1 YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY .7^. Coo^. scii^.p. ' sua £!isiiai[©'ff®F]UiKm BiAir ONE OF I'UE aEirTLBMEH PEirsrOH-ERE.OT THE KEIGW OP OUEEN ELIZABF.rtl MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, K.G., VICE-CHAMBERLAIN AND LORD CHANCELLOR TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. INCLUDING HIS CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE QUEEN AND OTHER DISTINGUISHED PERSONS. BY SIR HARRIS NICOLAS, G. C. M. G LONDON: RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, ¦Ptililtglitr in (J^itdiinn) to %ltx iiLTJtstn. M. DCCC. XLVU. LONDON : Printed hy S. & J. Bbntlkv, Wilson, and Fley, Hangor House, Shoe I,anc. PREFACE, Of Sir Christopher Hatton, Gentleman Pensioner, Captain of the Guard, Vice-Chamberlain, and Lord Chan cellor to Queen Elizabeth, and her distinguished personal Favourite, less was known than of almost any other Statesman of that period. This neglect of a very remark able person probably arose from the notion that he was a mere Courtier, whose life presented no incidents to in struct, and few to amuse mankind. Though noticed by Naunton, Fuller, Lloyd, and Lodge, as well as in all general Biographical Collections, no attempt was made to give a detailed account of Hatton's career, until Lord Campbell wrote a Memoir of him in "The Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England." Since the appearance of that work, the transcript of a manuscript, entitled " Booke of Let ters receaved by Sir Cheistopher Hatton, Vice-Cham- berlayne to the Queue's Majestie, from sundry parsons, and procured by him to be written iu this same Booke," was placed in the Editor's hands, for the purpose of being printed with the usual illustrative Notes. iv PREFACE, It of course became desirable to ascertain whether any other Letters from or relating to Hatton could be found, besides those in that manuscript; and whether Loed Camp bell's Memoir had rendered any other account of his Ufe unnecessary. Numerous Letters, and some of the highest interest, were discovered in the State Paper Office, consisting principally of his secret Letters to the Queen; and there are a few others in the British Museum, The examination of the Memoir in the " Lives of the Lord Chancellors" shewed it to be remarkable for omis sions and for errors, while it seems that an unfair, if not prejudiced, view is there taken of Hatton's character. Under these circumstances, it was determined to write an entirely new Life of Hatton, and to illustrate it by the Correspondence in the " Letter Book," as well as by Letters from other sources. The present Memoir contains every fact relating to Sm Christopher Hatton that could be found, together with every Letter from him of which the existence is known. It wiU be seen that Lord Campbell's statements have been treated with the freedom, and it is hoped with the candour, that should characterize all literary investi gations ; and his Lordship is of all men the last to wish that Historical truth should be in any degree sacrificed to feelings of courtesy. His Lordship's mistakes as to facts are placed beyond dispute ; and it only remains for the public to decide upon the justice or injustice of his estimate of Hatton's talents and character. So far from being a vain, idle " scapegrace," with few acquirements and less talents, and the mere ornament of I'REKACE. V a Court, Hatton took a prominent part in all State affairs ; and his opinion on public transactions received great con sideration from Lord Burghley, Leicester, Walsingham, and all the other Ministers. He was for many years what is now termed the Leader of the House of Commons ; and if he did not adorn the Woolsack, to which he was unex pectedly raised, by great legal learning, he had the mo desty and good sense to consult eminent lawyers in cases of magnitude, and obtained the respect of the public by the equity and impartiality of his decisions. Unlike that of many great legal luminaries of his age, his own conduct was pure with respect to bribes ; and, long before he was made ChanceUor, he dismissed his old Secretary because he had taken some small fees from persons who had soli cited his Master's favour. Sir Christopher Hatton was the constant resource of the unfortunate, knowing on such occasions no distinction of Religion ; " in whose cause," he nobly said, " neither searing nor cutting was to be used," He was the fre quent intercessor in cases of persecution ; the patron and, better stiU, the friend of literary men, who repaid his kindness by the only means in their power, thanks, — " the Exchequer of the Poor," — in the dedications of their works. AU that is known of Hatton proves that his heart and disposition were amiable, his temper mild, and his judgment less biassed by the prejudices of his age than that of most of his contemporaries. The Correspondence in the "Letter Book" consists mostly of Letters to Hatton on a great variety of subjects, both public and private, from Queen Elizabeth, Sir Chris- vi PREFACE. topher Hatton himself. Lord Burghley, the Duke of Nor folk, Lord Chancellor Bromley, the Lord Keeper Bacon, and the Earls of Leicester, Arundell, and Sussex; the Countesses of Sussex, Bedford, and Derby; Archbishops Grindall, Sandys, Whitgift, and Loftus; Aylmer, Bishop of London; Lords Buckhurst, and Grey of Wilton ; Dr. Mathew, afterwards Archbishop of York; Lord Henry Howard, afterwards Earl of Northampton ; Sir Philip Sid ney, Sir Francis Walsingham, Sir Amias Paulet ; Sir Thomas Heneage, Treasurer of the Chamber ; Secretary Davison, Sir John Stanhope, the Poet Churchyard, Charles Arundell ; Stubbes, the author of " The Gaping Gulf," for which he lost his hand ; Cartwright and Nor ton, the well-known polemical writers ; Theodore Beza, &c. Many of these Letters, as might be expected, throw much new light upon the history of the times, as well as on the characters and conduct of the writers themselves. But the Letters to which the greatest interest attaches are from Hatton to the Queen, which have hitherto en tirely escaped observation, and which certainly breathe the devotion and tenderness of a Lover rather than the humility and duty of a Subject. These documents, and some others in this Collection, will probably raise a strong doubt upon her Majesty's right to her favourite and well- known designation. The " Letter Book" forinerly belonged to Mr, Upcott, but its previous history is unknown. It was purchased at the sale of his manuscripts, by the Trustees of the British Museum, and now forms the "Additional MS, 15891." Its genuineness is beyond suspicion, and the PREFACE. VII coUection was apparently made before Sir Christopher Hatton became Lord Chancellor, there being no Letters relating to him after 1587, aud that dignity is not attri buted to him in the title. The letters seem to have been copied by his Secretary, Mr. Samuel Cox, who shews the flattering opinion he entertained of his own epistolary talents by the insertion of so many of his own learned, but proUx and pedantic epistles, that it was necessary to consign many of them to an Appendix. It may per haps be wished that a few other Letters had been placed with them. The Editor begs leave to offer his best thanks to his friends Sir Charles George Young, Garter, and to Albert William Woods, Esq., Lancaster Herald, for much useful information ; and his thanks are likewise due to Robert Lemon, Esq., and H, C. Hamilton, Esq., for their zealous and obUging aid in selecting from the comparatively speaking unexplored Historical stores in the State Paper Office, aU that related to Sir Christopher Hatton. TOKBINQTON SqUAEB, 30tk November, 1846. CONTENTS, 1572, p^gj, From Thomas Duke of Norfolk to his Son Philip Earl of Surrey, , . . . 2nd February 10 From Mr, Dyer to Mr. Hatton . . . 9th October 17 From Mr. Hatton to the Queen . . 20 1573, From Mr. Hatton to the Queen . .5th June 25 From Mr. Hatton to the Queen . . .17th June 26 From Mr, Hatton to the Queen ... 28 From Mr, Hatton to the Queen , . .IOth August 29 From the Queen to the Deputy and Council of Ireland 29th June 33 1576. From Mr. Hatton to Lord Burghley , 26th August 38 1577. From Mr. Hatton to Lord Burghley . .13th Jime 39 From the Lord Keeper to the Queen . , 1 5th September 40 1578. From Mr, Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton Sth March. 44 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hat ton 21st April 50 From Bishop Ayhner to Sir Christopher Hat ton 29th April 51 From Archbishop Grindall to Sir Christopher Hatton 2nd May 52 CONTENTS. 1578 continued. PAGE From Mr, Davison to the Privy Council . Sth May 53 From Bishop Aylmer to Sir Christopher Hat ton 28th May 55 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 3rd June 57 From Bishop Aylmer to Sir Christopher Hat ton 8th June 58 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 16th June 60 From Bishop Aylmer to Sir Christopher Hat ton 17th June 61 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton . . . . 1 7th June 62 From Mr. Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 20th June 63 From Dr. Aubrey to Sir Christopher Hatton 64 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 23rd June 65 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton . . . . 27th June 66 From the Bar! of Leicester to Sir Christo pher Hatton 9th July 68 From Mr. Davison to Sir Christopher Hat ton 22nd July 70 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christo pher Hatton 23rd July 73 From Sir Amias Paulet to Sir Christopher Hatton 26th July 74 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christo pher Hatton .... 29th July 75 From Dr. Mathew to Sir Christopher Hat- *°" 22nd August 76 From Mr. Stanhope to Sir Christopher Hat- *°" 5th August 77 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christo pher Hatton .... 1 6th August 79 From the Eari of Sussex to the Queen 28th August 81 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christo pher Hatton , , . . Oth September 89 CONTENTS. xi 1578 continued. PAOB From Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton 1 5th September 91 From the Eari of Sussex to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 20th September 92 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 2Ist September 92 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir hristopher Hatton . . .9th October 93 From Mr. Edmund Tremayne to Sir Christopher Hatton . , .1 7th October 95 From the Earl of Leicester to Sir Chris topher Hatton ,,,.... 97 From Gherarde de Marini to Sir Christo pher Hatton 23rd October 97 From the Archbishop of Canterbury to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 15th November 98 From Mr. Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton ISth November 99 From Sir Amias Paulet to Sir Christo pher Hatton ..... 6th December 100 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 14th December 101 From Thomas Bynge to Sir Christopher Hatton 24th December 102 1579, From Sir Amias Paulet to Sir Christo pher Hatton 1 2th January 103 From Mr, Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton Sth February 104 From the Queen to Sir Amias Paulet . . . . 106 From Sir Amias Paulet to Sir Christo pher Hatton 9th February 111 From Sir Amias Paulet to Sir Christo pher Hatton 10th March 112 From the Earl of Leicester to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 113 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . • 23rd AprU 115 ^ b 2 xii CONTENTS. 1579 continned. PAGE From Mr. Henry Howard . . • 1st May 116 From Dr. Bynge to Sir Christopher Hatton 6th May 117 From the Archbishop of Canterbury to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 22nd May 118 From Dr. Bynge to Sir Christopher Hatton 3rd August 120 From Lord Burghley to Sir Francis Wal singham 9th August 121 From Lord Burghley tb Sir Francis Wal singham 9th August 123 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 9th August 124 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 10th August 125 From Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 12th August 127 From Sir Philip Sidney to Sir Christo pher Hatton 28th August 128 From Nicholas Saunders to the son of the Earl of Clanrickard . . . 23rd September 129 From the Bishop of London to Sir Chris topher Hatton . . . .28th September 132 From Dr. Humfrey to Sir Christopher > Hatton 13th November 135 From Dr. Humfrey to Sir Christopher Hatton ......... 136 From Mr. Henry Howard to Sir Christo pher Hatton ..,,,,.. 137 From Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton , . . . . _ _ jgg From John Stubbes to Sir Christopher Hatton 1st December 141 1580. From Mr. Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton 21st February 144 From Sir Nicholas Woodroffe, (Lord Mayor), to Sir Christopher Hatton . llth February 145 CONTENTS. xiii 1580 continued. From the Countess of Derby to Sir Fran cis Walsingham , . . . May 146 From the Countess of Derby to Sir Christopher Hatton . . , . , . 147 From the Countess of Derby to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . . . , 143 From the Countess of Derby to Sir Christopher Hatton . , . . , . 149 From the Countess of Derby to Queen Elizabeth I49 From Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 30th June 151 From the Earl of Sussex to Sir Christo pher Hatton . , , , , , , . 152 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 22nd July 152 From Sir Christopher Hatton to the Queen ...,,, September 153 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Sir Tho mas Heneage . . . . .llth September 155 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to the Queen ...... 19th September 156 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Sir Francis Walsingham . . , 26th September 158 From Thomas Norton to Sir Christopher Hatton SOth December 161 From Unknown to Lord Burghley . . . . 162 1581. From Arthur Lord Grey of Wilton to Sir Christopher Hatton . . , 14th March 166 From Sir Thomas Wilson to Sir Christo pher Hatton 23rd April 167 From Charles Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton 23rd May 169 From Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chris topher Hatton , , . . 27th May 169 xiv CONTENTS, 1581 continued. PAGE Prom Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 1st June 170 Prom Bishop Aylmer to the Queen 13th June 171 Prom Thomas Churchyard to Sir Chris topher Hatton . , . • 23rd June 172 Prom Lord Grey to Sir Christopher Hatton 1st July 174 Frora Thomas Churchyard to Sir Chris topher Hatton . , , • 10th July 175 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 13th July 177 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 15th July 178 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton 17th July 179 Prom Thomas Churchyard to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 20th July 180 Prom Charles Arundell to Sir Christo pher Hatton 20th July 180 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 23rd July 181 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton .... 27th July 182 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton , . , . SOth July 183 Prom Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 6th August 185 From Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 7th August 185 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton , . , , IOth August 186 Prom Lord Grey to Sir Christopher Hat ton . . , . , . 1 2th August 187 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton 20th- August 189 From Lord Buckhurst to Sir Christopher Hatton SOth August 190 CONTENTS. XV 1581 continued. From Dr. Mathew to Sir Thomas Heneage 7th September 1 9 1 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 1 2th September 192 From Sir Francis Walsingham to the Queen 12th September 194 From Sir John Branch (Lord Mayor) to Sir Christopher Hatton . . , 20th September 197 From Dr, Humfrey to Mr, Samuel Cox 21st September 199 From Sir Francis Walsingham to the Lord Mayor of London . . . 25th September 200 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 26th September 201 Prom Mr. Philip Sidney to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 26th September 203 From the Earl of Leicester to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 27th September 204 From Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox SOth September 204 From Mr. Philip Sidney to Sir Chris topher Hatton . . . , I7th October 206 From Mr. Edward Tremayne to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 27th October 207 From Dr. Humfrey to Sir Christopher Hatton 13th November 208 From P. A. to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 210 Prom Mr, Philip Sidney to Sir Christo pher Hatton 1 4th November 210 From Lord Grey of Wilton to Queen Elizabeth 28th November 213 From Sir Henry Cheke to Sir Chris topher Hatton , . . , 15th December 213 From Mr, Philip Sidney to Sir Christo pher Hatton 18th December 214 From Mr, Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton 28th December 215 From Charles Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton 216 XVI CONTENTS. 1581 continued. From Charies Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton ..,••• From Charles Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton .,.••• Prom Charles Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton From Unknown to Sir Christopher Hat ton ....•• From Unknown to Sir Christopher Hat ton . • • • • From Lady Anne Askewe to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... From Unknown to Sir Christopher Hat ton . . ... From Unknown to Sir Christopher Hat ton ...... From Unknown to Unknown Lady Leighton to Sir Thomas Leighton From Mr. Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton . . , , . From Mr , Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton ...... 217218 218 219 222 223 224225 229 1582, From Sir Henry Cheke to Sir Christopher Hatton 15th January 229 Prom Dr, Clark to Sir Christopher Hat ton 4th February 230 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton Sth February 232 Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox , 12th February 232 Prom Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chrisf topher Hatton , , . , 20th February 233 Prom Mr. Thomas Norton to Sir Chris topher Hatton . , , . 28th February 234 From Bishop Aylmer to the Lord Mayor 1st March 236 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Mr, Egerton . . . . 1 7th March 238 CONTENTS. xvii 1582 continued. Prom Bishop Aylmer to Sir Christopher PAGE Hatton SOth March 240 Prom Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chris topher Hatton 26th March 241 From Sir Francis Walsingham to the Earl of Leicester .... 4th April 241 Prom Mr, Thomas Norton to Sir Chris topher Hatton . , . , IOth April 242 From Bishop Aylmer to the Queen • • 243 Prom Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 5th May 247 From Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Chris topher Hatton , , . , 12th May 248 From Sir James Harvey (Lord Mayor) to Sir Christopher Hatton Srd June 249 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Un known ...... 6th June 250 Prom Sir Walter Mildmay to Sir Christo pher Hatton 13th June 251 Prom Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox . 15th June 252 Prom Su: Christopher Hatton to Mr. Egerton 19th June 252 From Thomas Churchyard to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 10th July 253 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Mr. Doctor Norgall, Mr, D, Harvey, and Mr. D, Hatcher , . . , 14th July 254 Prom Dr. Mathew to the Countess of Warwick 23rd July 255 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Chancellor Bromley 27th July 256 From Sir Thomas Bromley to Sur Chris topher Hatton .... 28th July 258 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton SOth July 261 From the Earl of Leicester to Sir Christo pher Hatton 2nd August 262 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord 2nd August 263 xviii CONTENTS. 1582 continued. PAGE Prom Ann Countess of Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 20th Aug. 265 Prom Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 1st September 265 From the Queen to the Earl of Shrews bury 267 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 6th September 268 Prom the Earl of Leicester to Sir Chris topher Hatton . . . , 1 1th September 269 Prom Prances Countess of Sussex to Sir Christopher Hatton . , . 16th September 271 From Anne Countess of Bedford to Sir Christopher Hatton . . .1st October 272 From Unknown to Sir Christopher Hat ton . . . . . .3rd October 273 Prom Theodore Beza to Sir Christopher Hatton 10th October 273 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 25th October 277 From Dr. Mathew to Mr, Samuel Cox , 2nd November 278 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . .7th November 279 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 8th November 280 Prom Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 9th November 280 Prom Archbishop Mathew to Mr, Sa- «»iel Cox grd November 280 Prom Unknown to Mr. Cox . . 20th November 281 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton , , , . 26th November 282 From Mary Queen of Scots to Queen ^^i^a^eth 28th November 284 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 22nd December 296 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Chris topher Hatton .... 29th December 297 CONTENTS. XIX 1582 continued. Prom Dr. Mathew to Sir Christopher Hatton 298 From Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox . . . SOO Prom Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 300 From Thomas Cartwright to Sir Christo pher Hatton 301 From Thomas Churchyard to Sir Chris topher Hatton ....... 304 1583. From Mr. Thomas Norton to Sir Christo pher Hatton ..... 5th January 305 From Sir John Noms to the Queen . 9th January 306 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to the Earl of Derby and the Bishop of Chester . 10th January 309 Copy of an Article propounded by Mons, La Motte 20th January 310 Prom Mr, Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton 22nd January 311 Prom Mr. Davison to Mr. Samuel Cox . 22nd January 313 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 315 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 24th February 316 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 24th Pebruary 316 Prom Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 28th Pebruary 318 Prom Mr. Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton 4th March 318 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 12th March 321 Prom Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 18th March 326 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 19th March 326 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Christopher Hatton . . , 19th March 327 XX CONTENTS. 1583 continued. From Dr. Mathew to Sir Christopher Hatton llth May 328 Prom the Scottish Arabassador to Sir Chris topher Hatton 12th May 330 Prom Mr, William Herle to Sir Christopher Hatton 20th May 331 From Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Christopher Hatton - 5th July 333 From Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Christopher Hatton 2nd August 334 From the Lords of the Council to the She riffs of Oxfordshire .... 16th August 335 Prom Archbishop Sandys to Sir Christopher Hatton • 17th August 338 From Sir FrancisWalsingham to Lord Burghley 26th August 339 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton ...... August 340 From the Lords of the Council . . ... 340 Prom Dr. Mathew to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . 343 From the Countess of Sussex to Sir Christo pher Hatton 1 Sth September 344 From the Countess of Sussex to the Queen .... 345 From the Countess of Derby to Sir Christo pher Hatton 26th September 346 Prom the Countess of Sussex to Sir Christo pher Hatton 10th October 347 Prora Bishop Aylmer to the Earl of Leicester 2nd November 348 From Sir Christopher Hatton to John Dutton, Esq 16th December 350 Frora Dr. William Tresham to Sir Christo pher Hatton ..... . . 351 Prom Unknown to the Queen ..... 353 Prom Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox . . . 355 Prora Elizabeth to Sir Christopher Hatton 356 Prom the Archbishop of Dublin to Lord Burghley , . 357 Prom Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox .... 360 From Dr. Mathew to Sir Christopher Hatton . . 361 CONTENTS, XXl 1584, PAGE From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton SOth January 361 Prom Mr. William Dodington to Sir Chris topher Hatton 4th March 362 Prom Mr. Samuel Cox to . . , . 29th March 364 From Sir Christopher Hatton to Queen Eli zabeth 3rd April 367 Prom Mr. Henry Howard to Sir Christopher Hatton 27th April 368 From Archbishop Whitgift to Su- Christopher Hatton 9th May 371 From Unknown to Sir Christopher Hatton 10th May 373 From Mr, Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 20th May 373 From Mr, Henry Howard to Sir Christopher Hatton 376 From Lady Leighton to Sir Christopher Hatton 1 7th June 378 From Sir Christopher Hatton to the Earl of Derby and the Bishop of Chester . , 23rd June 379 Prom Archbishop Whitgift to Sir Christopher Hatton 17th July 379 From Sir Christopher Hatton to the Earl of Leicester 21st July 381 Prom the Earl of Leicester to Sir Christopher Hatton 23rd July 382 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Unknown 4th August 383 From Lord Burghley to Sir Christopher Hatton 6th August 384 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to the Earl of Hertford 7th August 385 Prom Lord Grey to Sir Christopher Hatton Sth August 385 Prom the Lords of the Council . , . 18th August 386 From Mr, Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 4th October 389 Prom Su- Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 29th October 394 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Mr, Samuel Cox 26th October 395 Prom Mr, Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 26th October 396 xxii CONTENTS. 1584 continued. PAGE Prom Dr. Mathew to Mr. Samuel Cox Hatton 27th October 397 Prora Sir Christopher Hatton to the Bishop of Chester 27th October 398 From Mr. Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher jjg^tton 29th October 399 Prom Mr. Samuel Cox to . • 4tb November 400 From Mr. Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 9th November 403 From Mr, Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 28th November 404 From Mr, Samuel Cox to Sir Christopher Hatton 20th July 405 From Dr. Mathew to Sir Christopher Hatton , . 406 1585. From the Lords of the Council to the Lord Deputy of Ireland . . . .3rd January 409 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 2 6th January 4 1 1 Prom Mr, Davison to Sir Christopher Hatton 12th February 412 Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Christopher Hatton 2nd April 415 From the Countess of Sussex to Sir Christo pher Hatton 1 2th April 416 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Mr, Egerton Solicitor-General .... 15th April 417 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton 26th April 418 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton 28th April 418 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton ..... 29th April 419 Prom Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton 1st May 420 From Dr, Loftus, Archbishop of Dublin, to Sir Christopher Hatton . . . . , 421 From Sir Francis Walsingham to Sir Chris topher Hatton 1st May 426 CONTENTS, xxiii 1585 continued. PAGE Prom Sir Thomas Heneage to Sir Christopher Hatton 2nd May 426 Prom the Earl of Arundell to Sir Christopher Hatton 7th May 427 From Mr, Samuel Cox to. ... 