Queen.
THE SQUIRE'S SPEECH.
I have brought before your Majesty two wanderers, the
one, as it should seem, some Indian youth, the other white of
complexion and expert in language : to me they will neither
give account whence they come, nor whither they would ;
but of me at the first acquaintance they have curiously
inquired of the state of the country, of the manner of the
government, of the disposition of the people, and specially of
many circumstances of your Majesty's person; which dis-
covery of their high conceit, aiming directly at yourself, hath
made me bring them into your Highness' presence, that they
make their purgation to yourself.
THE ATTENDANT OR CONDUCTOR TO THE INDIAN PRINCE.
Excellent Queen, in the most retired part of that division
which those of Europe call the West Indies, near unto the
fountain of the great river of the Amazons, there governeth
at this day a mighty monarch, whose rare happiness in all
things else is only eclipsed in the calamity of his son, this
young Prince, who was born blind. This only tax and impo-
sition hath fortune set upon the father's felicity, and nature
laid upon the son's perfections ; for this want removed, never
was there, in that royal line, a spark of that expectation, so
lovely of person, so active of body, and so full of spirit. But
yet no one thing hath so much affected both his father and
his people towards him, as an ancient prophecy, that it should
be he that should expel the Castillians, a nation of strangers,
which as a scourge hath wound itself about the body of that
K K 3
502 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
continent, though it hath not pierced near the heart thereof.
This fatal glory, added to his other excellency, hath made the
king his father to visit his temples with continual sacrifices,
gifts, and observances, to solicit his son's cure supernaturally ;
and at last, this present year, out of one of the holiest vaults,
was delivered to him an oracle in these words :
Seated between the Old World and the New,
A land there is no other land may touch,
Where reigns a Queen in peace and honor true ;
Stories or fables do describe no such.
Never did Atlas such a burthen bear,
As she, in holding up the world opprest ;
Supplying with her virtue, every where,
Weakness of friends, errors of servants best.
No nation breeds a warmer blow for war,
And yet she calms them with her majesty ;
No age hath ever wit refined so far,
And yet she calms them by her policy :
To her thy son must make his sacrifice,
If he will have the morning of his eyes.
This oracle hath been both our direction hitherto, and the
cause of our wearisome pilgrimage; we do now humbly
beseech your Majesty, that we may make experience whether
we be at the end of our journey or not.
Your Majesty's sacred presence hath wrought the strangest
renovation that ever was in the world. You have here before
you seemly Love, a Prince indeed, but of greater territories
than all the Indies ; armed after the Indian manner with bow
and arrows, and when he is in his ordinary habit, an Indian
naked, or attired with feathers, though now for comeliness
clad. To procure his pardon for the stratagem he hath used,
and to show his thankfulness for his sight which he hath by
you received, he presents your Majesty with all that is his ;
APPENDIX. 503
his gift and property to be ever young ; his range of liberty
to fly from one to another; his bow and arrows to wound
when it pleaseth you ; and withal humbly desireth that
though Philantia hath hitherto so prevailed with your Ma-
jesty, as you would never accept of him while he was an im-
perfect piece, yet now he is accomplished by your Majesty's
grace and means, that you will vouchsafe him entertainment.
For all the challenge that ever hath been made to love or his
bond hath been, if it be rightly considered, only to his want
of eyesight. Lovers are charged to aspire too high ; it is as
the poor dove, which, when her eyes are sealed, still mounteth
up into the air. They are charged with descending too low ; it
is as the poor mole, which, seeing not the clearness of the air,
diveth into the darkness of the earth. They are sometimes
charged with presuming too far ; it is as the blind man, who
looketh in humanity that any seeing man should give him
way. They are accused sometimes to be timorous ; it is as
the blind stalks and lifts high where the way is smooth.
They are taxed to be credulous ; why, the blind are ever led.
They are said at other times to be incredulous; the blind
must feel that which sufficeth another to see. How can they
know times justly, that go by the clock and not by the sun ?