20th July 405 1586. From Mr. Samuel Cox to 7th July 441 Prom Sir Christopher Hatton to Lord Burghley 2nd September 443 From Anthony Babington to . . . 449 From Sir Christopher Hatton to the Queen , 13th October 450 Prom Lord Burghley and Sir Christopher Hatton to Secretary Davison . . 10th November 453 1587, Prom Sir Christopher Hatton and Secretary Davison to Lord Burghley , , , 6th January 455 From Sir Christopher Hatton and Secretary Davison to Lord Burghley . , . 7th January 456 Articles ministered to Secretary Davison by Sir Christopher Hatton and Mr, WoUey 12th March 461 From LordBurghleyto Lord Chancellor Hatton 12th May 470 From Lord Chancellor Hatton to Sir Francis Walsingham 27th May 472 From Lord Chancellor Hatton to William Clopton, Esq., and John Gurdon, Esq., Jus tices of the Peace in Suffolk . . .Sist May 473 From Mr. John Stanhope to Lord Chancellor Hatton 474 From Mr. John Stanhope to Lord Chancellor Hatton 18th October 475 1588. From Lord Chancellor Hatton to Mr. Ser jeant Puckering 2nd September 482 1589. From Lord Chancellor Hatton to Lord Burgh ley 15th May 484 xxiv CONTENTS. 1589 continu.ed. PAGE Lord Chancellor Hatton to the Eari of Shrews bury .30th July 484 Lord Chancellor Hatton's Memorial of busi ness to be transacted . . . . 2nd September 485 1590. Lord Chancellor Hatton to the Earl of Shrews- bm-y ....••• 2nd January 486 Prom the Archbishop of Canterbury to the Canons of Lincoln . , , . 29th June 486 From Lord Chancellor Hatton to Lord Burgh ley 15th July 488 Prom Lord Chancellor Hatton to Lord Burgh ley 20th Nov. 489 1591. From Lord Chancellor Hatton to Sir Henry Unton, Ambassador in France . , 5th September 490 Frora Lord Chancellor Hatton to Sir Henry Unton ISth September 491 From Lord Chancellor Hatton to Sir Henry Unton 4th October 492 From Lord Chancellor Hatton to the Earl of Essex 5th October 494 Prom Lord Chancellor Hatton to the Queen , , 496 Sonnet by Spenser to Lord Chancellor Hat ton 500 CONTENTS. xxv APPENDIX. From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to ¦ From Mr. Samuel Cox to 1586. 20th November 17th December 1 7th December PAGE i iiiiv 1587. From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr, Samuel Cox to Sir Henry Lee From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to Lady 20th July 19th October 2nd November 2nd November V vii viii xxxvii xii xiii 1588. From Monsr. de la Noue to Lord Chancel lor Hatton ..... From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to his Cousin and Namesake . . , , From Mr, Samuel Cox the younger to Mr. Samuel Cox , . . . . From Mr, Samuel Cox to , 1589. From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr, Samuel Cox to his Friend that had given money for an Office From Mr, Samuel Cox to 1590. From Mr. Samuel Cox to From Mr. Samuel Cox to Mrs. E. 16th February xxxvii 18th April xvi 20th April xviii 27th April XX 2nd May xxiii llth May xxv 12th May xxvi 7th July xxvii 7th July xxviii 15th January xxix May xxxu xxvi CONTENTS. 1594. From Doctor Seames to Mr. Samuel Cox 22nd April From Mr. Samuel Cox for a Friend From Unknown to Lord Chancellor Hat ton . Prom Thomas Churchyard to Sir Christo pher Hatton ....... From Mr, Samuel Cox to From Mr, Samuel Cox to Mrs. B From Mr. Samuel Cox to Mrs. E From Mr, Samuel Cox to Mrs, E PAGE xxxiii xxxiv xxxv xxxvi xliv xlv xlvi xlvii 1599, From Mr. Samuel Cox to . 29th April xlviii From King James to the Lower House of the Parliament jj From the Earl of Essex to the Lord Keeper Egerton jjj Prom the Lord Keeper Egerton to the Eari of Essex _ J Address of the Catholics of England to King James the First jyjj 1604. From Archbishop Hutton to Lord Cran- ^°™« Sth December lx 1637. From the King of Morocco to the King of ^ England 5th November Ixii Inscription on Lord Chancellor Hatton's Tomb . . , . . . , Ixiv errata. p. 26, line 36, note, for " 5th," read " 7th " of June. P. 63, line "23, dde " and Hatton is said to have consulted the latter in all important cases," Dr. Dale having been there mistaken for Dr. Snale. A similar error occurs in p. 250, line 4. P. 128, Une 33, note, for " 1759," read " 1679." THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Like so many men who have risen to the highest stations in England, Sir Christopher Hatton owed little besides the rank of gentleman to his birth. He was the third son of WiUiam Hatton, of Holdenby in Northamptonshire, by AUce, daughter of Lawrence Saunders, of Harrington in that county. The pedi gree of Hatton is traced beyond records, and conse quently to an apocryphal source. Ivo, a nobleman of Normandy, the supposed ancestor of the Fitz-Nigells Barons of Hatton, and of other families in Cheshire, is said to have had a sixth son, Wolfaith, Lord of Hatton in that county, from whom descended, through a long series of Knights and Esquires of some local but of little general fame, Piers or Peter Hatton, of Quisty Birches in Cheshire, whose third son, Henry Hatton, founded a new line by marrying, in the reign of Henry the Seventh, Elizabeth, the sister and eventuaUy sole heiress of William Holden, of Holdenby in Northamp tonshire, Esq. Their eldest son, John Hatton, settled at Holdenby, and had three sons, WiUiam, the eldest; VOL. I. B 2 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1546-60. John Hatton, of Gravesend in Kent, ancestor of the Viscounts Hatton, now represented by the Earl of Win chelsea and Nottingham; and Christopher. WiUiam Hatton, the eldest son, had, by Alice Saunders, an only daughter, Dorothy, who married John Newport, of Horn- ingham in Warwickshire, Esquire, and three sons, viz. Francis and Thomas, who both died young" and un married; and Christopher, who, as heir to his bro thers, succeeded to the estates at Holdenby,** and made the name of Hatton historical, if not imperishable. Christopher Hatton was born at Holdenby in 1540,"= and was left an orphan at the age of six years, by the death of his father in August 1546." It does not appear how long he enjoyed a mother's care; nor -can it be ascertained precisely when, by the deaths of his two elder brothers, he succeeded to the family in heritance, but probably before he became of age. There is some reason to believe that his maternal uncle, Wil liam Saunders, superintended his education; but no thing of his early life is known until he entered as a Gentleman Commoner at St. Mary's Hall, Oxford,' when he was probably about fifteen or sixteen years old. He quitted the University without a degree, and became a member of the Inner Temple on the 26 th of, May 1560, on which occasion he was described " of ^ Francis, the eldest son, was four- ^ Esch. I Edw. VI. Part II. No. teen years old in 1548 ; but.he and 22; by which it was found that his next brother,. Thomas, are stated William Hatton, Gentleman, was to have died in their youth, in the seized in fee of the manor of Hold- Herald's Visitations of Northampton- enby, &c. ; that his wife Ahce sur- shire, in the College of Arms, and vived him ; that he died on the 28th British Museum. of August, 38 Hen. VIIL, 1646 ; and •> Pedigree of Hatton in Baker's that Francis Hatton was his son History of Northamptonshire. and heir, and was then fourteen years •: On his monument he is said to old and upwards. have been fifty-one at his death in ' Wood's Athen. Oxon, ed, Bhss. November 1591, j ggS. JET. 20.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 3 Holdenby in Northamptonshire;"" which tends to show that he was then in possession of those estates. Some of his biographers have said that he did not enter the Temple with a view of studying the law as a profes sion ; but, as has been justly observed, that report was probably invented to increase the wonder," if not the obloquy, which his appointment as Lord ChanceUor created. It is supposed that Hatton was never called to the bar; but, though no proof of the fact exists, it may nevertheless have occurred. He became eligible to be called within five, if not three years after his admission as a student ; and, as no book is pre served in which "caUs" are registered before 1567, Hatton may have been made a barrister between 1565 and 1567 ; but he was never either a Eeader or a Bencher of his Inn." The next occasion on which any notice of Hatton has * Inner Temple Register of Ad- vanity which always distinguished missions, him ; and, being much spoiled as ¦> Lodge's Memoir of Sir Christo- the child of his father's old age, he pher Hatton. succeeded in prevaiUng upon the in- "= From the information.veryoblig- dulgent squire to enter him a Gen- ingly supplied, of Edw. H. Martin, tleman Commoner at St. Mary's Hall, Esq., Under- Treasurer of the Inner althdugh the additional expense thus Temple. Lord Campbell, in his incurred could ill be afforded." Upon " Lives of the Lord Chancellors," this it must be observed, that the ex- vol. ii. pp. 136, 139, says positively pense could not have much affected that Hatton was never called to the the "indulgent squire," nor could bar. His Lordship gives a very mi- "the news of the manner in which" nute account of Hatton's early ca- his son " dedicated himself to dan- reer ; but as the Editor has not had cing" at the Temple " have caused the good fortune to find the slightest heavy hearts under the paternal roof authority for any one of those state- in Northamptonshire, " inasmuch as ments, and as none is cited (except Hatton's father died when he was Justice Shallow's description of his only six years old. "While at col- own life in Clement's Inn), he can lege," his Lordship proceeds to say, only observe, that, according to Lord "hewas exceedingly popular with Campbell, Hatton was " idle and his companions, but he spent much volatile" as a child, and "imbibed more time in fencing and archery than with difficulty from a domestic tutor in perusing Aristotle and Aquinas ; the first rudiments of knowledge ;" and, from the fear of being plucked, that he had already shown " the he left Oxford without trying for a b2 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1561. been discovered is remarkable, as it was to a similar festivity that he owed his fortunes. In 1561 the Inner Temple celebrated Christmas by a splendid masque, in which the part of " Master of the Game" was played by " Christopher Hatton," The scene was honoured with the presence of Lord Robert Dudley, afterwards the celebrated Earl of Leicester, who, under the title of " Pa- laphilos," held the mimic rank of Constable and Marshal.* Hatton was then in the twenty-first year of his age, handsome, tall, and graceful in his person, of elegant manners, and an accomplished dancer — qualities that never faUed to please the eye and gratify the taste of Queen Elizabeth. Neither the exact time nor the occa sion upon which he first appeared before his Sovereign is known, but it is said to have been in one of those masques which the Templars often presented to the Queen. " He came to Court," says Sir Robert Naun ton, on the authority of Sir John Perrot, "by the galliard, for he came thither as a private gentleman degree," At the Temple he was "in truth a noted roisterer and swash buckler ; hearing the chimes at mid night, knowing where the bona robas were, and sometimes lying all night in the Windmill in St. George's Fields ; but while he spent much of his time in dicing and gallantry, there were two amusements to which he particularly devoted himself, and whioh laid the foundation of his fu ture fortune. The first was dancing, which he studied under the best mas- sters, and in which he excelled be yond any man of his time : the other was the stage : he constantly frequented the theatres . . . and he himself used to assist in writing masques, and took a part in per forming them." First Edition, ii. 136 : Second Edition, ii. 138. Lord Campbell's horror of Hat ton's being a good dancer, from its apparent inconsistency with the gra vity of forensic, not to say judicial, duties, might not have been quite so great had he remembered that dan cing was then not merely tolerated, but exacted from lawyers. On the 6th of February, 7 ^Jac. 1610, "the under-barristers of Lincoln's Inn were, by decimation, put out of commons for example's sake, because the whole bar offended by not dan cing on Candlemas-day preceding, ac cording to the ancient order of this Society, when the judges were pre sent ; with this, that, if the like foult were committed afterwards, they should be fined or disbarred," Dug dale's Origines Juridiciales, Ed, 1680, p. 346. * Dugdale's Origines Juridiciales, Ed, 1680, pp, 150, ^T. 21 .J SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 5 of the Inns of Court in a masque, and for his acti vity and person, which was taU and proportionable, taken into the Queen's favour." This statement, which has been generaUy adopted, though probable in itself, may have originated in envy; or Naunton may have been misinformed, as his account of Hatton is very erroneous." It is, however, to some extent supported by Camden, whose candour was no less great than his learning; who says, that, "being young and of a comely tallness of body and countenance, he got into such favour with the Queen that she took him into her band of fifty Gentlemen-pensioners.'"" The precise date of Hatton's appointment as a Gen tleman-pensioner has not been discovered; nor has that of his promotion to the situation of Gentleman of the Privy Chamber been ascertained, and which, like his subsequent higher offices in the Queen's service, Camden says he owed to the " modest sweetness of his manners." It is, however, nearly certain that he at tracted the Queen's notice, and was made one of the Gen- " Fragmenta Regalia, p. 30, print- the profession of the law, but in ed in 1641. Naunton says, Hatton fonned her that he had incurred was first made Vice-Chamberlain, debts which were beginning to be whereas he had previously held three troublesome to him. She advanced other offices. him money to pay them off, — at the same time (more suo) taking a bond ^ Annals of Queen Elizabeth, ed, and statute-merchant to repay her 1630, book iv. p. 34. Lord Camp- when he should be of ability. He bell's account of Hatton's removal little thought he should ever hear from the Temple to the Court wants of these securities, which afterwards only the authority for his Lordship's were supposed to be the cause of his statement to be interesting ; — " The death." 2nd ed., vol. ii. page 140. tender heart of Elizabeth was at once However well founded this narrative touched by his athletic frame, manly may be in other parts, it will be seen beauty, and graceful air; and she hereafter that the sum for which openly expressed her high admira^ Hatton was pressed by the Queen, tion of his dancing. An offer was and which is said to have hastened instantly made by her to admit him his death, had nothing whatever to of the band of Gentlemen-pension- do with his early debts, nor with ers. He expressed great unwilhng- those imaginary "bonds "or "statute- ness to renounce all his prospects in merchant," THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1568-71, tlemen-pensioners between March and June 1564; for though his name does not occur in the Roll of the Ba,nd, made at Lady-day in that year, yet on the SOth of June 1564" a warrant was issued to the Master of the Armoury, commanding him " to cause to be made one armour com plete, fit for the body of our weU-beloved servant Chris topher Hatton, one of our Gentlemen-pensioners, he pay ing according to the just value thereof,'"' and which was probably the usual order for the equipment of persons appointed to that situation. In 1568 Hatton was one of the "gentlemen of the Inner Temple" who wrote a tragedy called "Tancred and Gismund," which was acted before the Queen, apparently by the authors of the piece.' His contribution was the fourth act; to which, when the play was printed in 1592, his name was thus affixed — " Composuit Chr. Hatton." ^ Seven Rolls of the names of Gentlemen-pensioners in the reign of Elizabeth, befoie 1580, have been found ; viz, those of Srd, Sth, 6th, 16th, I9th, 20th, and 2Ist Eliz., all of which (except that of the 5th, which is in the State Paper Office) are in the Rolls House. The name of " Christopher Hatton " occurs only in the' Rolls of the 12th, ISth, and I9th EUz. ^ Original in the State Paper Of fice. ' Lord CampbeU (u. 138) says, but without giving his authority, that Hatton "did not act in this piece himself." The point is not very material ; but the dedication by its editor Wilmot, in 1692, as weU as the other introductory matter, show that it was performed by the authors. To the fair dedicatees, Lady Mary Petre and Lady Ann Grey, the edi tor says : " So, amongst others, these gentlemen, which with what sweet ness of voice, liveliness of action they then expressed it, they which were of her Majesty's Right Honour able maidens can testify." Wil mot's friend Webb, who requested him to print it, says, " The tragedy was by them" (the Inner Temple gentlemen) "most pithily framed, and no less curiously acted, in view of her Majesty, by whom it was then as princely accepted." " The brave youths that then, to their high praises, so feelingly per formed the same in action, did shortly after lay up the book unre garded, or perhaps let it run abroad, (as many parents do their children once past dandUng,) not respecting so much what hard fortune might befal it, being out of their fingers, as how their heroical wits might again be quickly conceived with new in ventions of Uke worthiness, whereof they have been ever sinoe wonder ful fertile." The names of the actors are not prefixed to the play ; but to the first act is added the sig nature "G. Al.," and to the second, "Per Hen, No," ^T, 28-31. J SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 7 In April 1568, Hatton exchanged his hereditary manors of Holdenby with the Queen for the site of the abbey and demesne lands of Sulby ; but on the same day she granted him a lease of the manors of Holdenby for forty years." From this time the Royal bounty flowed upon him in so copious a stream as to excite wonder, if not suspicion; for he had performed no service to the State, and to meritorious public servants Elizabeth was parsimonious, if not mean, in the distribution of rewards. It is said that the favours lavished upon Hatton excited the displeasure, if not the jealousy, of Leicester; and that, in ridicule of the accomplishment which first attracted the Queen's notice, he proposed to introduce a dancing-master, who excelled the young pensioner. But Elizabeth drew a proper distinction between the merit of an artist and the skill of an amateur: "Pish!" she said contemptuously, "I will not see your man; — it is his trade !"^ On the 27th of July in that year he was appointed Keeper of Eltham Park, and of the Park of Home. In 1569 the farm ofi the chapel of Monkton in Pembrokeshire was granted to him; and he was one of the Justices of the Peace in Northamptonshire," In February 1570 he obtained the reversion of the office of Queen's Remembrancer in the Exchequer;"* and, in 1571, an inn near Temple Bar caUed " the Ship," lands in Yorkshire and Dorsetshire, and the wardship of a minor were granted to him.' » Rot. Patent. 10 EUz.; Baker's Office. In a list of "Gentlemen under Northamptonshire, i. I9S. the Marquis of Northampton " in ¦• Miss Strickland's Life of Queen 1569, the name of "Hatton" was EUzabeth, vol. vi. p. 336 ; but the underUned by Cecil. — Ibid. fair authoress does not give her au- ¦¦ This grant was repeated in May thority. 1572. = List of Justices of the Peace in ' Rot. Patent. II, 12, 13, Ehz., October 1569, in the State Paper passim. 8 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1571-2. Hatton was returned to parUament for Higham Fer rers" in April 1571, but there is nothing to show that he took any part in its proceedings. In May 1571, he distinguished himself as one of the challengers in " a solemn tournay and barriers," before the Queen at West minster; his coUeagues being the Earl of Oxford, Mr. Charies Howard, and Sir Henry Lee, "who did very vaUantly, but the chief honour was given to the Earl ofOxford."* In 1572 he presented his Royal mistress, apparently for the first time, with a New-year's gift, consisting of a jewel of pizands of gold adorned with rubies and diamonds, and flowers set with rubies, with one pparl pendant, and another at the top.'' From this time Hatton, like the rest of the Court, never failed to make a similar offering to the Queen on New- year's day, obtaining in return silver-gilt plate; and it is deserving of remark, that while the largest quantity of plate ever given, even to the highest personage, never exceeded two hundred, and was seldom more than fifty ounces, ^ Hatton always received four hundred ounces on those occasions. Between February and July 1572, grants were made to him of woods in Here fordshire, of the manor of Frampton in Dorsetshire, of the reversion of the house of the monastery de Pratis in Leicestershire, of the stewardship of the manor of ' WiUis' Notitia Parliamentaria. of the Duchy, 30 ; Sir Francis Wal- ^ Nichols' Progresses of Queen singham, 60 ; the Treasurer of the Elizabeth, i. 276. Household, 25 ; the Comptroller, 24 ; " Ibid. 296. the Archbishop of York, 35 ; Lord ¦' See the Usts in Nichols' Pro- Howard, 104; Countesses, 18 to 50; grosses of Queen EUzabeth, vols. ii. Lord Howard, 104 ; and the Earl of and ni. pa.=!sim. The eariiest is in Ormonde, 165 ounces, which is the 1678. The Keeper of the Great largest quantity given except "to Seal received 34 ounces ; Leicester, Sir Christopher Hatton, Vice-Cham- then Master of the Horse, 100 ; the berlain ancf Captain of the Guard," Lord Admiral, 22 ; the ChanceUor who received 400 ounces ^T. 32.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 9 Wendlingborough in Northamptonshire, and of the wardship of two more minors." Though Hatton had then been at least eight years attached to the Court, his name has not been found in any correspondence of the period ; and his career seems to have been marked only by the extraordinary fa vour and liberal bounty of the Queen. That his posi tion rendered him an object of envy, cannot be doubted ; but he seems to have made more friends and fewer ene mies than any other Royal favourite. Literary men found in him a kind and generous patron; and his influence with the Queen had ena bled him to lay some of the highest personages in the State under obligations. An aflecting proof of his friendship for the Duke of Norfolk, who was condemned for high treason on the 16th of January 1572, but whose greatest crime was a design to marry the Queen of Scots, is afforded by a passage in the letter which that unfortunate nobleman wrote to his son, Philip Earl of Surrey, on the 20th of that month : " Mr. Hatton is a marveUous constant friend, one that I have been much beholden unto. Write unto him and seek his goodwiU, and I believe you shall find him assured." To this circumstance may be attributed the insertion of the following letter, from the Duke to his son, in Hatton's "Letter book." It was in tended that Norfolk should have been executed on the 2nd of February, and early in the morning of that day he wrote this pathetic letter in his Bible ; but he was then respited, and not put to death untU the 2nd of June. The young Earl of Surrey naturally revered the book so bequeathed to him, and wrote in it, " Phi- > Rot. Pat. 14 EUz. 10 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1572. lip Surreye and this booke ought no waye be sepa rated, but be together alwayes; and I PhUip Surreye testify the same, beinge written with myne owen hande."" THOMAS DUKE OF NORFOLK TO HIS SON, PHILIP EARL OF SURREY. Now, my dear son Philip, the hour is come that your earthly father must bid you farewell : and so I do with a right goodwiU, as well yourself as also your loving wife, my well-beloved daughter; your two brethren, my dear children; and mine own sweet daughter, with your pretty sisters-in- law.'' For I have, by my most eamest prayers to Almighty God, for His dear Son's sake Jesus Christ, committed you wholly over to His divine Majesty; whose grace if you call for earnestly, with a constant faith in Christ only, no doubt you shall receive more mercy and goodness at His hands than my natural affection unto you can either think for or wish you. Besides, I have by most humble petition to my most gracious sovereign Lady, Queen, and Mistress,"^ offered you " Harleian MSS. 6991, where his second wife, Margaret, daughter another copy, differing slightly from and heiress of Tliomas Lord Audley the one in the text, occois. Copies of Walden, the Duke of Norfolk left of the Duke's letter to his children on two sons, viz. Thomas, ancestor of the 20th of February, bidding them the Earls of Suffolk and Berkshire, farewell in the most tender terms, and WiUiam, ancestor of the Earls of and advising them as to their con- Carlisle, and of Mr. Howard of duct in life, as well as of the letter Corby, Both Thomas and WilUam of that date to his son, are in the Howard married daughters of Lord Harleian MSS. 787, 4808, &c., and Dacre and sisters of their half-bro- they may all have been printed. ther the Earl of Arundel's wife, and '' By his first wife, Mary, only a daughter Margaret, who became child of Henry Fitz-Alan, Earl of the wife of Robert Earl of Dorset. Arundel, he had his son and heir. The Duke married a third wife, who Philip Howard, then styled Earl of died in 1569, and by whom he had Surrey, who inherited the earldom of no issue, but who lefi two daughters Arundel from his mother. Though by her first husband. then very young, he was married ¦= This petition is in Hayne's to Anne, eldest daughter of Tho- State Papers, p. 166, In the Duke's mas, and sister and co-heir of letter to the Queen, of the .23rd of George Lord Dacre of GiUesland, January, caUed his "confession," he and he died a prisoner in the gratefully acknowledges her "iii- Tower, under sentence of death for tended goodness to his unfortunate treason, in November 1595, By brats." Ibid. p. 168. ^T. 32.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 11 (as poor orphans cast away) unto the comfort of her High ness' most merciful goodness ; to whom with your hearts, if you have not minds fully bent, as your abilities will serve you, to make some satisfaction for me your father's disobedience. Instead of well-wishing you, I pray God send you short lives; but I hope, as it may be an example unto you to take heed of undutifulness, so you will remember this my last charge. And because by mine own experience I know how forgetful youth is, and for fear lest your young years (which I have most unhappily overthrown) should utterly sink for want of bridling, I have by my earnest petition chosen for you my children one" that I hope v?ill be to you another myself: not that I can claim any so great kindness at his hands by desert, (who have been ever beholden to him, and I never able to pleasure him,) but for the former experience that I have had of his friendship; and now, lastly, when friendship was most tried, that it pleased him, at my fervent request, to be your adoptive father. It is, methinks, no little comfort unto me, at this time of my death, that I have so well bestowed you, first, to the protection of the most merciful God; secondly, to the most gracious and pitiful heart of my most redoubted Queen and Mistress; thirdly, to the care of so friendly and vigilant a nobleman, now your earthly father. I write briefly now, because my mind is wholly bent upon that which I have more care of than of yourselves: have regard to my meaning, and not to my uncouthed sentences, or perhaps unapt words. I have written to you at length heretofore, which perhaps is come to your hands ere this. Remember my former lessons, as well as if I should repeat them anew. They be but short; but, if you follow them, you shall find them sweet, and best for your souls' health, and for your worldly profit and quietness. Be obedient to your new good father, and to those other my friends that in my letters I have recommended unto you ; and be advised by such of my servants as have been trustiest unto me, for they are able to give you that counsel which shall be fittest for you to ^ Lord Burghley. 12 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1572. follow. I write thus much unto you in this place of the Book, because by godly Job you may learn to be patient m this adversity that my desert hath now laid upon you, and say with that good man the one-and-twentieth verse in his first chapter; and on the other side, of the Psalms of good Kmg David, you may select and see many sentences again for the comfort of your afliicted minds. But the true cause why I send you this Book is, to the end you may study it well, and live accordingly, for so shaU you be thought to fear to do evil O God, forgive me, I beseech Him, all my misdeeds! If I had done as I now counsel you, this misfortune had not chanced; and yet behold the mercifulness of God, for although I was called but at the eleventh hoiu:, yet I hope I have taken that instruction of this Book of Life as hath made me fit to battle against the devil, death, and all worldly temptations. God grant, for His mercy's sake in my Saviour Jesus Christ, that I may so strongly in spiritual grace continue till my last breath ! O Philip, is not this then a worthy Book, that, if you ply it worthily, vnll keep thee ever from deadly sin? and yet if thou fall, by the frailty of Adam's flesh, in this Book thou mayest find comfort to be again and again renewed and reconciled to Jesus Christ. Read this Book, study it, and meditate upon it, and the Lord -will bless you, not only in this world, but also in the world to come, where nova facta sunt omnia, and where I raost humbly beseech Him to grant us a joyful meeting. That is the only kingdom. Pray most effectually for the long preservation of our most gracious Queen, for our Lord save her ! If aught should chance otherwise than well to her noble person, your misery shall be doubled, and your back friends perchance strengthened. Be ware of factions (whereof there be too many), if you love your own life, or will save that little that by hap is left you. Farewell, my dear son! as you may think, when you see how much time I have bestowed upon you at this instant, when time is more precious unto me than all the good in the world. And the Lord bless you all, my dear children ! I wish this to the rest as well as to you, and send you all His grace, which is no ways to be obtained but by faith in Jesus JET. 3a.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 13 Christ; in which faith the Lord of His merciful goodness strengthen you now and evermore. Amen! The 2nd of February, which, within four hours after, might have been written with my heart's blood. Remember my lessons, and forget me. Written between four and fiye of the clock by me your earthly woeful father, but joyful. I most humbly thank the Lord, that I hope my time draweth so near that my soul shall enjoy bliss, and leave this crooked lump of sinful fiesh. Sometime Norfolk, now Thomas Howard." In May 1572, Hatton was elected a Knight of the Shire for Northampton, and he continued to represent that county'' until he became Lord Chancellor. On the 13th of July Lord Burghley was made Lord High Treasurer; Lord William Howard, Lord Privy Seal; the Earl of Sussex, Lord Chamberlain; and Sir Thomas Smith, Secretary of State. On the same occasion the office of Captain of the Guard becoming vacant by Sir Francis KnoUys being made Treasurer of the Household, he was succeeded by Hatton," who still retained the situation of Gentleman of the Privy Cham ber and of Gentleman-pensioner. Though large beneficial grants had been made to Hatton, no important office, nor any honour, for he was not even Knighted untU five years after this period, had been conferred upon him; yet the Queen's regard for him was so notorious, that he was considered to rival the Earl of Leicester in her favour, and scandal was equally rife with respect to them both. The earliest allusion that has been found to these injurious reports shows how prevalent they must have been. In August 1570, > Additional MSS. I689I fo. 149. " Stow, p. 672. Nichols' Pro- ¦¦ WilUs' Notitia Parliamentaria. gresses, i. 307. 14 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1573, several persons were tried, and some executed at Nor wich, for treasonable speeches and designs, "They had set out four proclamations : one was touching the wantonness of the Court;" and one of the conspirators called Marsham,' having said that " my Lord of Lei cester had two children by the Queen," was sentenced to lose both his ears, or pay a fine of one hundred pounds." Among the traitorous speeches of a person caUed Mather, in 1571, according to Berney's written confession to Lord Leicester, was, that the Queen " desireth nothing but to feed her own lewd fantasy, and to cut off such of her nobUity as were not perfumed and court-like to please her delicate eye, and place such as were for her turn, meaning dancers, and meaning you my Lord of Leicester, and one Mr. Hatton, whom he said had more recourse unto her Majesty in her privy chamber than reason would suffer if she were so virtuous and well- inclined as some noiseth her ; with other such vile words as I am ashamed to speak, much more to write."'' In a letter from Archbishop Parker to Lord Burghley, in September 1572, he says he was credibly informed that some man had, in his examination by the Mayor of Dover and Mr. Sommers, uttered " most shameful words against her" (the Queen), namely, that the Eari of Leicester and Mr. Hatton should be such to wards her as the matter is so horrible that they would not write down the words, but would have uttered them in speech to your lordship if ye could have been at leisure." ° But there were far more distinguished and more => Lodge's "Illustrations of British Orig., printed in Strype's Life of History, ' Svo. vol. i. pp. 614, 616. Archbishop Parker, ed. Oxon. vol. <> Murdin's State Papers, p. 204. ii. p. 127 ; and in Wright's " Queen « Lansdowne MSS, 16, art 43. EUzabeth and her Times," i, 440. .ET. 32.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 15 virulent calumniators of the Queen than these obscure people. Mary Queen of Scots' charges must be here repeated, however disgusting or untrue. In her celebrated letter to Elizabeth, she says, that the Countess of Shrewsbury had expressed regret " que vous ne vous contentiez de maistre Haton et un autre de (x^ieafavJme^ buthad for gotten her honour with Simyer, as well as with the Duke d'Anjou, his master. " Quant au dict Haton, que vous le couriez a force, faisant si publiquement paroitre I'amour que luy portiez, qui luy mesmes estoit contreint de s'en retirer, et que vous donnastes un soufflet a Kili- greu pour ne vous avoir ramene le dict Haton, que vous avviez envoiay rappeler par luy, s'etant desparti en choUere d'auveques vous pour quelques injures que luy auviez dittes pour certiens boutons d'or qu'il auvoit sur son habit. Qu'elle auvoit travaille de fayre espouser au dit Haton la feu Comtesse de Lenox sa filie, mays que de creinte de vous, il ne osoit ententre." Mary then says that the Earl of Oxford dared not cohabit with his wife " de peur de perdre la faveur qu'U esperoit re- cepvoir par vous fayre I'amour ; " that she was lavish towards all such people, " et ceulx qui se mesloient de teUes mesnees, comme a un de vostre chambre. Gorge,"" to whom she had given three hundred pounds of rent, " pour vous avoir apporte les nouveUes du retour de Haton."*' * Query if the Williara Gorge or she hated, and at the same time in- Gorges, who was for many years one juring Lady Shrewsbury, whom she of the Gentlemen-pensioners. detested, — a double revenge, too tempting to a vindictive and injured ^ Murdin's State Papers, 558, woman to be lost, and perfectly con- The admirers of Mary affect to sistent with Mary's temper, — ex- doubt the authenticity of this letter, plains away most of the objections which is said to have been printed taken to it. It receives some sup- from the original ; but the opportu- port from Lady Shrewsbury's step- nity of exasperating Elizabeth, whom son, Gilbert Talbot, having informed 16 ' THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1572. Cardinal Allen, in his " Admonition to the NobUity and People of England and Ireland," in 1588, charges her, in the coarsest terms, with having intrigued with Leicester and " with divers others," and speaks of her " unlawful, long concealed, or fained issue."" To these facts may be added, that the notoriety of Elizabeth's incontinence was aUeged by the Duke of Anjou as his reason for refusing to marry her;'' and that one of Lord Burghley's objections to her marrying Lei cester was, that " it would be thought that the slan derous speeches of the Earl with the Queen have beeh true.'"' Extraordinary evidence on this delicate subject is afforded by the following letter to Hatton, from his friend Edward Dyer,*^ written a few weeks after the be fore-mentioned examination at Dover, and by the stUl more remarkable letters from Hatton to the Queen, which will be afterwards given. The letter from Dyer proves that whatever may have been the nature of Elizabeth's regard for Hatton, it was perfectly well known to his friends ; and that, a rival having appeared, Hatton was thrown into the shade. He therefore con- his father of the Queen's flirtation bassadeurs, qui y ont est^, qu'il pen- with the Earl of Oxford in IS73. seroit estre deshonnori et perdre toute * Cardinal AUen's charges are la. reputation qu'il pense avoir ac- abridged and translated in a note to gu'ise." Lingard's History of Bngland, Svo. <= Hayne's State Papers, p. 444. vol. viii. p. 635. a Edward Dyer was one of the I" In a Letter from the Queen Mo- many dependants of the Earl of Lei- ther, Catherine de Medicis, to De la cester. He was occasionally em- Motte Fenelon, the French ambas- ployed in the Queen's service, and sador, (Ed. Cooper, vol. vii. p. 179,) was rewarded in 1696 by the ap- she said, " Et pour venir au poinct, pointment of ChanceUor of the Order c'est que mon fils m'a faict dire par of the Garter, when he was Knight- le Roy qu'il ne la veut jamais es- ed ; and died about 1607. An pouser, quand bien eUe le voudroit, account of Dyer, by the Editor of d aultant qu'il a tousjours si mal oui this work, will be found in " Davi- parler de son honneur, et en a veu son's Poetical Rhapsody," ed. 1826, des lettres escriptes de tous les am- where this letter was first printed. ^T. 82,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, , 17 suited Dyer as to the means of maintaining or recover ing his position in the Queen's favour. Finding that Hatton contemplated the dangerous plan of reproaching Elizabeth for the change in her sentiments, he earnestly advised him not to adopt so perilous a course ; and, if the expressions used by Dyer are to receive their usual interpretation, it is difficult to disbelieve the reports which were then so prevalent. Hatton's. rival was apparently the young and eccentric Earl of Oxford, who had lately married the daughter of Lord Burgh ley, and whom he cruelly treated in revenge for her father's having refused his request to intercede with the Queen for the Duke of Norfolk. As Oxford, be sides his illustrious descent, was distinguished for the same personal qualities as those which obtained the Queen's favour for Hatton," his jealousy is not sur prising;— MR. DYER TO MR. HATTON. Sir, After my departure from you, thinking upon your case as my dear friend, I thought good to lay before you mine opinion in writing somewhat more at large than at my last conference I did speak. And I do it of goodwill, for you need no counsel of mine I know right well. But one that standeth by shall see more in the game than one that is much more skilful, whose mind is too earnestly occupied. I will not recite the argument, or put the case as it were, for it needeth not ; but go to the reasons, such as they be. First of aU, you must consider with whom you have to deal, and what we be towards her ; who though she do descend very much in her sex as a woman, yet we may not forget her place, and the nature of it as our Sovereign. Now if a man, of secret cause knovni to himself, might in common reason challenge it, yet if the Queen mislike thereof, the world i" Vide page 23, post. VOL. I. C 18 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1572. followeth the sway of her inclination ; and never fall they in consideration of reason, as between private persons they do. And if it be after that rate for the most part in causes that may be justified, then much more will it be so in causes not to be avouched. A thing to be had in regard; for it is not good for any man straitly to weigh a general disal lowance of her doings. That the Queen will mislike of such a course, this is my reason: she will imagine that you go about to imprison her fancy, and to warp her grace wdthin your disposition; and that vwll breed despite and hatred in her towards you : and so you may be cast forth to the malice of every envious person, flatterer, and enemy of yours ; out of which you shall never recover yourself clearly, neither your friends, so long as they show themselves your friends. But if you will make a proof (par ver vramo,'- as Spanish phrase is) to see how the Queen and he will yield to it, and it prosper, go through vrithal ; if not, to change your course suddenly into another more agreeable to her Majesty, I can like indifferently of that. But then you must observe this, that it be upon a by-occasion, for else it were not convenient for divers reasons that you cannot but think upon. But the best and soundest way in mine opinion is, to put on another mind ; to use your suits towards her Majesty in words, behaviour, and deeds; to acknowledge your duty, declaring the reverence which in heart you bear, and never seem deeply to condemn her frailties, but rather joyfully to commend such things as should be in her, as though they were m her indeed; hating my Lord of Ctm- in the Queen's understanding for affection's sake, and blaming him openly for seekmg the Queen's favour. For though in the beginning when her Majesty sought you (after her good manner), she did bear v.ith rugged deahng of yours, until she had what she tancied yet now, after satiety and fulness, it wiU rather Hurt than help you ; whereas, behaving yourself as I said thiw5"ob?curi^y.^" '""''''"" '^ P''^*"^"^^ P-^^'t'-to «ee daylight •^ Query Oxford 1 ^T, 32,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 19 before, your place shaU keep you in worship, your presence in favour, your foUowers will stand to you, at the least you shaU have no bold enemies, and you shall dwell in the ways to take all advantages wisely, and honestly to serve your turn at times. Marry, thus much I would advise you to remem ber, that you use no words of disgrace or reproach towards him to any; that he, being the less provoked, may sleep, thinking all safe, while you do awake and attend your advan tages. Otherwise you shall, as it were, warden him and keep him in order ; and he will make the Queen think that he beareth aU for her sake, which will be as a merit in her sight ; and the pursuing of his revenge shaU be just in all men's opinions, by what means soever he and his friends shall ever be able. You may perchance be advised and encouraged to the other way by some kind of friends that wiU be glad to see whether the Queen wiU make an apple or a crab of you, which, as they find, vdll deal accordingly with you ; foUovying if fortune be good; if not, leave, and go to your enemy: for such kind of friends have no commodity by hanging in suspense, but set you a fire to do off or on, — aU is one to them ; rather liking to have you in any extremity than in any good mean. But beware not too late of such friends, and of such as make themselves glewe between them and you, whether it be of ignorance or practice. Well, not to trouble you any longer, it is very necessary for you to impart the effect of this with your best and most accounted friends, and most worthy to be so ; for then you shall have their assistance every way ; who, being made privy of your council, will and ought in honour to be partners of your fortune, which God grant to be of the best. The 9th of October 1572. Your assured poor friend to command, Edw. Dyer." Though the original letter does not exist, there is no reason to doubt the accuracy of the transcript. It occurs among the copies of many other letters and docu- ^ In the Harieian MSS. 787, fol. 88. . c2 20 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1572, ments of the period, which were found in the possession of Mr. DeU, who had been Secretary to Archbishop Laud. The internal evidence of its genuineness is strong ; and becomes stiU stronger when compared with Dyer's other letters, especially with his letter to Lord Leicester some years later," giving him advice respecting his proceedings in the Low Countries. The danger which it might be supposed would attend any person who ven tured to commit such sentences to writing, if they really had the meaning which they seem to bear, is some reason for suspecting the letter, or for giving a very different construction to the passages; but the Queen's attachment to Hatton was so notorious that it accounts for Dyer's recommending Hatton to consult his "best and most accounted friends" on the subject. Though there is no date to the following letter from Hatton to the Queen, and though he feU under her dis pleasure on subsequent occasions, there can be little doubt that it was written at this period; and it shews the ostensible cause of his loss of favour. It is super scribed with this cypher, instead of the proper ad dress; — AAA Madam, In striving to withstand your violent course of evil opinion towards me, I might perhaps the more offend " Memoir of Sir Edward Dyer, in « Davison's Poetical Rhapsodv " ed 1826, vol. i. p. Ixxix. • ' ^T. 32.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 21 you, because the truth of my cause disagreeth with the rigour of your judgment. But the bitterness of my heart in humble complaints I trust you will hear, for your goodness and jus tice sake. May it therefore please you, my faults are said to be these ; — unthankfulness, covetousness, and ambition. To the first, T speak the truth before God, that I have.most entirely loved your person and service ; to the which, without exception, I have everlastingly vowed my whole life, liberty, and fortune. Even so am I yours, as, whatever God and you should have made me, the same had been your own ; than which I could, nor any can, make larger recompense. This I supposed to have been the true remuneration of greatest good tui-ns, because I know it balanceth in weight the greatest good wills. Neither hath the ceremony of thanks giving any way wanted, as the world will right fully witness with me ; and therefore in righteousness I most humbly pray you condemn me not. Spare your poor prostrate servant from this pronounced vengeance. To the second, I ever found. your largess befpre my lack, in such plenty as I could wish no more, so that by craving I never argued myself covetous ; if any other way it appeared, let it be of foUy and not of evil mind that so I have erred : yet God knoweth I never sought nor wished more wealth than to Hve worthily in your most sacred service, without mixture of any other opinion, purpose, or matter. I trust therefore in your holy heart this truth shaU have his settled place. God for His mercy grant it may so be. To the third, God knoweth I never sought place but to serve you ; though indeed, to shield my poor self, both nature and reason would have taught me to ask refuge at your strong and mighty hand. These late great causes that most displeased your nobles, as of the Duke of N. and Q. of S.," the Acts of Parliament for religion, and other strange courses in those things taken, were all laid on my weak shoulders ; under which when I shall fall, behold then the wretched man how he shall pass all pointed at. But to my purpose, if ever » Duke of Norfolk and Queen of Scots : vide p. 9, ante. 22 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1573. I inordinately sought either honour, or riches, place, calling, or dignity, I pray to God that hell might swallow me. Be Ueve not, I humbly beseech you for your wisdom and worthi ness, the tale so evil told of your most faithful : be not led by lewdness of others to lose your ovm, that truly loveth you. These most unkind conceits wonderfully wring me : reserve me more graciously to be bestowed on some honourable enter prise for you ; and so shaU I die a most joyful man and eter nally bound to you. But would God I might win you to think well according with my true meaning ; then should I acquiet my mind, and serve you with joy and further hope of goodness. I ask right of Her will do no wrong; and yet this hard hap doth follow me, that I must make prayer for the blessing that every man hath without demand or asking. I fear your too great trouble in reading this blotted letter. I will therefore with my most dutiful submission pray for your long and happy life. I pray God bless you for ever. Your despairing most wretched bondman, Ch. Hatton." Early in May 1573, Hatton was seriously ill; and, however much the Queen's regard for him may have been lessened, his indisposition certainly revived her affection. On the llth of that month Mr. GUbert Talbot wrote a letter to his father, the Earl of Shrewsbury, filled with news ; and it affords so much curious information on the state of the Court, that a few sentences will be extract ed, besides the one immediately relating to Hatton : — " My Lord Treasurer, even after the old manner, dealeth with matters of the State only, and beareth himself very uprightly. My Lord Leicester is very much with her Majesty, and she sheweth the same great good affection to him that she was wont : of late, he hath endeavoured » Autograph in the State Paper Oflice. ^T. 83.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 23 to please her more than heretofore. There are two sisters now in the Court that are very far in love with him, as they have been long, my Lady Sheffield and Frances Howard:" they of Uke striving who shall love him better are at great wars together, and the Queen thinketh not weU of them, and not the better of him; by this means there is spies over him. My Lord of Sus sex goeth with the tide, and helpeth to back others ; but his own credit is sober, considering his estate : he is very dUigent in his office, and takes great pains. My Lord of Oxford is lately grown into great credit; for the Queen's Majesty delighteth more in his personage, and his dancing and valiantness, than any other. I think Sussex doth back him all that he can ; if it were not for his fickle head, he would sure pass any of them shortly. My Lady Burghley *" unwisely has declared herself (as it were) jealous, which is come to the Queen's ear; whereat she hath been not a little offended with her, but now she is reconciled again. At all these love matters my Lord Treasurer winketh, and will not meddle any way. Hat ton is sick StiU; it is thought he wiU very hardly re cover his disease, for it is doubted it is in his kidneys : the Queen goeth almost every day to see how he doth. Now is there devices, chiefly by Leicester (as I suppose), and not without Burghley's knowledge, how to make Mr. Edward Dyer as great as ever was Hatton ; for now, in this time of Hatton's sickness, the time is convenient. It is brought thus to pass : Dyer lately was sick of a consumption, in great danger; and, as your Lordship knoweth, he hath been in displeasure these two years : it " Daughters of William Lord How- •> The Earl of Oxford's mother-in ard of Effingham, The Earl of Lei- law, cester married the former, and the Eari of Hertford the latter. 24 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578, was made the Queen believe that his sickness came be cause of the continuance of her displeasure towards him, that, unless she would forgive him, he was like not to recover; and hereupon her Majesty hath forgiven him, and sent unto him a very comfortable message : now he is recovered again, and this is the beginning of this device. These things I learn of such young fellows as myself."" On the 23rd of May, Lord Talbot informed his father that the Queen was desirous of making a progress to Bris tol, but that it was wished to dissuade her from going so far on account ofthe unseasonableness of the weather ; and he added, "Mr, Hatton, by reason of his great sickness, is minded to go to the Spa for the better recovery of his health,'"' On the 29th of May an order was signed by the Privy Council for aUowing Hatton " to pass over the seas for recovery of his health,"" and the deep solicitude which the Queen felt about him was shewn by her causing him to be accompanied by Dr. Julio, the eminent Court physician. Hatton took leave of Elizabeth on the 3rd of June; and few letters have le« rf' Art%^S'TQ '" *.'f °'" S"° ^'' ^'"Sress Mr, Hat- lege ot Arms it . fo 79, printed m ton (not weU in health) took this Lodge s "Illustrations of British opportunity to get leave ti ffo to the " H^l^te'r-'Httorv^Sf '^ f ^l'^-' .