And how can they know measure, that see as well a mote as
a beam ? This makes poor lovers all as blind horses, ever going-
round about in a wheel ; and this makes them ever unfor-
tunate, for when blind love leads blind fortune, how can they
keep out of the ditch ? But now that Love hath gotten pos-
session of his sight, there can be no error in policy or dignity
to receive him. Nay, Philantia herself will subscribe to his
admission ; then your Majesty shall first see your own invalu-
able value, and thereby discern that the favours you vouchsafe,
are pure gifts and no exchanges. And if any be so happy as
to have his affection accepted, yet your prerogative is such as
they stand bound, and your Majesty is free. Then shall
K K 4
504 LIVES OF THE EAHLS OF ESSEX.
your Majesty read the conditions of every pretender, who it
is that cometh manned out by the plots and policies of others ;
and who cometh led only by his own star, who is sent in unto
you by the frowns of fortune, to have some commendation
from you to her again, and who both left a favourable fortune
when he came to you, and resolves never to establish a fortune,
because he will wholly depend upon you ; who seeks your
favour to the end he may tread upon others, and who enjoys
all others' favours to be trodden on by you ; who offereth gold,
incense, and myrrh, and who but the meanest of the folks, or
a cruise of oil. Your Majesty shall obtain the window into
hearts of which the ancients speak ; thereby you shall discern
protestation from fulness of heart, ceremonies and fashions
from a habit of mind that can do no other, affection from
affection. Your 'Majesty shall see the true proportion of
your own favours, so as you may deliver them forth by
measure, that they neither cause surfeit or faintness, and take
as just a tribute of your commandments as you vouchsafe an
imparting of your favours, and so keep them as well in breath
and exercise, as in strength and in heart. And to conclude,
your Majesty may be mindful of that which the poet saith
was never granted, A mare et sapere. And you honest squire,
that have conducted us, carry your master this message from
seemly Love, as the first fruit of his sight. Let him consider
whom he serves, and first of all to seek to dignify himself in
worth and merit. For it is not a small piece of wood, though
never so well kindled, that will make a great fire. Let him
add to his merit diligence and application ; for it is not a dead
fire, though never so great, but a fire continually blown,
that will melt hard metal. Let him not build too much upon
remembrance of griefs or contentments past ; it is the fault of
a blind man to have too good a memory: let him choose
expertly his seasons and opportunities ; it is a blind man's case
not to know night from day : let him dissemble unkiudness
APPENDIX. 505
and discouragements ; for it is no blind man's part willingly
not to see. And to conclude, since in his blindness he has
chanced so well as to fix his affections in the most excellent
place, let him now by his sight find out the most ready way.
And so squire for guiding us the right way, we have taught
your master part of his.
(GO
The true manner and form of the proceeding to the funeral
of the Right Honble. Robert, Earl of Essex and Ewe,
Viscount Hereford and Bourchier, Baron of Ferrers of
Chartley, Bourchier, and Lovaine, on the 22nd October,
1646 : —
Five regiments of the Trained Bands lined both sides of the
way, from Essex House to Westminster Abbey.
A regiment of horse.
The Marshal of the City and his men.
Servants, two and two.
Four regiments of foot, trailing their pikes ; the musketeers
in a funeral posture, the drums covered with black, the fifes
having a banner bearing the Earl's arms.
Field Officers and Captains, two and two, 360 in number ; Sir
William Waller bringing up the rear, and trailing a pike.
Drums, fifes, and trumpets.
The Earl's standard.
The Earl's servants.
The Earl's chaplains.
Drums, fifes, and trumpets.
The guidon of the Earl.
One of his horses, covered with black cloth, adorned and
garnished with plumes, shafferons, and escocheons of his
Lordship's arms.
Drums, fifes, and trumpets.
506 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
The banner of Lovaine.
A horse adorned as before, with the arms of Lovaiue.
Officers of the five regiments lining the way.
Drums, fifes, and trumpets.
The banner of Bourchier.
A horse as before, with the arms of Bourchier.
Fifty Colonels and Field Officers in mourning, who had
served under his immediate command.
Drums, fifes, and trumpets.
The banner of Ferrers.
A horse as before, with the arms of Ferrers.
Knights.
Baronets.
Younger sons of noblemen.
Comptroller, Steward, Treasurer, of the late Earl's household.
Trumpets.
The great banner of the arms of the Earl of Essex, bearing
sixteen quarters.
Cheval de deuil, or chief horse of mourning, covered with
black velvet, adorned with the quartered coats, led by the
Yeoman of the Horse.
The preacher, Master Vynes.
Bluemantle Pursuivant, with the helm and crest.
Rougedragon, with the spurs.
Portcullis, with the gauntlets.
York Herald, with the sword.
Norroy K. of Arms, with the target.