- Autograph in the State Paper themselves: — Office. Though the inquiry after " Even such good health my friend letters from Queen EUzabeth to Hat- as never can appair is vrished may ton has not been successful, it has fall unto your share by one even brought to light parts of two very re- whoUy yours, if he can he such a markable documents, which may pos- one, that scant is found to he his sibly have been the " gracious letters" own. Your curious care to know to which he alludes (p. 26), because what grief incumbred my breast in one of them she speaks of the together with the remedy that may health of the person to whom it was cure the sore, is harder for me to addressed ; both were written at the utter than write. If my guest were same time ; and the conclusion of the not worse than his lodging, the rest second of them may have been the were not worse than the travail. " last word," which he says was And lest my paraphrase agi-ee not " worth the Bible." If these extracts with my text, I win make mine own were really made from letters to Hat- exposition. The constitution of my ton,theytendtonegative the injurious mind's vessel is not so evil framed, impressions created by other circum- as whereupon grievous diseases or stances, and they ought, therefore, perilous mjiladies have taken hold. I to be here inserted. In the Editor's find not the mixture so evil made as opinion, however, they did not form that any one element of all four, parts of the Queen's letters to him; overruleth so his fellows, as that the but they shew, at all events, that she rest may envy his hap. Since but sometimes repressed improper wishes, one other part the divine power hath ^T, 33,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 31 The exact time of Hatton's return to England is not known, but it must have been before October in this year; for, on the llth of that month, a religious enthu siast, named Peter Burchet, a student of the Middle Temple, deemed it a matter of conscience to assassinate Hatton," because he had made himself obnoxious to the Puritans, by whom he was considered " a wilful Papist, and hindereth the glory of God so much as in him lieth;" '' but, mistaking Captain Hawkins" of the Queen's given us for the best, it foUoweth then that there must be the plaint, or gone is aU the moan. If your request, that seldom I deny, had not enforced u custom newly made, it would have pleased me weU that you should not forget how hardly green wounds sufFer their toucher's hand ; but since a nay your firm frieud can scarce be brought to make you, the upper scale you shall touch to sound the depth shall serve the feeler's part. uTien I a gathering make of common paths and trades and think upon the sundry sorts of traveUers in them both, I find a muse no greater, when multitudes be gathered and faces many one, amongst the which not two of all be found alike ; then wonder breeds in me, how all this worldly mass so long is made to hold, where never a mould is framed aUke, nor never a mind agrees. And were it not that heavenly power overcometh human philosophy, it would content me well to remember that an evil is much better the less while it endureth." ***** "A question once was asked me thus. Must aught be denied a friend's request? Answer me yea or nay. It was said — Nothing. And first it is best to scan what a friend is, which 1 think nothing else but friendship's harbour. Now it follow eth what friendship is, which I deem to be one uniform consent of two minds, such as virtue links arid naught but death can break. There fore I conclude that the house that shrinketh from his foundation shall down for me ; for friend leaves he to be, that doth demand more than the giver's grant with reason's leave may yield. And if so, then my friend no more; my foe. God send thee mend. And if needly thou must will, yet at the least no power be thine to atchieve thy desire. For where minds difi^er and opinions swerve, there is scant a friend in that com pany. But if my hap have fallen in so happy a soil, as one such be found that wills but that beseems, and I be pleased with that he so allows, I bid myself fareweU, — and then I am but his." — Contemporary copies in the State Paper Office, indorsed " A couple of letters of the Qu, endited and written at one time." " Sir Thomas Smith, writing to Lord Burghley on the 15th of Octo ber 1673, says, " It is said here that divers times within this fortnight, both by words and vmtings, Mr, Hatton hath been admonished to take heed to himself, for his life was laid in wait for." Wright's Queen EUzabeth and her Times, i. 492. ^ Burchet's (or, as he wrote his name, Byrchet) autograph confession in the Lansdowne MSS., 17. art. 88. " The celebrated navigator Sir John Hawkins ; but neither Camp bell nor Prince notice the circum stance in their accounts of his life. 32 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1573, navy for his intended victim, Burchet struck that offi cer with his dagger, as he was riding with Sir WiUiam Winter near Temple Bar towards Westminster. The wound, though severe, was not mortal; and, Burchet being sent to the Tower, he there murdered his keeper. As the false humanity of considering every fanatical as sassin necessarily insane was not then in fashion, or, as a learned authority expresses it, "as they did not then stand on such niceties," " the criminal was justly condemned, and as properly executed.'' Whether from indignation at the act, or terror at the danger from which her favourite had so narrowly escaped, Elizabeth ordered a commis sion to be issued for executing Burchet by martial law ; and she was with some difficulty persuaded from so illegal a measure." Only one letter of the year 1573 occurs in Hattons Letter-book. The Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir William Fitzwilliam, had, with the consent of the majority of the Council, improperly granted a full pardon to a man accused of slaying a gentleman ; and they had, moreover, complained of Sir Edward Fitton, one of the Council and Treasurer of Ireland, for having objected to the pardon. The Queen severely reprimanded the Deputy, and told the Council that they ought not servilely to adopt his views, but to advise him when they thought he was mis taken ; and she highly applauded Fitton for his firmness. The comparison which she draws between the severity of Henry the Eighth on a similar occasion, and her own " moderate reign and government," is amusing ; — " Lord CampbeU. "= Camden's Annals, and Ellis's i* Stow's Annals, 677. Strype's Original Letters, second series, vol. Annals, ed, Oxford, 427, 428, Cam- iii, p, 27. den's Annals, b. ii. p. 62. .ET, 83.] sra CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 33 THE QUEEN TO THE DEPUTY AND COUNCIL OF IRELAND. Right trusty and well-beloved, and trusty and well-be loved, we greet you weU. We have received your letter of the 12th of June, in the which, for the matter of pardon granted, and also touching Sir Edward Fitton, having read and considered the whole that you have written, and Ukewise that he hath written, of that matter unto us, we cannot but mislike that you the Deputy should be so hasty to give such and so general a pardon upon the slaying of a gentleman: for, where the corrupt jury of the coroner's quest did find it but se defendendo, it may easily appear that was no true verdict, and that it was a murther; or else you would not in that case have made out a general pardon, but a particular pardon upon the indictment, and, of course, as in like cases are wont. But this pardon is so general, that aU treasons, murders, and other enormities, and transgressions of laws be pardoned, and from the friend of the man murdered all prose cution of law taken away, such a one as we ourself (for we have seen the copy of it) would be afraid to grant, nor have not granted (to our knowledge) at any time since the first day of our reign : for it is not unknown to our Council here, and to aU that have any doings with us, how seldom, and with what difficulty and conscience we be brought to pardon any man where suspicion of murther and mahce pretensed is ; and how curious we be to be informed of the matter when any of our subjects be slain, before we will condescend to discharge any man of it. That discretion we looked for in you our Deputy, and therefore we put you in that place, lest the blood of the man slain should cry vengeance upon us and our realm not doing justice for it, and that the punishment of the murder should be a terror to others to adventure upon the Uke. But if you our Deputy should overslip yourself in this, either by hastiness or temerity, yet, as it appeareth, you the rest of our Council there have done as Kttle your duties to God and us, in that you would put your hands unto it ; as, whatsoever the Deputy therein for the time 34 THE LIFE AND TIMES OP [1573-4. should do and aUow, you would straight run into the same rashness, and affirm it with subscription of your hands as applauders of our Deputy. You be put there to be grave and sage advisers, to temper such sudden affections either the one way or the other, of love or of hatred, as may chance to our Deputy, being but a man made of flesh and blood, who cannot lightly be without them ; and to have regard to God first, and then to our honour and the surety and good government of our realm. Sir Edward Fitton seemeth to us a true and a good Counsellor, who, seeing so unreasonable a pardon so unadvisedly granted, made stay of it to bring it unto you our Deputy to be better advised of it, not resist ing, but discreetly requiring more mature consultation ; and for this you will agree to put him to that shame as to commit him for a contemner of your doings, imputing rashness unto him in that behalf, where, in truth, he honoured us, in re quiring more deliberation and regard than was had, to be had in justice, the which is clean taken away by that rash and unjust pardon. He refused "to sit with you, and he had cause so to do ; for it appeareth you are all rather foUowers of the Deputy's affections, than careful ministers of justice or of our honour. If you had done well, you should have done as he did, requiring the Deputy to stay to take better advise ment: so should you have showed more care of justice, of our honour, and of the good government of that our realm, than of following the hasty affection of our Deputy. You are adjoined to him from us as Counsellors, and in one commission, not to follow one head, or whatsoever the Deputy willeth ; but to consider what is just and reason to be done, and so agree with him and set to your hands, and no other wise ; and therefore be you more than one, that, if need be, one may temper the other. Nicholas White, as appeareth by your letter, not daring to dissent against so running a con sent, yet showed his conscience not to consent to affection, and would prescribe no punishment to that fact, which ia his conscience he thought to be the duty of a good Counsellor to do. If this had been in our father's tirae, who removed a JET. 84,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 35 Deputy thence for caUing of one of the Council dissenting from his opinion 'churl,' you may soon conceive how it would have been taken. Our raoderate reign and govern ment can be contented to bear this, so you will take this for a warning, and hereafter have before your eyes, not the will or pleasure of our Deputy or any other Counsellor, but first God's honour, and then justice and our service, which is always joined to the good governraent of the realm, not foUowing in any respect any private quarrels or affections. And as to you our Deputy, we shall hereafter write our mind more at large : so wiU we not forget to give thanks to our good cousin, the Earl of Kildare, for his good service. And we could be content that the Earl of Orraond were at home. We have written to Sir Edward Fitton, willing him to join with you in Council and take his place again ; and do wish that, aU sinister affections laid apart, you do join all in one to do that which may be to the honour of God and of our service, to the execution of justice, and to the good govern ment of that realm. Given under our sjgnet at our manor of Greenwich, the 29th of June 1573, the 15th year of our reign.* The Queen visited Bristol in August 1574, attended by Leicester, Hatton, and the other officers of her household. Churchyard, the prolific versifier, from whom several letters occur, published an account of her reception in the second edition of his book, called " Churchyard's Chips," which he dedicated to " the Right Worshipful, his tried and worthy friend, Master Christopher Hatton, Esquire, Captain of the Queen's Majesty's Guard, and Gentleman of her Highness's Privy Chamber." His motive for thus inscribing his work he thus explains: " The long liking and goodwUl, with the fast friend ship I find in you, good Master Hatton, procures my pen presently to perform that I promised no smaU Additional MSS. 16891, f, 22. d2 30 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1574-6. time since, touching a book of aU my EngUsh verses in metre. The ofier whereof came from myself, not for the goodness of the matter, but for the perfect ness of the person to whom I meant to dedicate my work." It was in this year that Hatton, with the approbation of the Queen, first applied to Dr. Cox, Bishop of Ely, for the lease of the episcopal house in Ely Place, Holborn, The bishop made, however, so vigorous though fruitless a defence of the property of his See,* as to call forth this weU-known reprimand from the Queen : " Proud Prelate ! I understand you are backward in complying with your agreement, but I would have you know, that I who made you what you are can unmake you; and if you do not forthwith fulfil your engage ment, by God I will immediately unfrock you. ^ " Elizabeth.'"" Hatton was then so much in debt, that in December of this year Mr. Walsingham communicated the Queen's commands to Lord Burghley, that, of the note of the hundred pounds land that was given to him by Hatton, he should apply fifty pounds of it, as he might think most fit for her to part with, to him, " for that she is content to bestow so much on him presently towards the payment of his debts." " In the year 1575 few notices have been found of Hatton. He presented his usual New-year's gift to the Queen, and her favour to him was manifested by large => Strype's Annals, ed. Oxford, i. pt. i. p. 136, where the above copy 601, 602, 633, 641 ; ii. 269, 664, 584. of it is printed from " the Register ' There are so many versions of of Ely." this pithy letter that its authenticity <^ Original letter from Walsing- becomes doubtful. No better autho- ham to the Lord Treasurer, 12th rity has been found for it than the December 1574. Lansdowne MSS. Gentleman's Magazine, vol, Ixxix. 18, art, 96, ^T. 35,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 37 grants. In January he obtained lands in several coun ties : in August the manor of Chapel Brompton in Northamptonshire was given to him ; and, on the Sth of December, Elizabeth settled four hundred pounds a year upon him for life, which donations were fol lowed in the next year by the gift of Corfe Castle in Dorsetshire, and other lands in various parts of Eng land." One of the few occasions on which Hatton appears in Parliamentary proceedings occurred in the Parliament which met in February 1575-6. Mr. Peter Went worth, one of the members for Tregony, made a speech which astonished the pliant Commons. To advert to the acts of the Crown or to the state of the Country, except in terms of praise, was to speak " unreverend and un dutiful words of the Queen." Wentworth was seques tered; and placed in the custody of the Sergeant-at- arms. A committee, of which Hatton was one, was appointed to investigate the aff'air. It made a re port on the 9th; and the offender was sent,*" almost as a matter of course, to the Tower." On the 12th of March, Hatton was the bearer of a gracious message from the Queen, announcing that her Majesty was pleased to remit her "justly occasioned displeasure," and to refer the enlargement of the party to the House.'* During that Parliament Hatton obtained a pri vate Act for the assurance of his lands." - Rot. Patent. 17 & 18 EUz. It tal to the Tower. His committal a,ppears from the Sydney Papers, was moved by the Treasurer of the vol. i. p. 169, that Hatton had also Household, not by Hatton. Com- enjoyed a monopoly in Ireland, mons' Journals, i. 104. which expired about January 1576- c Commons" Journals, i. 104. 7, the granting of which was ^ Parliamentary « thought to be of no benefit to that j^^^^^^^ ^^ qq^^ ' '"'™Lord Campbell (ii. 140) says, « Statutes of the Realm, vol. iv. Hatton moved Wentworth's commit- pt. i. p. 607. 38 rTHE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1576. On the 26th of August 1576, Hatton wrote to Lord Burghley, from Northamptonshire, in reply to a letter in which the Lord Treasurer had thanked him for his reception at his house, and advised him to return to the Court. It is obvious that Hatton was then in bad health and depressed spirits. TO LORD BURGHLEY. My MOST HONOURABLE GOOD LoRD, Your letters declare the great goodness of your noble nature. I have neither deserved your thanks, nor can be grateful as I am most bound unto you. I will love and honour you as your virtue bindeth me, and every honest man that is subject to our most gracious Sovereign. I have scarcely had health. Sir, since my coming to this country; so that, enjoying not myself, I could little joy in those small things I have. Sir Thoraas Cecil,^ I thank him, is pleased to be with me; whereof, I as sure your Lordship, I take great corafort. He is faithful, good, and honest. I pray God you may live long to joy in him and his. I most humbly thank your Lordship for your loving and grave counsel. I will return to my most bounden and dutiful service ever so soon as possibly I can ; your honourable wish for the stay of my poor house is that I pray to God for, but yet it doth not so please Hira that it may come to pass. Thus, leaving to cumber your good Lordship with my simple occasions, I most humbly take my leave. Dene,*" this 26th of August 1576. Your good Lordship's most bound. ' Chr. Hatton.'^ The year 1577 was an important era in Hatton's life. On the llth of November he was appointed Vice- Chamberlain of the Queen's Household, and sworn of the Privy Council;"* and in the same month he re- " Lord Burghley's eldest son. = Lansdowne MSS. 22, art. 82. •i Hatton's vn-iting is very illegible. Autograph, This word may be either "Dean" "i "At Windsor, llth November in Northamptonshire, or " Done," 1577. This day Christopher Hat- ^T. 36.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 39 ceived the honour of Knighthood from the hauds of his Eoyal mistress at Windsor Castle, That dignity was on the same occasion conferred upon Walsingham, one of the Secretaries of State, and upon Thomas He neage, Treasurer of the Chamber." He also received in the same year an additional grant of lands in many counties.'' The only letter that is knowu to exist from Hatton in 1577 is of little other value than from its showing that he was then in possession of Ely House, of which he obtained a formal grant from the Crown in June in the ensuing year.'' to lord BURGHLEY. Right honourable and my very good Lord, I under stand that my friend Arden Waferer (whora I have required to be busy all this day about certain necessary affairs of mine at my house in Ely Place and elsewhere) is warned this morning to appear before your Honour in the Exchequer Charaber, for what cause I know not ; but I know the man so weh, and have known hira for these fourteen or fifteen years, even since ray first coining to the Inner Temple, (where we were sorae tirae both together,) that I verily think he will be well able to answer aU raatters that any his adversaries shall object against him. Notwithstanding, for so much as my business require present and speedy dispatch, (which, without him, being of long acquainted therewithal, cannot well be done,) if therefore your good Lordship will show rae the favour presently to give hira Uberty to attend my causes, I shaU think myself much beholding to your Honour ; and I wiU undertake that he shall always be ready, moreover, to wait upon your Honour whensoever your good Lordship ton. Esquire, Captain of her Majes- Highness's Principal secretaries." — ty's Guard, was swom Vice-Cham- Privy Council Books. berlain and one ofthe Privy Council, " Cotton MSS. Claudius, C. in. and Mr. Doctor Wilson one of her '> Rot. Patent. 19 Eliz. ¦: Ibid. 20 EUz. 40 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1577. shaU appoint me to send him unto you. And so, beseeching your Honour to stand his good Lord, and to grant my said suit, and not to take displeasure with him, although per chance my occasions cause hira to wait somewhat the later upon your Honour, (as the bearer hereof shaU raore largely declare to your Honour,) with ray hurable commendations I take my leave of your good Lordship. Court, this 13th of June 1577. Your good Lordship's raost bound during life, Ch. Hatton." The Hatton Letter-book contains only one letter written in 1577, and which was from the Lord Keeper Bacon to the Queen on the state of public affairs. That venerable statesman, who offered his opinions in a simi lar manner on at least two other occasions,'' died in February 1579. THE LORD KEEPER TO THE QUEEN. My most gracious Sovereign, I with all hurableness pray pardon of your Majesty that I presume by letter to do that, which bounden duty and service requireth to be done in person. O good Madam, not want of a wiUing heart and raind, but an unable and an unwieldy body, is the only cause of this. And yet the body, such as it is, every day and hour is, and ever shall be, at your Majesty's coraraandraent ; and so should they be, if I had a thousand as good as any raan hath, raine allegiance and a nuraber of benefits hath so sundry ways bounden me. The causes that make me now write to your Majesty be the dangerous and perilous tiraes, that hkve continued long, and do now, in ray judgment, daily greatly increase. For as the two mighty and potent princes, your neighbours, and surely your inward eneraies, were the less to be doubted as long as they had their hands full at horae ; so doubtless, as they prevail against those that kept thera occupied, (which, as I understand, they do greatly,) do the perils and dangers to your Majesty's state hasten and grow " Lansdowne MSS. 26, art. 22. >> In November 1677, and May Original. 1678. Haileian MSS. 168, f, 91, 93, ^T. 37.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 41 on as greatly. Their wUls be ready, only these letts defer their opportunity ; which being now taken away, it is easy to judge that with conjunct force and fury they will execute their wiUs, full of enmity and revenge : for seeing your Ma jesty hath had evident proof of their iU dispositions towards you by their practices, and that in weighty raatters in the midst of their troubles, when they were not able to do you any hurt ; what then is to be looked for when opportunity and abiUty shall concui" ? Again, it is to be doubted, that, when they shall begin to stir coals, there be many both at home and abroad that wiU put oil to this fire ; and the rather, because of the glorious and plausible pretext that they pre tend to have to serve their purpose. Most gracious Sove reign, I have been so inquieted with these things when I entered into the consideration of thera, (whether of over-much fearfulness by nature, or over-great jealousy of your High ness's estate, I know not,) that I could not choose but now at the last to utter to your Majesty that which I have oft intended, and yet never done, partly for fear, and partly in hope that things would prove better, which I see daily prove worse and worse. And, if reraedy be not foreseen in time, I doubt it will prove very hard to be holpen by any counsel to ray understanding. And the best remedies that I can think of be these, nevertheless submitting them with all humbleness to your Majesty's most grave and wise considera tion : The first reraedy is, to make Scotland as sure to your Majesty as may be ; for so, beside the aid you may have by them, that great peril of annoyance by France will be re moved : and the better to understand what is best to be fore seen and provided, both for theirs and your surety, methinks it best that some wise men were sent to confer with the Regent and his adherents by your Majesty, and that such counsel as shall be agreed upon in that conference be sent to your Highness to be considered of, and by you aUowed or araended. Then resteth nothing but to have it carefully executed ; and, handUng of this, great care would be taken that the who groweth now to years, be 42 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1577- not transported, but nance of such as shall be most assured to your Maj esty .* And for the better bring ing of this to pass, I raost hurably beseech your Highness, that such and so many pensions may be granted as raay best bring it to good effect. Surely I think that every thousand pounds that shall be thus bestowed vnll save you a hundred thousand ; and it raay be doubted, whether (if this be un done) any money will be able to bear off the danger. As to the second remedy, because the annoyance from Spain is like to grow by the Low Countries, I see no way so sure for your Majesty as to keep the Prince of Orange in heart and life; for raethinks his estate towards Spain, and the Regent's towards France, stand both in one predicament, and therefore require both one course. The States of the Low Countries are so divided, that how trust raay be reposed in thera where one trusteth not another, I see not. Marry, if it might be brought to pass by counsel frora hence that the Duke of Arschot and the States raight govern the countries according to their liberties, and the Prince to have the rule of their raartial raatters, this of all others were the surest way : otherwise, whilst the States be in deUberation, it may be doubted that their overthrow raay happen. The third reraedy is, to have your rausters kept and continued, and their certificates carefully perused and wants supplied, so as your captains, men, munition, and armour may be in readiness against all suddens. Thus I have troubled your Majesty, I confess, longer than perchance it needeth, con sidering chiefly your own understanding and wisdom, and therewith the grave, wise, and careful counsellors daily at tendant about you. But, good Madam, how can these things discharge rae of ray duty, judging of these tiraes as I do? And although I have before this tirae signified to sorae of my Lords what I have thought in your raatters of state, yet seeing now the danger increasing, I could not satisfy ray own '^ The lacunse in the text are occa- now in years, be not transported into sioned by part of the MS. being torn. France, and that he may for a time The passage in the Harleian MS. be in the governance of such as be 168, reads thus: "Great care is to the most assured to your Majesty." be had that the young King, growing ^T, 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 43 heart without an advertiseraent to your self, most hurably praying pardon of the length of ray letter, ray shaking hand being so iU, and the rather because I mean not to trouble your Majesty often without your license and good favour. Thus, wishing to your Highness all felicity both of mind and body, I forbear any further to trouble your Majesty at this time. From Gorhambury, the 15th of September 1577. Your Majesty's most humble subject and servant. Bacon." From the year 1577 Sir Christopher Hatton took a prominent part in State affairs. The Privy Council was then also, what has since been termed, the " Cabinet Council;" and the interest which he felt in public business was probably the cause of his hav ing had transcribed, not only his private correspond ence, but also many letters addressed to other per sons on subjects of importance. The letters in his "Letter Book" consequently begin about this period; and they afford as much information on the policy of the Country, and the persons employed in her service, as on his own character and conduct. The first letter of the year 1578 was to Sir Christopher Hatton from Mr. Davison, who was employed in various negotiations, and became Secretary of State in 1586, but who is now best known as the victim of Queen Elizabeth's dissimulation respecting the execution of Mary Queen of Scots. In February 1576, Davison was sent on a mission to the Low Countries; and, in July 1577, was appointed the Queen's agent at Antwerp.'' '^ Additional MSS. 16891, f. 1. the Harleian coUection, but it has Another copy of this letter, but with not been found. some variations, is in the Harleian ¦¦ His instructions and great part MS. 168, f. 62. Lodge, in his me- of his correspondence while in Hol- moir of Sir Nicholas Bacon, says land are in the Harieian MSS. 28.5, that an autograph draught of it is in 287 ; Cottonian MSS. Galba, C. vi ; 44 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1678. MR. DAVISON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The Duke of Alen9on having (as I credibly leam) received advice frora some of his favourers here that her Majesty should either be utterly altered, or at the least so coldly affected to erabrace the cause of this country as that there was great appearance she should break off with the States under pretext of their refusing to deliver her the Isle of Walcheren for assurance, hath hereupon taken occasion to dispatch hither in post one Lafugiere, a gen tleman of his, to renew his old practice and offer of assist ance unto the States, in hope it vrill be now accepted, partly in respect of their necessity, and partly to show that he proceedeth with the greater sincerity and good will towards them. He seemeth content to offer them la carte blanche, and to accept what conditions they them- selve,s vrill prescribe. The gentleraan had his audience vrith the Prince on Thursday and Friday last, with whom he hath been very earnest and full of persuasion to induce an acceptation of his master's offered goodwill ; but he hath yet no other corafort than general compliraents. Neither do I think that the Prince, or the rest that be of judgraent, considering how rauch they ought to suspect the offers of such a Prince, their neighbour, (a born eneray, a Prince arabitious, the next heir to the crown of France, one that pretendeth a right and interest to the greatest part of this country, and that hath long sought to invest hiraself in the governraent thereof,) will in any sort incline to this proposition, unless it be to use hira as an instrument to divert the succours which the eneray hath and may have from that side, till they be so provided as they need not doubt them. And yet thus much I may assure your Honour, that the long suspense and uncertainty of her Majesty's Titus, B. II. and B. vii ; Lansdowne those collections. A Life of Davison, MSS. 2442, in the British Museum: who died in great poverty in De but the above, and the other letters cember 1608, was pubUshed by the to Hatton, do not appear to be in Editor of this work in 1823. MT. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 45 resolution (considering the necessity whereunto the affairs are here reduced, the promise which her Majesty had made them, the hope and comfort wherein she had so long enter tained them, making them reject the former offers of the Duke, and neglect other means which they raight have used for their reUef,) hath begun such a jealousy and alteration in divers of the greatest that were before enemies to the part of France, as, fearing that her Majesty's long delay will in fine bring an absolute denial, are now the first that would persuade that course. And, to say truly, sorae of the wisest here attend such a desperate resolution, if her High ness should indeed abandon them. For, seeing the King of Spain hath resolutely deterrained to prosecute the war against them with aU extremity, that he hath an army strong at their gates, composed of the expertest captains and soldiers of Christendora, that he hath, for the better attaining and effecting his purpose, concluded a truce with the Turk, and solicited the succour and assistance of the Pope, the French King, the Swisses, the Dukes of Savoy and Lorrain, vrith divers other princes and potentates of Italy and Gerraany, conjured eneraies to the cause of the Low Countries, (against whose forces it shall be hard for thera to resist without the help and succour of sorae of their neighbours,) they must of necessity strengthen thera selves with the aUiance of sorae one or other that raay be able and apt to protect thera. Now, araongst all their neighbours, it is indubitable that there is no one whose assistance raay be so much profitable and little dangerous unto them as the help of the Queen our sovereign, France being justly suspected, and the calUng in of such a pro tector perilous, the Emperor both unable and unassured, and the rest of the Princes of Germany hireUngs and coldly affected. And therefore have they first addressed themselves unto her Majesty, of whose favour the interest she hath in the success of their troubles, and the expe rience they have of her bounty and clemency, hath not a little increased their hope and presumption ; in satisfy- 46 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. ing whereof if her Majesty fail thera, such is their hatred against the Spaniard, as, rather than they vrill be forced to faU under the yoke of their insupportable tyranny, they wiU run any fortune, be it never so desperate ; and especiaUy that of France, which though all raen esteera full of peril, yet wiU they make it a counsel without counsel, when they cannot otherwise choose. Now, seeing that her Majesty can neither abandon thera without the certain peril as well of herself as of them, and seeing that to suspend their hope and her deliberations any longer shaU be as inconvenient for both, (for as there is nothing raore dangerous in raatters of state than to be uncertain and doubtful in deliberation, so is there nothing raore unfitting to the tirae and present condition of their affairs,) it should in ray poor judgraent, under the correction of your Honour, be rauch the more profitable and honourable for her Majesty the sooner that she giveth them her determination ; for, if she mind to assist them, it shall be the raore acceptable and available unto thera the raore timely her succour cometh to do them good, and it shall make their obligation so much the greater towards her Majesty, and her merit consequently the greater in that respect, if the medicine be timely applied, ere that the grief be grovra to any hard or rather irapossible cure. For as the house is easily raaintained and repaired that is yet strong and in good plight, but being ruined and fallen is of far greater charge and travail to be redressed and restored to its forraer estate ; and as the sickness is the less to be feared, the less that the body is feeble and weak : so shall it be an easier matter to support and entertain the state of these countries whilst they be strong and united, than, being once weakened and dismembered, to restore thera to their forraer condition. On the other side, if her Majesty have no will to embrace the cause, it were better they knew it betimes than too late; because it shaU raake thera the more diligent and resolute to take some other course for the supply of their necessity, where now their suspended hope doth make them both negligent, un- MT. 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 47 certain, and irresolute, a thing amongst others most perilous for them. Now, though I may seem to go too far in judg ing whether of these two resolutions her Majesty were best to take, yet shall it not be rauch araiss that I tell your Honour what I observe upon the inclination of things hard. To cast thera off cannot, in my poor judgraent, but bring forth a general astonishraent in the people, an al teration in the nobihty, a confusion of the present union and^ agreeraent of the Provinces, an advanceraent of the affairs and hopes of the eneray, a hazard, or rather a cer tainty, of losing the hearts of this people; which vriU be so rauch the more perilous to her Majesty in that she shall contmue, notwithstanding, in the hatred of Spain, and so gain unto herself the enmity of both, and friend ship of neither; and that which is raore, so far unlikely It is that her Majesty in not assisting them shaU eschew war, as she shaU rather defer it than otherwise, to her greater disadvantage. For the scope of the Holy League of these Cathohc Princes, long since projected, often renewed, and now like to be put in execution, doth manifestly ap pear to reach, not only to the subverting of these countries in particular, but also to the ruin of aU such as make profes sion of the Reformed Rehgion in general; amongst whom as her Majesty occupieth the chiefest place, so is she the mark they principally shoot at; holding it for a maxim, that if she, being the chiefest protectrix of our Religion, were once supplanted, they should the raore easily prevail over the rest. Now if this be true, as it is too apparent to be called into doubt, I leave to the discourse of others, whe ther her Majesty's own surety do will her to look to the cause of this country betiraes, or not. There resteth now to be considered in what sort her Majesty may best assist them. Some raen perhaps are of opinion that it were bet ter done underhand with the loan of some money than with raen ; or, if with men at all, that it were better sorae few should be passed over by stealth than openly; aUeging further reason, that if her Majesty do send over any great forces 48 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. under the charge of a personage of quaUty, it shall draw her into an open war against both the Kings of Spain and France, with the one, in respect of the injury which he shall presume to have therein received, with the other, in regard of the jealousy and doubt which he may conceive of our neighbourhood, having once set footing in such a country as this is ; and therefore they conclude, that to eschew a war so chargeable, so uncertain and dangerous, it were better her Majesty should assist thera underhand than openly. But against these reasons may be produced others of far raore raoment and consideration in my rude advice. One is, that to give them any manner of succour underhand shall not be so profitable for her Majesty as if she proceeded roundly and openly; partly because her Majesty, entering into the action openly, shall the sooner obtain that she de sireth, which is a peace. For of how much the greater diffi culty the King of Spain shall find his enterprise, so much the more easily will he be brought to a peace : partly because both her Majesty's raerit towards these countries, and their obligation and duty, shall be the greater; and partly, (that which is not of least consideration,) because her Majesty may have, vrithout her charge, a convenient array of her own subjects, trained and experienced in the wars of this coun try, of whom she raay be the better served in all occasions that raay occur hereafter ; whereas they be now, of aU other nations, the most inexpert and ignorant in that behalf. Another reason is, that it shaU not be so honourable for her Majesty, because she hath already passed her promise; in perforraing whereof she shall show a zeal to the cause of her poor neighbours, a resolution in counsel, a 'stedfast ness in promise, a raagnaniraity in execution. The contrary whereof may be perhaps noted and condemned in her Ma jesty if she should do othervrise. Besides that, it is apparent she should no less offend, nor show a less evil affection to the King of Spain, if she should in any sort assist them under hand. Lastly, seeing it is a resolution here to serve them selves with strangers, I think there is no man would counsel ^T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER H.\TTON. 49 her Majesty to lend them money, to entertain the French, the Scots, or other foreign nations, and to keep her own sub jects unemployed; the reasons being so manifest as they need no disputation. So as by these few circumstances it may ap pear how much fitter it were for her Majesty to succour them openly, and vrith her raen, conducted by some person age of quaUty that may keep them in discipUne and good order, than either to send over any small troops by stealth, which is iU; or to assist them with raoney without raen, which is much worse. As for the fear which some raen apprehend of an invasion pretended in England or Ireland, upon occasion whereof they would infer a necessity for her Majesty to keep her men at horae, it is not to be doubted but that the King of Spain, so long as he hath his hands full in the Low Countries, shaU be an enemy more terrible in opinion than in effect unto us. And as for France, how easily her Majesty might keep them occupied at home, every man that hath any acquaintance with the state of that country c£in tell. In sum, it is in her Majesty's hands to prevent and divert, if she Hst, any peril that possibly may threaten her estate by the one Prince or the other. Lastly, to speak of the condition of this war in general, such is the nature and strength of the covmtry, so many and so inexpugnable be the towns and holds in the same, and so resolute and desperate is the condition of the people, as there is no raan of judgment but thinketh the enterprise of infinite difficulty, being assisted of her Majesty, and abiding united among themselves; a thing never more hoped and less doubted than since the defeat of their camp. Since which misadventure they have buried and compounded all their private differences, and have showed an universal resolution to vrithstand the common enemy. So as the King of Spain being deceived of his chief hope, which was to have sowed such a division and zizany^ amongst them as thathe might hav? set them one » The word is not very legible, micus ejus, et superseminavit zizania but it was probably " zizany," from in medio tritici, et abiit." Matt. zizanium, cockle or darnel, " Cum xiii, 25, autem dormirent homines, venit ini- VOL. I. E 60 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578- against the other, and so have had the better market of both, without which hope it is indubitable he would never have taken this war in hand; and finding, besides, the infinite charge, peril, and difficulty to entertain as well a great navy by sea, as an array by land, without which his enterprise is desperate, and with it in raanner hopeless, having no one port in the whole country at his devotion, no mean to re dress a second navy when the first is miscarried, besides a number of other difficulties; it is not to be doubted but that once vrithin the year he will be glad of a peace, though it cost hira very dearly. And therefore I conclude, that if her Majesty's surety, honour, profit, and necessity may move her, she will no doubt go forward vrith her promise and good disposition to assist these countries, whose union or disjunction, prosperity or peril, dependeth upon her resolu tion. And thus, submitting my opinion to the judgment and correction of your Honour, I most humbly take my leave. Antwerp, the Sth of March 1577 [1577-8.] W. Davison." A letter from Lord Burghley, in April, shows the Prime Minister in correspondence with one of his col leagues respecting the Queen's tooth-ache; and, as the courtly physicians were afraid to inform her of the necessity of extracting the tooth, Burghley suggests that Hatton should undertake the delicate task, who pro bably, as the writer expected, did so by placing the letter itself in the Queen's hands ; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I heard of her Majesty's indispo sition by some pain in her head ; and then how can any of her poor members, having life by her as our head, be without pain ? If my coming thither might either diminish her pain, or be thought convenient, I would not be absent ; although » Additional MS. 16891, f. 23. *T. 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 51 in grief I am present, and do most heartily beseech God to deUver her from all grief, praying you to let rae know of her Majesty's araendraent: not doubting but you are careful by the physicians to provide the remedy, which is said to be only the withdrawing of some one tooth that is touched with some humorous cause, and, except that be removed, her Majesty's pain shall not be quit. And though her High ness doth not or wiU not so think, yet I assure you it is said that the physicians do of knowledge affirm it, howsoever they forbear to impart it unto her. Besides my prayer, I caimot teU what to yield for her Majesty's ease more than this information ; praying you to examine the truth, and further truth to her Majesty's serrice, and to her ease in this point. 21st April 1578. Yours assuredly, W. Burghley.* Doctor John Aylmer, Bishop of London, the learned tutor of Lady Jane Grey, a celebrated divine and bitter enemy of the Puritans, was a frequent correspondent of the Vice-Chamberlain ; and perhaps prelatical hypocrisy was never more painfiiUy shown than in some of his let ters. His efforts to place Doctor Chatterton in the See of Chester were successful, but not until late in the fol lowing year. " One Goodman," to whom the Bishop so discourteously aUudes, was no doubt Dr. Christopher Goodman, a violent non-conformist, who printed a pam phlet at Geneva in 1558, entitled " How superior powers ought to be obeyed of their subjects," which Warton describes as being " an absurd and factious pamphlet against Queen Mary" ; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have been an importunate suitor to my Lord of Leicester and you in the behalf of Mr. Doctor Chader- ¦> Additional MSS. 15891, f. 42'. E 2 52 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578- ton for his preferment to the Bishoprick of Chester ; not so much for my affection to the man, as for the good I know he might do in the Church of God, both for his singular learning, as also in respect of his zeal to bridle disordered persons. It may please you, therefore, at my request to help to dispatch the poor man, and send a governor to that place ; which I fear, as an unruly family without a steward, will, by this long delay* that hath happened, be hardly dravra to good order. There is in that country one Good- raan, who wrote against the governraent of woraen, a man not unknown to her Majesty ; who, in this vacation, I doubt, will build one way raore than the Bishop shall a good while be able to pull down in that kind of curiosity. I pray God bless you and raake you happy in His grace, and in all other prosperity. From Fulham, the 29th of April 1578. Your Honour's most assured to command in Christ, John London.*" Doctor Edmund Grindall, who was made Archbishop of Canterbury in 1576, having fallen under the Queen's displeasure for refusing to sanction the marriage of Dr. Julio," the favourite physician and dependant of Leicester, with another man's wife, he was sequestered from his See and confined to his house. Hatton had, it appears, used his influence, though in vain, to restore him to the Queen's favour, and was thus thanked for his exertions : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Although your long and instant travail to her Ma jesty for my benefit is not yet corae to such fulness of effect as you desire and I have long wished for, yet do I think myself especiaUy bounden to give you most hearty thanks, and that in as ample manner as if I presently enjoyed the • The See of Chester fell vacant "> Additional MSS. 15891, f. 64''. by the death of Bishop Downman " Vide pp, 24, 30, ante. in December 1677. ^T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 53 fruition of the end of my suit; for that I do right well understand of your continual, honourable, and most friendly cares and travails for me, by the which, as also by your sundry comfortable messages at divers times sent unto me, I am brought into an assured hope by your good raeans to recover her Majesty's grace and favour in time convenient, (the Umitation whereof I wholly refer to her Majesty's good vriU and pleasure,) rauch to the quieting and comforting of my mind, so long afflicted for the want of the sarae. Your honourable and friendly dealing herein I shall not fail care fully to lay up in the treasury of a thankful raeraory. And so, taking my leave, I heartUy coramend you to the grace of God. From Lambeth, the Snd of May 1578. Yours in Christ, Edm. Cantuar.* Mr. Davison wrote to the Privy Council about the afiairs of the Low Countries on the Sth of May ; — I WROTE lately unto your Lordships from Gant, and what hath succeeded since you may somewhat particularly imderstand by this bearer. The traffic with the Duke of AIen9on doth very much confound their opinions here. Four or five thousand arquebusiers of his troops, coming through France in twelve days from about RocheUe, are already entered the country, and ere this (as it is doubted) possessed of Quesny, by the mean of the Count Labaine, who hath in plain terms let the States understand that he thinketh it fit to receive them in for divers respects which he allegeth, wherein he doth rather express his sentence, than desire their advice or direction. The Baron of Aribigny is in the town, whose partiality that way doth make the matter never a whit the better The Duke's Comraissioners are sent for to come to BrusseUes for the raore coramodious proceeding in their negociation with the States; but their answer is not yet retumed. Whatsoever opinion is had at home of this action, it is here held a thing indubitable that this practice » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 30. 54 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. wUl go forward. Your Lordships do rauch better perceive than I, both the offence and defence of these States, and the danger of either. The offence, in my rude observation, must be either for the enemy or for himself, both which do threaten some unhappy consequent. Their defence on the other side must be either in respect of their common cause, or of his own particular profit. The first is gene rally suspected, the second is certainly believed. Now whe ther we do in this behalf mean well or ill, the success cannot but greatly touch both them and us : them, because from one tyranny they shaU run to another, or retum to the same ; and us, in that the weakening of our friends and alUes must of necessity weaken our estate. Once, however, the French proceed, whether in favour of the Spaniard or of themselves, it is Uke to be the seed of a languishing ^war, ahd the beginning of great alteration ; for they must here, in fine,- either resolve to return and reconcile themselves with the King of Spain, or to comrait themselves unto the hands of some other master, or else translate their State into a government popular or aristocratical. The first they seem now resolved never to do ; of the other, the question is not yet decided. Some, and a great part, (I wiU put your Lordships out of doubt,) are resolute to change their master, and to take the French; others to change their government, abandoning both them and the other. But for debate and disputation, it will not be long ere this raatter grow to exe- ' cution. We raay hereof, in the raean tirae, rather conjec ture than in any sort assure the success. I shall not need to tell your Lordships, who can sufficiently shun the danger, how rauch this raatter iraporteth the looking to; but thus much I think I may safely say, that the sooner it be met withal, the better. Your Lordships can now perceive whe ther her Majesty's forbearing of her open declaration have diverted the French; or whether it hath not rather ad vanced their purpose, with the hazard of her friends, and perhaps prejudice to herself. But, as it becomes me not, so will I wade no further in this discourse. Only this I ^T. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 55 wish, that she may not be constrained, in fine, to fall into this action with her greater incomraodity and disadvantage than if she had entered into it sooner, though if it might be vrith her Majesty's surety and honour, I could rather pray she might not have to do with it at all, either early or late. I do Uve here utterly ignorant of the success of things in a Court ; and though I have of late iu this special matter given your Lordships sundry advice, yet have I received no manner of direction how to govern myself. If your Lordships do think herein I may do any service at aU, I would beseech the same to let my ignorance be repaired ; knovring what a maim it is in service abroad to understand nothing, and seldom from horae. Of the late accident of Maesterich, of the apprehension of three councillors at Gant whilst I was there, of the proclaiming of an inhibition against the exercise of rehgion either pubUcly or secretly, with other particular occurrents, I think Mx. Rogers can at length inform your Lordships. Concluding, therefore, vrith my hearty prayer for your Lordships' long and prosperous Uves, I most humbly take my leave. From Antwerp, the 8th May 1578. W. Davison.* The Bishop of London's character is exhibited in the foUowing letter. It would seem, and which is con firmed by a subsequent letter, that one of Hatton's rela tions, or friends, had felt the effects of Aylmer's perse cuting spirit. It appears also that Hatton was the me dium of communicating the Queen's wishes on the pre late's proceedings towards her recusant subjects ; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I had written unto you before this for divers causes, and especially to give you raost hearty thanks for that mUd and calm raanner of expostulation which you used with me in our last conference, but that the next day after » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 18. 56 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. I fell very sick, and so continued for five or six days toge ther; out of which feebleness as soon as I any whit reco vered, I thought good to salute you with a Une or two, partly to signify unto you that I will not forget to commend, both to God in my prayers and to all men in speech, that rare conquest that by great vrisdom you have had over your affections, which by the motions of flesh and blood must needs have been set on fire marvellously against me, had not a natural instinct of heavenly and Christian philosophy and wisdom quenched the flame thereof; and partly to ask your honourable adrice in one branch of that speech that passed between you and me; which was, whether it were not the safest and profltablest way to cut off (even as her Majesty termed it) and to correct offenders on both sides which swerve from the right path of obedience, which I set up as the raark to aira at, purposing to discipline both the Papist and the Puritan in anything wherein (disobeying her Ma jesty's laws) they raay be indifferently touched. By which course of proceeding I do not doubt but I shaU do that ser vice to her Majesty, in suppressing these dangerous people, which shall well content her, and bring great unity of go vernraent to the Church, which her Majesty in her godly vrisdom so rauch thirsteth after. It was her Majesty's plea sure that I should understand her mind by you in these things. Let me therefore intreat your Honour to afford me some direction, in a word or two, how you think good I should deal in these matters, and then you shall see that I shall so guide the helm as the ship shall keep the best and safest course. Thus hoping you will reraeraber me in this point, that principis indignatio mors est, I leave at this time to trouble you any further; remaining raost faithfully at your coraraandraent. Frora Fulham, the 28th of May 1578. Your Honour's most bound in Christo, John London." The annexed letter from Walsingham refers to the attempts of an adventurer, caUed Stukeley, who, with » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 38. ^T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 57 the assistance of the Pope, from whom he had received the title of Marquis of Leinster, and the command of eight hundred Italians, attempted to excite a rebellion in Ireland. He arrived with these troops at Lisbon ; " but," says Camden, " the more potent power of the Divine counsel frustrated those designs against England and Ireland."* ; — TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I Uke well of her Majesty's course, being very consi derate and such as answereth to the place she holdeth ; and therefore do mind at the next dispatch to acquaint either the Deputy or the Govemor for the time. being with this her Majesty's resolution. It needeth no present dispatch, for that her letters to the NobiUty of that Realm are not yet signed: in the deUvery whereof there may be that order taken, as the NobiUty of that Realra may be contained in their good devotion, and encouraged (in case any thing shall be attempted) to do that which in duty they ought; vrithout pubUc notification, by proclamation or otherwise, of any fear conceived here that so weak an instrument as Stukeley is shaU be able to prevail against a Prince of her Majesty's power, arraed with the goodvrill of her subjects in that Realm, as she doubted not but that she is. Thus much I thought good to scribble unto you, referring the rest to this bearer, and yourself to God's good keeping. Frora the Court, the Srd of June 1578. Yours most assuredly, Fra. Walsingham.'' Upon the following disgraceful letter no comment could be too severe. Bishop Aylmer's proceedings seem to have disgusted both the Queen and Hatton; and the spiritual tyrant appears in the too common character of a Court sycophant. His " travails for the government of women," to which he alludes, was a tract, printed in 1559, '¦ Annals, ed. 1630, p. 93, i" Additional MSS, 16891, f. 36.'' 58 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. caUed " An Harborowe for faithful and trewe subjects against the late blowne blaste concerning the government of women," and which is said to have been an able an swer to John Knox's " First blast of the trumpet against the monstrous regiment of women." It may be inferred, from one passage in this letter, that Aylmer, who was only Archdeacon of Lincoln when he was elected to the See of London, in March 1577, owed his mitre to Hat ton; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have much desired, and yet do, to receive some Une or two from you in writing, only to persuade me that your displeasure is appeased, as I found it was at our last raeeting, rauch to ray corafort and raore to your honour ; but chiefly that I might have sorae little inkling that her Majesty standeth ray gracious Lady, without the obtaining whereof, what joy can I haye in myself ? what courage to execute this painful service, which is more than the burthen of Atlas ? or what hvely corafort can I, being as a dead- trunk, conceive be fore I take such nourishment as the root sendeth up to the tree, and as the head, which the natural philosophers term principium motus et sensus, conveyeth to the sinews, and so strengtheneth and confirraeth the body. I beseech you. Sir, vouchsafe so to deal with me as I may not live but with her Majesty's good liking ; otherwise I shall go on like a horse that is spurred and not cherished, and so in the end shall fall under the burthen. If ray fighting against the beasts at Ephesus, ray travails that I took when I was twenty years younger than I ara now for the Governraent of Women, my continual setting forth ofher Majesty's infinite gift frora God and unspeakable deserts towards us, have merited nothing ; yet it is the honour of a Prince to breathe life into dead bodies, and, after the cold and dead winter, to cheer the dry earth with the fresh and lively spring time. I study with my eyes on my book, and my mind is in the Court ; I ^T. 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 59 preach without spirit ; I trust not of God, but of ray Sovereign, which is God's lieutenant, and so another God unto me — for of such it is said Vos estis dii; I eat vrithout stomach, I sleep without rest, I company \rithout corafort, and live as one dead. You labour daily to your great coraraendation to cherish other Bishops set up by others, and will you throw down him whom you have set up yourself ? You think the fault that is past can never be recompensed. If that be your conceit, assure yourself it wiU redound the more to your honour and reputation if you can freely forgive it. Caesar was sorry that Cato had kiUed hiraself, because he could not make him bound to him by forgiving and deUvering him. Let Csesar's noble mind be in you, though Cato's mind be not in me; and think that it shall be the more honourable for you, and make my band the greater, if you forget and forgive me, whom I comrait to God's good provi dence. From Fulham, the Sth of June 1578. Your Honour's to command in Christo, John London." In June, Walsingham was sent with Lord Cobham on a mission to the Netherlands, with the hope, in conjunc tion with the Imperial and French ministers, of ter minating hostilities there; but the negotiation failed, and they returned to England a few months after. Walsingham being on his way to meet Lord Cobham at Cobham HaU near Rochester, wrote the foUowing letter to Hatton. The opportunity of making a firm alliance with Scotland, so strongly pressed in this letter, was the recent removal of the Regent Morton, and the trans fer of the government to the young King, who had sent the Abbot of Dumfermline to acknowledge, " with most grateful remembrance. Queen Elizabeth's benefits to wards him." '' » Additional MSS. 16891, f. SS."- " Camden's Annals, book ii. p. 91. 60 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Finduig you absent from Court at the time of my leave-taking, I desired our good friend Mr. Heneage to ac quaint you with certain public causes worthy of your know ledge and furtherance, which I would have been glad to have imparted by mouth. I nothing doubt but that you will have care of them, especially to further a straiter knot of amity between this crovra and Scotland. I find her Majesty in that point, to rest upon some nice terras ; which I hope, by your good persuasion, will be removed. Surely, Sir, if her Ma jesty let slip this opportunity, I fear we shall estrange Scot land from us unrecoverably ; and how perilous that vriU be, I leave to your good consideration. For my particular, in my absence, I promise that friendship unto myself at Mr. Vice-Chamberlain's hands that he would look to receive from me, being in Uke case. And so, wishing unto you as to my ovra self, I corarait you to God. At Gravesend, in haste, the 16th of June 1578. Yours raost assuredly, Fra. Walsingham." Bishop Aylmer's next letter to Hatton relates to some acts of intolerance similar to those before mentioned. By the Bishop's authority Mr. Roper's house had been searched, and " vestments, albes, and such trumpery," found in it.*" If, as there seems little doubt, the Mr. John Harrington was the author of the papers pub Ushed under the title of "Nugae Antiquge," Aylmer was little indebted to his friendship, for the anecdotes there related of the prelate are more curious than creditable. • Additional MSS, 15891, f. 44". " Minutes of the Privy Council of the 13th of January 1577-8. ^T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 61 BISHOP AYLMER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, You have borne so much vrith me, that I were to blame if I should not for your sake bear with yom- friends, among whom Mr, John Roper hath, chiefly in respect of you, and partly by seeing and confessing his own oversight, won at my hands both forgiving and forgetting of all the injuries which he offered me ; which were in nuraber not many, but in UkeUhood to hurt me of such force, as, if your good-nature by bearing, and your wisdom in judging, had not holpen, the weakest must have gone to the wall. It may please you then to remember, not for his hurt but for my discharge, and for the confirmation of your good opi nion, that I am none of those that vrill deal doubly vrith any man, and much less with such a friend as you are. These be the points : first, his complaining on me to the Council, wherein he did me great wrong ; for God himself knoweth, and your Honour can testify, that I wrote to you that we two, if it pleased you, should hear and order it, meaning and dealing simply. Besides, I was so free from the rifling of his house, that, upon the receipt of your letters, I de spatched a pursuivant at midnight to caU thera back. The matter grieved me so much the more, for that I was blamed in the hottest time of the paroxysra between you and me ; and where he reported that he was, or should be, called by my means, I inquired of it, but I found no such matter ; and to be sure it should not be done, I forewarned the Arch deacon and my ChanceUor, that, if any such thing should happen, I might be raade privy to it. He wrote unto you that he was caUed before the Commissioners. Upon search, I found no such meaning. I left it not so, but inquired again of the Archdeacon ; he knew nothing. I sought to learn who were his officers; in the end, it was Doctor Forde and Babam. I asked of them ; they were ignorant. In the end, I found by their clerks that Doctor Forde had excomrau- nicated thera. Thus I was fain to play the spaniel, not 62 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. for his sake, for I was angry with him, but because I would justify myself to you, my honourable friend ; and so will I stand to my justification in all things towards you, (one ex cepted,) wherein no wager of law is to be admitted. And therefore, I pray you. Sir, henceforth let rae answer before you suspect, and I warrant you no crack shaU be found in my friendship. I joy that your Honour beginneth to put Mr. John Harrington in the calendar of your friends; I assure it appertaineth,) but for the security and preservation of you, you shall find hira honest, wise, faithful, constant, and no universal friend to depend upon many, but iast where he maketh his choice. I pray your Honour bear with my long letters, for I cannot be short in so long a tragedy. God bless and prosper you, for, God vriUing, I mind to stand and faU with you. I speak it unfeignedly. From Fulham, the 17th of June 1578. Your Honour's most assured in Christ, as raost bounden, John London.* As soon as Walsingham arrived at Cobham HaU, he sent a trustful person to Hatton with the following letter ; — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, For that your leisure often tiraes will not serve you to acquaint rae with such things as were fit for me to know in furtherance of her Majesty's serrice, I have raade choice of this gentleraan, being vrise, honest, and discreet, and one that desireth good and sound friendship between us, as weU for the advancement of her Majesty's service as our own particular, to repair unto you, and to receive from you such matter as you shaU think fit to be communicated unto me in respect of my present charge ; which, standing as it doth upon hard terras, had need of aU furtherance. If the matter itself and my skill "¦ Additional MSS. 15891, f. 37. MT. 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 63 did answer unto my care, then would I promise all good success ; but the matter (by letting slip the opportunity of time, which overthroweth all good causes,) is so far out of frame, as I can hardly conceive any hope of good issue ; which is no smaU grief unto me, considering the zeal and desire I have to do her Majesty some acceptable service, especially in a cause that concerneth her Majesty's safety so rauch as this doth. I can but commit the success to God, who, blessing my travail, may raake rae an instrument to do that which is contrary to man's expectation ; which I wish not for my own glory, (for to him wiU I render it to whora her, which I prefer before aU worldly respects. And so, wishing unto you as to my own self, I commit you to God's good keeping. At Cobham HaU, the 17th of June 1578. Yours assuredly, Fra. Walsingham. I pray you. Sir, let this gentleman enjoy your good coun tenance, who doth love and honour you." The matter to which the next two letters relate has not been ascertained. Mr. Cox was Hatton's secretary; and many remarkably weU written letters occur from him to his patron. Dr, Aubrey and Dr. Dale were eminent civilians; and Hatton is said, when ChanceUor, to have consulted the latter in all important cases. MR. cox TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May it please your Honour, Having heard the opi nion of Mr. Doctor Aubrey, and likewise of Mr. Dale, I find the law to be this for the raatter of false depositions: Secunda assertio, extra judicium, non enervat effectum, primi dicti in judicio, etiamsi testis hoc dicat in articulo mortis. The reason that the law giveth is, propter venerantiam jura menti et judicis. There is therefore thus rauch to be said for the sick man's protestation on his death-bed, quod valde > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 43. 64 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578, minuitur fides primi dicti, sed non omnino tollitur : so that if there were no raore but this raan ahve deposed, nee adhuc lata sit sententia, then no doubt his last protestation in his sickness is of raore credit than his first deposition ; but, if there were two raore sworn as weU as he, their depositions are still of force, ratione qua supra. If there were but one besides this sick raan deposed in eodem judicio, non valehit primum juramentum, because fides alterius diminuitur, and there raust be two lawful witnesses at the least. The words of the law at large are these : Quando primum dic tum testis est dictum in judicio, et secundum extra judicium, si sententia fuit lata per primum dictum, non revocatur senten tia. Si sententia non est adhuc lata, detrahitur primo dicto per secundum, et in hoc ultimo casu diminuitur fides testis per secundum dictum, sed non tolUtur. It was four of the clock before Mr. Doctor Aubrey came from the Court of the Admiralty, so that I could not make that speed in the return of my answer which haply your Honour expected. I read the law myself, and desired Mr. Aubrey to turn- over more books than one, because I would be sure of the soundest resolution. I beseech God to bless your Honour with the increase of His manifold graces now and ever. From the Arches, the 20th of June 1578. Your Honour's raost humble and obedient poor servant, Sa. Cox.^ Dr. Aubrey himself wrote soon after to Hatton on the subject ; — DR. WILLIAM AUBREY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, For answer to the question propounded unto me by Mr. Cox, I make bold with your honourable favour to re tum this resolution : That respect ought to be had rather of the first judicial and sworn deposition of a witness than of his extra-judicial and unsworn revocation thereof in his death- » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 54. MT. 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 65 bed; for the law doth judge, in regard of the reverence that ought to be had of an oath, and of the raaglstrate, that the vritness did depose the trutli at the first, and doth not give credit to the revocation, as a thing presuraed to be procured by the contrary party, whora the first deposition did prejudice. Yet such revocation raade in the article of death doth greatly weaken the flrst deposition, and there may concur with that revocation such vehement presumptions and probabilities as may induce a Judge to give no credit to the first deposition. But, setting circumstances aside, the flrst judicial deposition by rirtue of oath is to be followed. And thus, in haste for satisfying my duty to your Honour, I humbly take my leave. Your Honour's most bounden at commandment, W. Aubrey.'' Queen Elizabeth's wavering policy towards the Low Countries, and her unwillingness to advance money to aid the States in their struggle for independence, caused Walsingham so much anxiety, that he wrote privately to Hatton, as well as officially to the Council ; — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your honourable and friendly dealing towards me, confirmed by divers of my friends, especially by Mr. Tre mayne, doth give rae just cause to be thankful for the sarae. But herein I had rather yield satisfaction in deeds than in words. I ara greatly grieved, considering the perilous state this Country standeth in, to find her Majesty so strangely affected as she is. I hope, when her Highness shall have duly considered (upon perusing our letters sent as well to herself as to ray Lords) what dangerous inconveniences are Ukely to follow, and to what confusion these Countries will come unto, if she withdraw her gracious assistance, she wiU then prefer her safety and honour before her treasure ; pro testing unto you before God, that, if her Majesty do not " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 57i>. VOL. I, F 66 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. look unto it in time, yea, and that out of hand, I see no remedy but the French will be masters of the Country. Seeing the peril so great, and knowing how careful you are of her Majesty's honour and safety, I do assure myself that you will take the raatter in such sort to heart as the cause importeth. Sorry I am to see by your letters her Majesty's indisposition to deal effectually in the Scottish causes." If the parties presently repaired thither be sent away with eril satisfaction, fareweU the quietness and good days of England. If I stood (as I hear I do not) in her Majesty's good grace, which is no sraall grief unto me, con sidering with what raind I serve, I would then discharge ray duty plainly unto her, touching the sending away of Dura- ferraline well satisfied. But my state standing as it doth, having no hope to do good, I think it wisdora to forbear to offend. And so, for other matters referring you unto our general letter sent to ray Lords, I corarait you to God. At Antwerp, the 23rd of June 1578. Your assured friend to his poor power, Fran. Walsingham.'' As Hatton did not quite understand the communica tion that was made to him by Mr. Heneage respecting the affairs of Scotland", Walsingham again wrote to him on the subject from Canterbury ; — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I perceive the raessage I sent you by Mr. Heneage touching the nobleman that is to be sent out of Scotland, seemed soraewhat dark unto you, being not made acquainted with the last letters sent from Mr. Bowes, remaining in Mr. Secretary Wilson's hands. You shall therefore do well to send for them, and upon the view of the sarae to take that course that to your good judgraent shall seem raost apt to knit the two Crowns in perfect amity. I am the raore im portunate in this cause, for that at my departure I found a « Vide p. 60, 68. >> Additional MSS. 15891, f.45''. •^ Vide page 60, ante. JET, 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 67 strange disposition in her Majesty (things at horae and abroad duly considered) touching the entering into any straiter de gree of amity with Scotland, as a matter dishonourable to join in any treaty with that Crown during the Queen's life. If her Majesty would call to raind her former proceeding in the causes of that Country since the deposition of the Queeri, as the maintenance of such as were the deposers of her, the prosecuting of her friends, the disposing of her of the castle of Edinburgh, and the retaining of her prisoner; all these actions being grounded on reason and justice, considering the title she pretendeth to this Crovra, and the actual re beUion she procured here witliin the Realm, there is no cause why her Majesty should now make a conscience to strengthen herself with the araity of Scotland. Such scruples of con science are rather superstitious than reUgious. Scotland is the postern-gate to any mischief or peril that may befal to this Realm. It will therefore behove her Majesty to look well to it. The Scot is a proud nation : if you refuse his friendship when he offereth it, you shall miss it when you would have it: and therefore it greatly iraporteth her Ma jesty to look substantiaUy to the raatter; for to my judg ment it toucheth her as nearly as the conservation of her Crown amounteth unto. I am afraid I am too troublesorae to you in this matter of Scotland ; and, though the Country be cold, I can neither think nor speak of it but in heat. By a letter received this last night from Mr. Secretary, I perceive that Monsieur's man is dispatched with good satis faction ; her Majesty doth deal therein very providently ; it behoveth her (the tirae duly considered) to lose no advan tage that by God's goodness is offered unto her* He will serve for a good counterpoise of his brother's raalice, which I always noted to be great, not only towards her Majesty, but to the whole Nation. I raay not forget to acquaint you vrith the honourable entertainment the Lord Cobhara and I have received at Mr. Justice Manwood's house in his absence; the same being performed not only very bounti fuUy, but also most orderly. The raan is greatly loved and F 2 68 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. esteemed here, for his uprightness and integrity, of the best sort of the gentlemen of this shire ; which is a most apparent arguraent of his good and just dealings amongst them: and therefore it were great pity that the malice of some few for their particulars should bleraish the credit of a raan of his sufficiency for her Majesty's service, and so vrell able for Uring to bear the countenance of a place of credit. And so, with raost hearty thanks for the assurance of your good friendship, I commit you to God's good keeping. At Can terbury, the 27th of June 1578. Your most assuredly, Fra. Walsingham." The date of the following letter from Lord Leicester to Hatton is fixed by Mr. GUbert Talbot having written to his father, on the 3rd of May 1578, " My Lord of Leices ter threateneth to come to Buxton this summer." On Monday or Tuesday next her Majesty goeth to Lord Compton's house at Tottenham; and so to my Lord Treasurer's at Theobald's, and there tarrieth three or four days ; and from thence to Wanstead, and there four or five days.'"" At Wanstead, a seat of Leicester's, she was received by Philip Sidney, and entertained by a dra matic interlude, written by him for the occasion, called " A Contention between a Forester and a Shepherd for the May^Lady," and printed at the end of the Ar cadia." THE EARL OF LEICESTER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. I HUMBLY thank God to hear of the increase of her Ma jesty's good health, and am raost glad that she took that happy medicine that wrought so well with her, as I perceive by your letter it did. I trust it wiU help to prolong and per fect that which we all daily pray for. I hope now, ere long, » AdditionalMSS.15891. Though i" Lodge's Illustrations of British the date in the Letter-Book is 1579, History, Svo. vol. ii. p. 98. it was certainly a mistake for 1578. " Nichols's Progresses, ii. 94 where the piece is reprinted. ^T. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 69 to be with you, to enjoy that blessed sight which I have been so long kept from. A few of these days seera raany years, and I think I shaU feel a worse grief ere I seek so far a remedy again. I thank God, I have found hitherto great ease by this bath, and hope it will raake rae a long while the better able to do my duty for attendance. One thing hath troubled me not a Uttle, to hear that her Majesty should corae to Wanstead, and her .=." not there to receive her. I fear that little Uking to it she had before will through too, too raany more faults, breed her less love hereafter. If my wish ing could have served, yea, or a little sooner knowing of it had corae, I think St. Anne should have had a short farewell. But God grant I raay hear that her Majesty doth both well rest, and find all things else there to her good contentraent ; and that the good raan Robert,*" she last heard of there, were found at his beads, with all his aves, in his sohtary walk. Well, good Captain, I hope you have suppUed that which is almost impossible, without her great especial goodness, to be done. I ara now at a point with St. Anne here, and will hie me home as fast as I can, not disobeying the great charge you have laid upon rae : at which Mr. Doctor Baily doth not take a Uttle advantage, specially because the late hot weather is now here returned again, having had three or four days of great heat now together. It vriU, I suppose, raake rae a Uttle the more obedient also. I have sent you a letter which I received yesterday frora Casirair ; it is of no new date. You may see what he writes, and how earnestly. Since my hap is not to be in so honourable a voyage, nor j*^ I would be most glad that my nephew'' might go to Casirair; and if he may not as from her Majesty, yet after the other sort you say her Majesty could like of. I beseech you further it, and I shaU be most glad it may be obtained. I long to hear of Mr. Walsingham's news ; by this you have all, I ara sure. I " The copyist originally wrote, — '' Himself. « and I not there ;" but the " I " is deleted, and the above symbol, " An unintelligible abbreviation which occurs elsewhere, and which occurs here. is thus proved to indicate Leicester, is written over it in another hand. * Philip Sydney. 70 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. will trouble you no further, but to wish you as rayself, and hope shortly to see you. From Buxton's, this 9th of July. Yours assured ever, R. Leicester.* Davison made another report of the affairs of the Low Countries, in his usual prolix style, on the 23rd of July ; — MR. DAVISON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have so long forborne to write unto your Honour, as I wot not well with what reason to excuse myself that shall not rather accuse me, considering mine obligation to wards you in many respects. But I doubt not raine error shall obtain your pardon, the rather in that it hath not grown frora any want of duty. Of the present condition of things with us, I can vvrite nothing that your Honour may not amply understand from ray Lords here. The Duke of Alencon being at Mons, is the matter which doth at this time most perplex and confound our opinions. Such as con sider the power of France, the unquiet humour of that nation, their ready disposition to fish in the troubled streams of their neighbours, the occasion that this war doth offer unto thera both to raake their profit abroad and to throw the fire out of their State at home, together with the inclination of some part of this Country to embrace them, do hold the en terprise of singular moment and danger: others measuring the same by the age and quality of the Duke, by the supposed difference between him and his brother, by the firm amity between the two Kings, by the lightness, and negligence pro per to that nation, by the nature and strength of these Coun tries, and in some by the difficulties which great attempts do commonly meet vrithal, do think it a matter not rauch to be feared, unless it tend to the deceiving of these States, in advancing the affairs, of the Spaniard, But what is like to be the success is the harder to judge, in that it dependeth on accidents uncertain, and on the will and, affection of a nation » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 63. jiT. 