Clarencieux, with the coat of arms.
The effigies of his Lordship's person, in his robes, his Earl's
coronet on his head, in soldier's apparel, a General's leading
staff in his hand, was drawn in an open chariot of black
velvet, with six horses covered with black velvet to the
ground, adorned and garnished with plumes, shafferons, es-
cocheons, and compartments of his Lordship's arms. Master
APPENDIX.
507
Pudsey, gentleman of his L. chamber, sitting at the feet, eacli
horse led by a groom.
Supporters of the Pall.
Henry Howard, Esq., 2nd son
of the late Earl of Suffolk.
Denzil Holies, Esq., 2nd son
of the Earl of Clare.
George Montague,Esq.52nd son
of the Earl of Manchester.
Chas. Rich, Esq., 2nd son of
the Earl of Warwick.
Colonel Sydney, 2nd son of
the Earl of Leicester.
Thos. Sheffield, Esq., 2nd son
of the Earl of Mulgrave.
The following commanders and persons of quality, bearing
pieces of armour, were appointed to go in rank with the sup-
porters ; and the bearers of the bannerols, in like manner
next to the armour bearers ; but the multitude of people, and
the foulness of the street, forced them out of their places : —
Sir Win. Balfour, helm and
plume.
Sir Ph. Stapleton, vambrace
and pauldron dexter,
Col. Jas. Sheffield, the breast.
Col. Davies, the gauntlets.
Sir John Meyrick, the gor-
get.
Maj. Gen. Skippon, vam-
brace and pauldron si-
nister.
Maj. Gen. Browne, the back.
Col. Graves, the taces.
The Bannerols.
Borne by Leicester Devereux, eldest
son of Visct. Hereford.
}8ir Anty. St. John, Baronet.
x
Devereux and "I Master Walter Devereux, 2nd son of
Devereux.
Ferrers.
Bourchier.
Lovaine.
Devereux and
Marbury, imp.
Devereux and
Bourchier.
J Visct. Hereford.
1 SJr Jno>
508 LIVES OF THE EARLS OF ESSEX.
Devereux and 7 Borne by Nich. Leake, eldest son of
Walsingham, J Lord Danicourt.
Devereux and
Knollys.
Devereux and
Hustings.
o
I Sir Thos.
I Sir Wm. Lewis, Bart.
} Col. Kobt. Hammond.
Grey.
Garter K. of Arms, with a Gent. Usher on his left hand,
bareheaded.
Chief Mourner,
Walter, Viscount Hereford,
his train borne by Master Garret, assisted by Nicholas
Devereux.
Eight assistants to Chief Mourner, viz. : —
Earl of Northumberland. Earl of Holland.
Earl of Pembroke. Lord Lisle.
Earl of Suffolk. Sir E. Shirley.
Earl of Warwick. Oliver St. John.
The Horse of Honor, led by the Gentleman of the Horse,
with a groom to hold him by the head.
Black Rod, with a Gent. Usher on his left hand, bareheaded.
The Earl of Manchester, Speaker of the House of Peers.
The House of Peers.
Serjeant of the House of Commons, with a Gent. Usher,
bareheaded.
The Speaker.
The House of Commons, three abreast.
John Glynn, Recorder of London.
The Aldermen, two and two.
Committee of Militia of London.
Prolocutor of the Assembly of Divines.
The Assembly of Divines.
A party of fifty horse.
APPENDIX. 509
As soon as the funeral sermon, preached by Mr. Vynes,
was ended, the officers of his L. household had broken their
white staves, and the trumpets had sounded, according to
custom at such solemn funerals, order was given for the
great bell of St. Margaret's to toll thrice. This gave signal
to a gentleman on the highest tower of the Abbey, who was
provided with a flag for the day, and a great globe lanthorn
for the night, with which, it being then seven o'clock, he
gave notice to the Lord Mayor's Stone Fort at Southwark, to
fire one great piece of ordnance : this warning piece gave
notice to Yauxhall Fort ; and so the Redoubt, Blockhouses,
Tothill Fort and the rest, all round the lines of communica-
tion, fired in turn, ending where they began, at the Stone
Fort. After this, the regiment of horse, drawn up in the
Abbey church-yard, gave a volley with their pistols, which
was succeeded by a volley from all the nine regiments, from
the Abbey to Essex House. The firing was repeated three
times throughout, and closed the ceremony.
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