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 71 most inconstant. He hath, since his arrival at Mons, written i to divers towns and persons particularly, and to the States generaUy, disguising the cause of his coming down to be whoUy for their succour; but as they inight very well spare help, so are the most parts loath to embrace the same, unless it be with better caution than is looked for. Howbeit, the matter is now grown to that point, that either they must accept him as a friend, or reject hira as an enemy, a ques tion sure very hard to determine : for if they receive hira in this sort he desires, which is to have the coraraandraent of their forces jointly with his own, they raust either depose the Archduke, or at the least abridge his authority, either of which will be hard to do but vrith an outward offence and inward confusion; besides that, they raust put their fortune into the hands of a stranger, and, that which is raore, of a bom enemy, of whom they have infinitely to suspect, and , nothing to trust unto other than a French promise. So as, i be it that he run a course for the Spaniard, which some sus- ] pect, or that he pretend to serve his, own tum, which is rather beheved, (for other object than one of these two un doubtedly he hath not,) the danger is apparent. On the other ! side, if they should reject him, the doubt is that either he vriU take part openly with the Spaniard, or else, for the first induction, impatronize himself of Hainault, which he holdeth as already at his devotion, and so have the gap opened j to invade and dismember the rest of the Country ; either of ' which inconveniences were hard for thera to faU into, though in common reason they cannot eschew the one or the other, unless the remedies be all the sooner applied. The Duke, to blear the eyes of this people, hath already put himself in action, and sent Bussy d' Amboise with three thousand men to the siege of Maubeuge, not far from Mons, wherein is a garrison of the enemies ; his drift being chiefly, under that colour, to draw his prepared forces (which by his ministers are bruited to be about four thousand horse and fifteen thou sand footmen) the rather into Hainault ; and yet, in the mean time, gives out that he doth nothing but with the liking and 72 THE LIFE AND TIMES OT [1578. knowledge of her Majesty, whose name and credit he useth as a cloak to colour his arabitious and deceitful pretext, as will better appear with tirae, and is partly- to be judged al ready by the raanner of dealing of his ministers with my Lords here. He hath, since his arrival at Mons, sent one Monsieur de Beauier towards Casirair to make fair weather with hira, but, of all his demonstrations, the scope and drift resteth suspicious ; and thus rauch for that matter. The Baron of Preinder, last ambassador for the Eraperor, is de parted towards his master: the other seems in mind to repair towards Don John, to see if there be yet any hope of peace, whereby to prevent the danger which the Country is like to fall into by the proceeding of this war ; the reraedy whereof resteth, as it seeras, in the retire of Don John, and yielding up the places he occupieth into the hands of the States, who are otherwise jealous and indisposed to enter into any treaty of peace, presuraing it shall tend on his part to the gaining of time, and wearying of thera with entertaining an array so chargeable as they have presently in the field, rather than to any good and sound coraposition. Their array, composed of eight thousand horse and nine thousand footmen, (besides the regiment of our nation and those which yet rest in garri son, through a lack of raoney to draw thera to the camp,) are lodged still within a mile of Liege, between the two rivers Called the Little and Great Nethe, from whence it is thought they shall remove within a day or two. The enemy hath retired the raost part of his forces into garrison, pretending, as sorae think, to raake a war defensive, leaving the fleld another whUe to the States: his forces are esteeraed to be five thousand horse and twenty-five thousand footmen, ac counting the companies as complete, which indeed they are not. He hath abandoned Soigny in Hainault, wherein the Count Lalam hath put garrison: the like it is thought he pretends to do with Dyest and Arschot, from whence he hath withdrawn his munition and artiUery, even to the small iron pieces. Corapiegne certainly affirraed to be rendered to the States of Guelders, who are in hope of like composition MT. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 73 with Dewenter. Casirair should as yesterday begin his raus ters besides Zutphen. The Gauntois, on Sunday moming last, surprised by a stratagem the tovni of Ipre in Flanders, vvhich (vrith them of the three members) is now at their devotion. The towns of Hainault, Artois, Lisle, Douay, and Orchies, (being practised by the letters of Monsieur,) have written hither to the States to know how they should govern themselves; whom the States have in their answer required to refer theraselves to the general resolution of the Provinces. Thus, being as weary vrith writing as I think your Honour vrill be of reading my tedious letter, I end vrith the offer of "my hurable serrice, commending your Honour to the protection of the Almighty. Antwerp, the 22nd of July 1578. Your Honour's humbly at coraraandraent, W. Davison.' On the 23rd of July Walsingham wrote again to Hatton respecting his mission ; — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, How we have proceeded here in our charge, what little good is like to foUow thereof, and how things do stand here, this bearer, Mr. Sommers, is able sufficiently to inforra you. I have amongst other things prayed him to acquaint you with my opinion touching the town of Sluse, which I wish were in her Majesty's hands in pawn for the money already lent, and that which hereafter her Majesty is to fumish thera withal, as well to vrithdraw thera from the French as to keep thera from being overrun by the Spaniards. If I do not mis take it, they have put their towns in that strength as the King of Spain is too old to see the end of these wars ; so that they may have, during their troubles, sorae convenient sup port frora hence, which they shall not lack elsewhere, if we do not raake sure vrith thera betiraes. And yet the raatter raay be so ordered as neither her Majesty shall enter into an ¦^ Additional MSS. 15891, f. 107. 74 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. actual war, nor yet reraain unsatisfied of such treasure as she shaU furnish thera withal. To raake this probable unto you requireth the setting dovni of raany circurastances which I would be loath to coramit to paper, but do reserve them to acquaint you withal at ray retum ; which by your good and friendly furtherance I hope will be with speed, seeing no ne cessary cause of stay here at this present, as yourself shall perceive by this bearer's report. By her Majesty's especial comraandment I wrote unto her in a private letter what I could discover touching the Prince of Orange's intention con cerning these Countries ; which in effect was, as far as I can gather, he meaneth never to be subject to the King of Spain ; that he purposeth to annex thera to the Erapire ; that he is not otherwise inclined to the French than to serve his own turn ; and lastly, that, though he gave out the contrary, he had rather enjoy the Country hiraself, than either French, Spaniard, EngUsh, or Alraayne. I know her Majesty will and hath acquainted you with all, and therefore I pray you advise her to keep the raatter secret, especially tbat it be not known to come from me. And so, beseeching you to com mit this letter to the fire, I coramend you to God's good keeping. At Antwerp, the 23rd of July 1578. Yours most assuredly, Fra. Walsingham.* Sir Amias Paulet, the writer of the foUowing letter, was then ambassador at Paris; and, as will appear from subsequent letters, soon after used Sir Christopher Hat ton's influence to obtain his recall, in which he succeeded in January 1579 ; but Paulet did not return to Eng land until the spring of that year. sir amias paulett to sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour to hold me excused that I write not raore often unto you, which proceedeth only of want of raatter worthy of you ; the root and spring of our ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 36. ^T. 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 75 actions here being derived into the Low Countries, from whence the news of France must be expected hereafter. Our only open doings consist in the assembly of men of war, which march daily, and want nothing but money ; and he may perchance be assisted vrith Captains of good credit very shortly. Our secret drifts and devices are composed of two divers fections, and tend to two divers ends : the one, and the mightier, seeking to disturb this voyage by all raeans pos sible ; the other, and the greater in number, sparing nothing that may advance the same. Ambassadors are gone to Mon sieur frora the Pope, the State of Venice, and the Duke of Savoy, to dissuade this journey. Monsieur is the only man that must decide this question, and sorae think that he will not be dissuaded. If you in England can bridle the French ambition, aU vrill be weU ; many here being of opinion that your own means will make you able, and that the necessity of the time vriU constrain others to yield to your counsel. The Marshal de Biron vriU not be quiet in Guienne; and what may ensue of his doings there, it is yet uncertain. I leave to trouble your Honour any further, committing you to the merciful protection of the Almighty. From Paris, the 26th of July 1578. Your Honour's to coraraand, A. Powlett." Walsingham's proceedings in HoUand gave great dis pleasure to Elizabeth ; and the ensuing vindication of hisi conduct to Hatton is remarkable for the boldness and honesty ofthe expressions; — sir FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I most heartUy thank you for letting rae understand by Mr. Treraayne the causes whereon hath grown her Ma jesty's offence. And though I hope I shaU be able suffi ciently to satisfy her at my return, yet in the mean time it is an intolerable grief unto me to receive so hard measure at her Majesty's hands, as if I were some notorious offender. » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 39; 76 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. Surely, Sir, it standeth not with her Majesty's safety to deal so unkindly vrith those that serve her faithfully. There is a difference between serving with a cheerful and languish ing mind. If there hath lacked in us either care, faithful ness, or diligence, then were we worthy of blame. It is very hard to judge there, (without understanding aU neces sary circumstances,) what is fit to be done here. When our doings shall come to examination, I hope the greatest fault we may be charged withal is, that we have had more regard to her Majesty's honour and safety than to her treasure ; wherein we have dealt no worse vrith her than with ourselves, haring for her serrice sake engaged ourselves £5000 thick ; which doing of ours being offensively taken, doth raake the burthen the heavier. Thus, Sir, you see, as my good friend, I am bound to open unto you my grief. For our proceed ings here, I refer you to the letters directed to my Lords. And so, with raost hearty thanks for your faithful, friendly deaUng towards rae, I coramit you to God's good keeping. Written with a weary hand and a wounded raind. At Antwerp, the 29th of July 1578. Your raost assured friend, Fra. Walsingham." It appears from Dr. Toby Mathew's reply to a letter from Sir Christopher Hatton that he wished to examine the records of Ohrist-Church College, Oxford. Dr. Mathew, who was afterwards Archbishop of York, was then President of St. John's, and Canon of Christ- Church. DR. MATHEW TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My bounden duty hurably remembered to your Honour. Iraraediately upon ray repair hither I dealt with ray corapany for the search of such evidences as your letter mentioneth. We are all not only contented a perfect view be had of all » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 43"'. JET. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 77 the muniments we have, but would be right glad, every one of us, that aught raight be found therein to profit or pleasure your Honour. And if I inight understand by this bearer, Mr. Mainwaring, (a raan raost vrilling and well able to do you much honour,) when it would Uke you to send hither to see the search raade, (the sooner the better in my opinion,) I would provide our officer for that purpose should not fail to be present. For raine own particular, I assure you. Sir, I think myself greatly beneflted that it pleaseth you in any thing to use my poor service ; which is, and shall be, and is so bound to be, at your commandment. And even thus I numbly commend the continuance and increase of your honour to the gracious blessing of Almighty God. From Christ-Church in Oxon, 22nd August 1578. Your Honour's humble and bounden, ToBiE Mathewe." Mr. Stanhope, of Harrington in Northamptonshire, the writer of the next letter, and ancestor of the Earls of Chesterfield, was then a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber. He succeeded Hatton as Vice-Chamberlain, was raised to the peerage by King James the First, and left issue two daughters, besides his son and heir, Charles, second Lord Stanhope; but no marriage took place between any of his chUdren and those of Lord Scrope of Bolton. Hatton's " fair house" was Holden by, which he rebuUt in imitation of Lord Burghley's seat of Theobald's ; — MR. STANHOPE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The continuance of your former courtesies erabol- deneth rae to salute you with these few hnes, which humbly recommend unto you his goodwiU whom your virtue and friendship have won to be yours in all he may ; praying you > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 35. 78 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578, to accept the offer of an honest mind in good part, till either occasion give more proof, or time more power, to perforra that which the whilst must rest in promise. In my journey from Londoii I had a little sight afar off of your fair house, which I had then gone to view better, had I not been tied to such a charge as I could not well part frora till I came to my cousin Thomas Markham's house, where I assure you. Sir, there was as great plenty of every good thing that raight welcome his friends as could be derised ; and as well can his wife skill to entertain them, as I have seen. From thence, after two or three days' rest, I took my daughter with rae to my brother's house ; where learing her, I carae to Carlisle to finish in some sort or other with ray Lord Scrope our forraer agreeraent touching the match of our children, whom I find, as ever, so still desirous to proceed according to our first intent ; and therefore have agreed to meet his Lordship again ' a month hence, in a progress which he intendeth into Lan cashire, where the young couples may see one another, and, after a little acquaintance, raay resolve accordingly. Where fore, Sir, I hurably pray you to present ray humblest service to her Majesty's gracious acceptance, imparting to her High ness our proceeding therein, and the cause of my stay here upon this occasion ; who either am otherwise to be counter manded by her Majesty, or else to finish this raatter as con veniently as I may, and then to return and raake an end of the reraainder of ray few years in her Highness's service, whereunto I have ever from the first both vowed myself and it ; raost humbly praying the Alraighty to prosper and defend her ever, to the only corafort of all her true loving servants and subjects, as it hath frora the first pleased Hira to bless her above all others with the excellency of most rare and singular virtues. Your letter was very welcome to my Lord Scrope, and, I can assure you, you raay dispose of hira as of your honourable constant friend ; who is so rauch the raore worthy accounting of, as he is her Majesty's very true and faithful servant, and the carefuUest to discharge the place coraraitted to hira with all diligence that raay be, as may well MI . 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 79 appear ; for that, of so rude and untamed people as these have been, I think her Majesty hath in few places better ordered or more obedient subjects. And yet surely. Sir, I must say that I am very glad I know no truer nor lovinger people to her Majesty anywhere than are generally over all these north parts as I have traveUed ; so as, if their landlords and governors be honest men, there is no doubt but the rest will show them selves very dutiful: the which I pray God we raay aU have ever the grace to do. And so, humbly praying you again to pardon my long troubling you, I recommend ray service to your devotion, and your health to the favour of the Alraighty. From CarUsle, the 5th of August, 1578. Yours most humbly to his power, John Stanhope.^ Walsingham's next letter to Hatton exhibits the Vice- Chamberlain in a very amiable light; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your most friendly standing in ray defence where it might do me most good, and your comfortable letter written to my poor comfortless vrife, do rainister unto rae just cause to acknowledge myself greatly beholden unto you, praying you to make account of me as of a raost constant and assured friend in aU fortunes. The desire that now her Majesty hath to understand of my doings at Mons, the speedy answer she requireth unto her last letters, and the sufficiency of this bearer, Mr. Somers, who hath been acquainted with all our proceedings here, which I have prayed hira to irapart unto you, doth force rae to be much shorter than othervrise I would have been if leisure had served. As you dispatch this bearer with comfortable or uncomfortable answer, so are these people here either to depend or utterly to fall away from you, wherein also there is to be used great expedition. God therefore direct her Majesty's heart to do that which » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 39"'. HO THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. may be for her honour and safety, to whose protection I com mit you. At Antwerp, the 16th of August 1578. Your most assured friend, Fra. Walsingham." In July the Queen set out upon one of her usual Pro gresses, and the Vice-ChanceUor of Cambridge, hearing that her Majesty intended to honour that University with a visit, wrote to Lord Burghley, its ChanceUor,- apprising him of the manner in which they intended to show their jespect, and asking his opinion on other points relating to her reception. Burghley, in his answer, advised them to provide gloves, with a few verses on a paper affixed, for the Earls of Leicester and Oxford and the Lord Chamberlain ; adding, " that for himself he could spare them, so that if Mr. Vice-Chamberlain might have a pair with some verses, it should do weU to conciliate his goodwill, being a lover of learned men." '' On the 26th of that month the Vice-ChanceUor and heads of houses waited upon the Queen at Audley End, when the gloves were presented. Gabriel Harvey, a scholar, orator, and poet, wrote a volume of Latin verses on the occasion; the fourth book of which he divided into three parts, and dedicated the first to Lord Oxford, the second to Sir Christopher Hatton, and the third to Philip Sidney. " On the accession of Elizabeth's suitor, Henry Duke of Anjou, to the Crown of France, in May 1574, the title of Anjou was conferred upon his brother, Francis Duke of AleuQon, who was then about twenty years old, and had for some time succeeded Henry as a candidate for the Queen's hand, though she was more than double his own age. This ridiculous alliance occupied the » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 35''. *> Nichols's Progresses, ii. 110. " Ibid. ii. 111. JET. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 81 public attention for some years; and in 1578, Camden says, " the Duke of Anjou, though his mind were bent upon the Netherland war, yet to show that he could attend both martial and love matters both at once, pro- secuteth his marriage with Queen Elizabeth, which he had begun to sue for whUst he was Duke of Alenqon ; and first Bacheville being sent for, this cause came to the ) Queen in her progress at Melford, CordaU's house in ,' Suffolk." " Elizabeth visited Sir Thomas CordaU, the , Master of the RoUs, at Melford, early in Augustt, at tended by the Earl of Oxford, Lord Hunsdon, Sir Chris topher Hatton, and others of her Court; and, a few days after, the Earl of Sussex expressed his opinions to the Queen respecting her marriage in the foUowing long letter :"= — THE earl of Sussex's letter to her majesty. It may please your most excellent Majesty, Upon Tuesday last, in the morning, about seven o'clock. Monsieur de Bussy came hither to me, and told me, that, hearing (as he was to pass through London) I was come hither frora the Court, he would acquaint rae with his negociation, for that he doubted that the raessenger sent from Mr. Walsinghara, since his coming from Monsieur, was not come to your Majesty before my coming frora the Court. The substance of his speech consisted upon two points. The one, that Monsieur dealt with such sincerity in the raatter of the raarriage as it rested in your Majesty to dispose of him therein as should please your self. The other, that he would be directed by your Majesty in his action of the Low Countries ; hoping that in both these your Majesty would have such respect ' Annals, b. ii. p. 90. literatedin the transcript in Hatton's '' Nichols's Progresses, ii. 113 — " Letter Book," have been supplied 116. from the copy in Lodge's Shrews- = Some passages, which are ob- bury Papers, vol. ii. p. 107, et seq. VOL. I. G 82 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. to his honour and state as the great affection which he bare to your person did deserve. He made a long discourse ofthe hard dealing that had been divers times used towards Mon sieur in France, and of the jealousies that from tirae to time were put into the heads of his raother and brother by per sonages of great quality, that sought their own greatness by his hinderance. He also declared that Monsieur, by these occasions, was necessarily detained frora shovring himself to be hiraself; but being now in free place, and at his full liberty, he would make his value and resolute mind knovra to all the world. And so concluded how necessary it was for hira to seek greatness abroad, to continue thereby his great ness and surety at horae ; and therefore was corae into the Low Countries to be directed whoUy by your Majesty, where he raight receive and follow your directions without the stay or lett of any other person ; which he would do with as great sincerity as could be required. He did not directly say that Monsieur looked to be raade great either by his raarriage with you or by his actions in the Low Countries ; but surely his whole discourse was oftentiraes interraingled with such speeches as I raight certainly gather that Monsieur's mean ing was to be great by the one of these means or by both, and that it were a dishonour to hira and a peril to lack both, and so return horae worse than he came forth. This was the substance of his speech unto me, which I thought my duty to declare unto your Majesty as briefly as I could. And now, remembering your Majesty's pleasure to be that upon all occasions I should be bold to write to you my opinion, I thought it my duty upon this occasion to write somewhat, humbly beseeching your Majesty to accept my plain and true meaning therein. To enter into this matter, I must first lay this foundation (which I think to be as sure as raan can lay), that Monsieur hath deterrained to seek to make himself great either by the marriage of your Majesty or by the pos session of the Low Countries, or by both; and that the French King and the Queen Mother to deliver hira out of France will by all the possible means that raay, help to J3T, 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 83 further and advance his greatness in tliis sort for their own benefit, quiet, and surety, and the avoiding of all fires, troubles, and perils at home. And if Monsieur by your ] Majesty be put from his hope in both these, and no sure peace concluded before, betwixt the King of Spain and the States, then wUl he turn over aU his forces to aid Don John, and seek his greatness and surety by martial actions that way, and by the friendship of the King of Spain, rather than with dishonour and peril to retum home in worse case tlian he came forth. Wherein also, or in any other action abroad; there is no doubt but his mother and brother vrill further him what they may, to keep him occupied abroad, and thereby to avoid the peril at home. This foundation being thus laid, it is fit to consider of the commodities and incoraraodities of every of thera ; that is to say, of the raarriage, of the alien ating of the Low Countries, and of the French assisting of Don John. Touching the marriage, (if your Majesty in your own heart can Uke of it, which I vriU leave to God and you,) I find these commodities to foUow. Your alUance vrith the house of France, whereby, besides aU Ukelihood that the French King wiU not attempt anything to the prejudice of you and his brother, you shaU be assured by yourself and by your husband to have such a party in France as -the French King shaU not be able, nor shaU not dare to attempt, directly or radirectly, anything against you. You shaU take away and i suppress aU practices for competition, for Popery, or any other seditious cause, at home or abroad; and so shall you at home and abroad assure your person and your state from aU perils that by man's judgment might grow anyways to you by France. You shaU also, by the help of your husband, f be able to compel the King of Spain to take reasonable con- | ditions of his subjects in the Low Countries, and the States ' to take reasonable conditions of their King, so as he may have that which before God and man doth justly belong to him, and they may enjoy their Uberties, freedoms, and all other things that is fit for their quiet and surety in their G 2 84 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. bodies, goods, consciences, and lives ; whereby you shall avoid great effusion of Christian blood, and shall have the honour and reward due in this world, and by God, to so gracious, godly, and Christian actions. And herewith, for the raore surety of all persons and matters, yourself may have in your own hands some raaritirae part to be by you kept at the charge of the King of Spain, and your husband may have some frontier towns in Uke sort, and both to be continued for such a number of years as may bring a settUng of surety in all respects; by which means you shall also be delivered from perils at home and abroad that may grow frora the King of Spain. And if you like not of this course in deaUng for the Low Countries, you may join with your husband, and so between you attempt to possess the whole Low Countries, and draw the sarae to the Crown of England, if you have any child by hira ; or, if you have none, to divide thera between the realms of England and France, as shall be metest for either. But, to be plain vrith your Majesty, I ; do not think this course to be so just, so godly, so honourable, nor, when it is looked into the bottora, so sure for you and I your state, as the other, although at the first sight it do perhaps carry in show sorae plausibility. It is also raost likely, and a raatter certainly to be expected, that, if God will incline your heart - to raarriage. He will also bless you with children ; whereby both you for your tirae shall be settled in the chair of surety, and all raatters that might be kindled by raischievous fires shall go away in the smoke, , et erunt cogitationes malorum sicut somnia. And, by the leav- I ing behind you of a successor of your own body, you shall leave surety and quiet to your realm; you shall avoid Chris tian bloodshed, like to grow by civil wars ; you shall dis burden your conscience ; you shall receive at God's hand your just desert for so godly a care, and your fame shall exceed upon the earth. So as, to be short, by your raarriage you shall give law to France, Spain and Low Countries, England, Scotland, and, in effect, to all Christendom; you shall settle your state surely at home; you shall be strongly friended JET. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 85 abroad ; you shaU be in estimation over all the world ; you shaU have a husband as a servant and defender of aU your causes present ; you shaU be Uke a serpent in the sight of the evil, and like a dove in the sight of the good; you shaU be the peacemaker to aU Christendom ; your fame shall exceed aU other Princes that were ever in Europe ; and God wiU bless you as His own chosen vessel both in this world and in the world to come: which be the commodities that be like to grow by your marriage at this present. The incommodities which may grow for lack of your mar riage be fittest to be left to be by your Majesty considered of by their contraries, whereby, and by the knowledge of your own heart, you may best judge of them ; and be such as my heart trembleth to think of them, and I pray God I never Uve to see them. The incommodities, dangers, and difficul ties that have been remembered might grow by your mar riage be these: 1. Your own mislike to mamage, which might breed a discontented life hereafter. 2. The difficulty of the choice of a person that might in aU respects content your mind. 3. The danger that a foreign Prince might vrith time and by degrees bring this realm to his ovm possession, ! being your husband. 4. The danger that if your husbemd should come to be a King of a foreign country, necessity would constrain him to his own from yours, and keep you in your own from him, and so by absence the comfort ex pected by marriage should lack. 5. The danger that, if you should have but one son by him, he should be heir of both kingdoms ; and then would be himself in the greatest, and rule the other by a riceroy, which England cannot bear. 6, 7. The difficulty of reUgion. The charge that should grow to the reahn by the maintenance of your husband. 8, 9. The general mishke which EngUshmen have to be govemed by a stranger. The danger of your person if your husband should but fraudulently seek you first, to possess by treason another after. To aU which such answers have also been remembered as follow : The first and second receive not the counsel of others, but must be directed by yourself,- whereby 86 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578, you be to follow only the counsel of your own heart, where unto all men raust leave you ; for it is the judgraent of your own heart that raay raake it ill to you, which no other raan can say to be but good of itself, if your heart can like of it. The third is a peril that raust have a long tirae of drift ere it come to pass, and indeed can never take effect if God take not all senses away both frora you and all the states of your realra ; and therefore a peril in talk and no peril in raatter, as appeareth by the King of Spain raarried to Queen Mary. The fourth is not yet in this raan, neither doth any raan know that it ever shall be, and therefore no peril, but accidental ; but if it did fall out indeed that he should be a King of himself, and thereby his ovra country require his presence, and your country require your presence, yet is it not therefore necessary that you should be always absent the one frora the other ; for, as by the araity of both Kingdoms both shall reraain in the greater surety, so by that occasion and the vicinity of thera you may have the better cause to be often together without danger to either of you, as appeared by King PhiUp, who carae divers tiraes to Queen Mary, and reraained with her certain raonths, even in his greatest tiraes of wars with the French King. The fifth rather seemeth to bring honour than peril, and yet is but a supposition, and no matter certain ; for it is a hard case to raake an assignraent that you shall have a child, and but one only child. And yet, if it so fall out, an EngUshraan, born in England and King thereof, born in his own realra, should also be King of France, as heretofore with great honour hath been ; and it should not be that a Frenchraan, born in France, King there of, should also be King of England, which never was before. And so, reducing this raatter to the example that hath been, it will be honour, and not peril, that shall grow thereby. The sixth hath always been answered that the exercise of his reli gion should (so long as he should continue it) be private to hiraself and a few of his own nation, without adraitting any Englishraen to it ; and he should also accorapany you to the exercise of your religion in convenient tiraes, which can bring MT. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 87 no peril to your person or state, nor hath been thought to be so intolerable as it should break your marriage, but only by such as picked quarrel rather to your marriage than to reli gion, whereof the world hath had good proof. The seventh shall rather bring gain than charge, for he hath a great pa trimony of his own to spend here. The example appeareth by King Philip. The eighth doth not carry a truth, for the realm is to be govemed as it was before, and so was it in the time of King Phihp ; and then the people shall have no cause to mishke, but rather a great cause of liking, when both your person, your realm, and aU your people shaU by this means be assured from aU dangers. The ninth inferreth a treasonable deaUng not to be thought of by a Christian Prince, much less to be executed, and that carrieth no rea sonable sense with it, that a Christian Prince, possessed of your godly, virtuous, wise, beautiful, and peerless person, and of all your kingdoms therewith, should have in his heart to be by treason delivered of you, and that he hath by you, to seek to get the same again by another person so far in ferior to you. And, therefore, of a Christian Prince I dare not have any such thought ; and he that thinketh of this can think of anything that he thinketh can hinder your marriage. And so I leave to your Majesty to consider at your pleasure of the commodities and incommodities of your marriage, and of the incommodities that are like to come if you marry not. Touching the aUenating of the Low Countries to the French, the incommodities be these : The uniting of the whole into one Prince's hands, which being divided, either party hath been able to match the other, and so by their division the realm of England hath never lacked a friend of the one ; which hath been a principal stay and surety to England, and by uniting of both vriU be a manifest and present danger and peril. The great forces both by land and sea that the French shaU have when they shall possess both, where the French may attempt what they vrill, and shall have power to execute their vriU. The great danger that may grow to all Europe by the greatness of the French, The perils that may 88 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. grow in particular to your Majesty by the French mainte nance of competition. Popery, faction, and other civil divi sions within the realm, and by withdrawing of England frora your devotion. The disturbing of all your traffic, and impos ing thereupon of aU taxes at the pleasure of the French. The stop of vent of all inward comraodities, and the mutinying of the people that shall lack work. The bringing of the realm into a perpetual servitude of tributes or other worse matter, which discomraodities, how they may be encountered with any of our coramodities, I do not see. By the joining of Monsieur with Don John, and no sure peace concluded be tween the King of Spain and the States, I see no commo dities to grow, but these incommodities manifestly to ensue. Either the whole suppression of the Low Countries by the Spanish tyranny, and thereby your Majesty to be subject to many of the perils before rehearsed in the cause of France, both for your person, realm, and traffic; or else your Majesty to raake yourself the head of the war, and so to enter into that which ray siraple head seeth no possibility for you to maintain, nor knoweth no way how to bring you out of it : which two generalities have so many particular perUs de pending on thera, as neither I can think of all, neither is it fit, for tediousness, to trouble you with those I think of; seeing your Majesty doth better know thera, and deeplier judge of thera than I can think. What may be done to procure a sure peace between the King and the States, I know not ; seeing I see such diffidence on both sides, and no likelihood that the States will either yield to reasonable conditions, or have any disposition to any reasonable peace. But if there raight be such a peace raade as in honour, truth, justice, and conscience were fit, both for the King and the subjects before God and raan, and sufficient to France of the continuance thereof, then do I surely think that many of the perils before rehearsed might be avoided for the time. But, if no such peace be made, then it were fit the States (being not able to defend theraselves) must cast themselves into either your defence or into the defence of France, where- iET. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 89 upon depend the perils before written. Thus have been bold to touch at this time such matter as true and faith ful duty doth find, and to put your Majesty in remembrance of; most humbly beseeching your Highness, that, seeing it is now time that all men should shake off particular respects, and yield themselves whoUy to that which is best for your service, the surety of your person, and the benefit of your realm, you will pardon me at this present for the delivering to you by writing that which in substance I have often before spoken, and, having by absence the coraraodity of speech taken from rae, ara forced, for the faithful discharge of ray duty, to deUver it rather by pen than by raouth, vrith ray most humble prayer to God that He may long preserve your Majesty to your own heart's contentation, and to put into your heart to do that which shall be most for His glory, and for your Majesty's honour and surety. The 28th of August 1578. Your Majesty's most humble and faithful subject and servant, T. Sussex. The decision of the CouncU on the affairs of the Low Countries, and its treatment of the Scottish ambassa dors towards the beginning of September in this year, were equally unsatisfactory to Walsingham, who declared his sentiments to Hatton on both points with his usual candour ; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, If it be good to have these Countries possessed by the French, and alienated in goodwill frora the Crown of Eng land, then have you returned Mr. Sommers with a very good dispatch; but if nothing can be raore prejudicial to the state of the Realm than such a resolution as may minister just cause of alienation, then have you committed a most dangerous, I wiU not say an irreparable error: for surely those people mean no longer to depend upon your uncertainties, who are the more grieved for that they shaU be forced thereby to 90 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1578. have recourse to a .raost perilous remedy, such as may be termed medicina morbo deterior. We do what we can to help the raatter, and to stay them from taking any desperate course. We put thera in some hope, that upon our return, when her Majesty by us shaU be thoroughly informed of the state of their affairs, she will take some other resolution that shall be to their comfort; which, though it breedeth sorae con tentment in thera for a tirae, yet when they weigh the un certainty of your forraer proceedings, and how subject they are to changes, and how dangerous it is for certain diseases to be reUeved by uncertain reraedies, they then despair to receive any good from thera. Her Majesty shall never have the Uke occasion offered to do thera good, as she raight, by yielding the relief they deraanded ; the estate of their affairs standing then upon making, or raarring: but things past cannot be called back again. Seeing your proceedings vrith them of Scotland, by sending away their ministers discontented, maketh me the less to wonder at your dealings vrith those of these Countries. The consideration of both doth give rae just cause to think that there hangeth over that Realra, which hitherto hath been blest under her Majesty's government with a rare quietness, some raost fearful storm; and the rather, I ara led so to conceive, for that I ara inforraed by Mr. Somraers, that no Prince could be raore faithfully and earnestly dealt vrithal by Counsellors than her Majesty hath been by hers, wherein he teUeth rae no raan could treat more effectuaUy than yourself. When the advice of grave and faithful Counsellors cannot prevail with a Prince of her Ma jesty's rare judgment, it is a sign that God hath closed up her heart frora seeing and executing that which may be for her safety ; which we that love her, and depend of her for tune, cannot but with grief think of: particularly my Lord Cobham and I have cause to think ourselves most unfortu nate, to be employed in a legation that is like to have so hard an issue; but I hope the world can witness that there lacked no goodwill in us to do that which duty and our call ing required. Thus, wanting presently any other matter to JEfi. 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 91 impart unto you, I commit you to God's protection. From Antwerp, the 9th of Septeraber 1578. Youi" very loving assured friend, Fran. Walsingham." None of Hatton's friends enjoyed more of his con fidence than Sir Thomas Heneage, the Treasurer of the Queen's Chamber; and some remarkable letters from him occur. The annexed, however, is unimportant: — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, To say nothing to you, now I go further from you, agrees not vrith my raind, nor, methinks, were good manner : yet hearing nothing from you, I have the less to trouble you with ; and if at any tirae for myself I trouble you at all, it is not the nature of ray will, but the pricking of ray need that is the cause thereof. Going now about ray journey, which wUl occupy me above a fortnight, I send this bearer princi pally to bring me word truly from you, that are like to know best, how her Majesty's perfect health (which of late hath been raore accurabered than she careth for) now presently standeth : for loring her more than ray life, I care for her health more than my own, and ara in Uttle quiet when I hear that any thing irapeacheth it. Next her Majesty, that your self do well, is that I raost desire to hear frora you, and raost heartily vrish. And so commend rae hurably to you, and us both to God's best keeping. From CopthaU, very hastily, this 15th of September 1578. Your own at coraraandraent, Thos. Heneage.'' The particulars of the "controversy" mentioned in the foUowing letter from the Earl of Sussex have not been ascertained, but it seems to have beeu of a public rather than personal nature : — ^ Additional MSS. 16891, f. 41''. >• Additional MSS. 15891, f. 56. 92 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. THE earl of SUSSEX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vicechamberlain, I am sorry to perceive that there was some raatter fallen out of controversy between you and Mr. Paginton, fearing it raight have bred sorae other disquiet; but, understanding by your letters how dis creetly you have dealt therein, and how well her Majesty resteth satisfied therewith, I am greatly eased of that fear ; and for my own part do like well that he tasteth some sraart for his arrogant using of a CounseUor, which in right is due to hira and to all others in the same predicaraent, although not always expected in like sort. Seeing the treaty by the three Princes, ambassadors take theffect, I would be glad to hear of a better sequel of the Emperor's sole treaty. I. hope the report of the King of Portugal's overthrow is not true. ' I do hear of late that the Queen's Majesty hath been soraewhat ill-disposed : if it be so, God shortly give her per fect health; for vrith her good estate we all breathe and Uve, and without that we aU stifle and perish. This soil bringeth forth no raatter worth writing, and therefore for this tirae I end, and wish to you, good Mr. Vicechamberlain, as to ray self. Frora Bath, the 20th of Septeraber 1578. Your assured friend, T. Sussex." When the following letter was written, Hatton was in attendance on the Queen at Loughton Hall in Essex, the seat of Mr. Francis Stonard, whence she proceeded to the Earl of Leicester's house at Wanstead, where the progress ended i** — TO LORD BURGHLEY. My VERY GOOD Lord, In consideration that her Majesty is not willing to hearken to any other suit raade unto her by Sir John Sraythe for his better enabling and recompense of " Additional MSS, 16891, f, 31, i" Nichols's Progresses, ii. 222. *T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 93 his service, her Highness is well pleased to release unto hira the mortgage of his lands upon the debt which he oweth her, with this order, that your Lordship shall take good bonds of him for the payment of 2000/. at Michaelraas corae twelve- raonths ; to the end, that his said lands being set free from raortgage, he may, either by raaking sale of them, or sorae other convenient means, endeavour to discharge and satisfy the debt the sooner. And whereas Mr. Secretary told your Lordship, that all his lands should stand bound for the said debt, there was no other raeaning in it, than that by the bonds abovesaid his whole liveUhood should be liable to her Ma jesty's execution ; as the raorrow, waiting upon your Lord ship at dinner, I will give you to understand raore at large. In the raean while, with ray very hearty coraraendations, I cominit your good Lordship to the Almighty. From the Court, at Mr. Stoner's, the 21st September 1578. Your good Lordship's most bound poor friend, Chr. Hatton." Walsingham's next letter was written soon after his return from the Low Countries. He was probably only restrained by respect or fear from adding another epithet to "hatred," when speaking of the Queen's "wooing matters," for it must have been a subject of ridicule throughout Europe : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I know by the inclosed from Mr. Davison, you shall be thoroughly inforraed what alterations are happened in the Low Countries since our departure frora thence. God dealeth most lovingly with her Majesty in taking away her enemies ; it requireth at her hands thankfulness, which is the only sacrifice He attendeth'' from her. By the reason of her in disposition, being continually troubled vrith the pain in her * Autograph in the State Paper OfBce, "¦ i. e. expects. 94 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. face, there hath as yet been no consultation for the Low Country causes. I find her Highness greatly altered frora that I left her touching those causes, so that I ara out of hope of any good resolution ; for the which I ara very sorry, knowing that upon this resolution dependeth either the con servation or ahenation of the Low Country people's heai'ts from her Majesty. The French ambassador, having received letters frora the King and the Duke of Anjou, requireth audience. I would to God her Majesty would forbear the entertaining any longer the raarriage matter. No one thing hath procured her so much hatred abroad as these wooing raatters. for that it is conceived she dalUeth therein. I have discharged ray duty in that behalf, but in very temperate sort, for that she hath been heretofore jealous of ray liking of her marriage ; and therefore cannot speak so frankly as others raay. Finding her Majesty daily subject to the pain in her face, she was content, through ray persuasion, that her physicians should confer vrith sorae of the best experimented physicians in London, which was performed accordingly ; but yet are they not resolved either touching the disease, nor the remedy. Thus, Sir, (as my leisure will give rae leave,) have I scribbled unto you such things as I think raeet for your knowledge ; and so corarait you to God. At Richraond, the 9th of October 1578. Your most assured friend, Fra. Walsingham. I should yesterday have raoved you, at the request of my brother Dodington, to appoint sorae day of access unto you for the Bishop of London ; as also to recommend unto you Mr. Manwood, to be by your good means furthered to the Chief Baronry '' ; both which I forgot, and am therefore charged with my unmindfulness of ray friends. I pray you let rae " Sic, sed quaere " misliking ;" or it '' Sir Roger Manwood succeeded may mean that the Queen suspected to the oifice, but was not appointed he did not like her intended mar- until the 24th of January 1679, riage. ^T, 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 95 hear frora you, or else perhaps wc raay be both blaraed. And so God keep you. Your assured friend, Fra. Walsingham." Mr. Edmund Tremayne, the writer of the annexed letter, appears to have been the person of those names who is deservedly memorable for his fidelity ; and if so, he was the second son of Thomas Tremayne, an Esquire of a very ancient family in Devonshire, and entered the service of Edward Earl of Devon, afterwards created Marquis of Exeter. When that nobleman and the Princess Elizabeth were sent to the Tower, on suspicion of being privy to Wyat's rebeUion, Tremayne was placed on the rack to extort from him a confession of their guilt; but he bore the torture without compromising either of them : and after Elizabeth came to the throne, she rewarded him with many marks of favour, and ap pointed him a Clerk of the Privy Council.'' He married Eulelia, daughter of Sir John St. Leger, by Katherine, daughter of George Lord Abergavenny, who appears to have been his mother-in-law, the "little lady" with a " noble mind" of whom he speaks so kindly : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May IT PLEASE YOUR Honour, Though no man be raore unvrilUng to trouble his friend vrith suits than myself, yet in such a case as this is, of my poor mother-in-law, which dif fereth not much frora the state of a widow or an orphan, not to be reraedied but by the help of a worthy gentleraan that will do it of his benevolence, I am bold to press upon your Honour, to whom if it were known as it is to rae what a noble raind there is within that little body, I am assured you would not but use all means to keep her from calamity. • Additional MSS. 15891, f. 44''. ' Prince's Worthies of Devon, Ed. 1810, p. 740. 96 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578, If her husband were in state, as he hath been within these twenty years, that little lady were easily induced to bestow upon her Majesty at an instant a present as great as this that she now desireth, rising to her Majesty to be paid by years. Besides the marriage of her daughter, I have been ever singularly bound unto her ; and in my greatest adversity I found in her a rare disposition to travail for my comfort. And therefore, besides the relief of the hard estate of her husband and herself, the good that she shall receive by my means shall greatly pleasure rae and increase my band to wards you. I have no doubt your Honour wiU do what you can. If her Majesty cannot like to pardon the debt, I hope yet her Highness will be pleased at the least to respite it, without danger to incur further forfeiture. If nothing else will be had, yet, I beseech you, vouchsafe the poor gentle woraan a dispatch with her Majesty's good favour; which of late days bath been the especial corafort of her life, and the least doubt thereof, I assure you, vrill shorten her days and hasten her death. I ara very loath to trouble you with many words, and yet much desire her good success in that she sueth for. In hope whereof, craving pardon of ray bold ness, I hurably take my leave. From Aukerwick, the 17th of October 1578. Your Honour's most assured at coraraandraent, E. Tremayne.* The foUowing letter from the Earl of Leicester has no date ; and as he incurred the Queen's displeasure, — the only fact mentioned in it, — on more than one occasion, there is nothing to prove when it was written. It pro bably, however, referred to Elizabeth's anger on being informed of his second marriage, in September 1578, to Lettice, widow of Walter Earl of Essex, and daughter of Sir Francis KnoUys. The letter occurs among those of 1578 and 1579; but as the letters are copied without " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 34''. ^T, 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 97 much regard to their dates, little reUance can be placed on its position ; — THE EARL OF LEICESTER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Mr. Vicechamberlain, Even as I had dined, Wrothe, my Lord Chamberlain's raan, came to me that immediately I should corae to the Court. My Lord of Hunsdon was with me, to whom he did the Uke message and other of her Ma jesty's CouncU I perceived were sent for also, whereby I con ceived the message was general for some CouncU causes. I did make show I would corae presentiy; but I partly de sired ray Lord of Hunsdon, as I do now raost eamestly to you, to excuse rae that I forbear to corae, being, as I wrote to you this moming, troubled and grieved both in heart and mind. I ara not unwUling, God knows, to serve her Ma jesty wherein I may, to the uttermost of ray Ufe, but most unfit at this tirae to make repair to that place, where so many eyes are vritnesses of my open and great disgraces delivered from her Majesty's mouth. Wherefore, if by sUence it raay be passed over, (my caUing for being but in a general sort,) I pray you let it be so ; otherwise, to be commanded for her Majesty's service, I wiU be most ready to it, if in tirae I may know it. Fare you weU. In haste, this afternoon, one of the clock. Your very assured, R. Leicester.* No information that can be relied upon has been found respecting Gerard de Marini, the writer of the foUow ing letter, and nothing is known of the " fault" for which he asks Hatton's pardon : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I could wish that these my dutiful Unes should attend some time of your Honour's leisure before they should pre sume to trouble you; but knowing how hardly they may > Additional MSS. 15891, f, 64'', VOL. I. H 98 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. then find such opportunity, as I crave they might, to present my humble serrice to your noble favour, I fear me they shall be constrained to press more boldly into your presence than becometh them, unless they should, through pusiUaniraity, leave that unperforraed for which they corae ; in which case, I trust your wonted courtesy vrill hold them favourably ex cused. After they have kissed your virtuous hands (as with due reverence I also do in heart), they are first most humbly to desire in my behalf your honourable pardon for my long silence; and then to represent unto the same the good and due remerabrance which I have of all the favours which your goodness hath bestowed on me at my divers needs, for which as I acknowledge myself raost bounden unto your Honour, so am I, and wiU be always, ready to eraploy the uttermost of my small power in your service, and repute it a great grace when you would vouchsafe to coraraand it. Hastily, and to conclude ; they shall advertise you that I shall ever have in raind to beseech Almighty God for the preservation of your happy estate, with increase of honour, fruition of your con tentation, and all perfect felicity. Thus having confessed ray fault, desired pardon, and insinuated my duty unto your Honour, with most lowly request of continuance of your accustomed favour towards me, I now think it meet to for bear to interrupt your honourable affairs any longer. From Paris, the 23rd of October 1578. Your Honour's raost affectionate poor servant, Gherarde de Marini.* In November, the Archbishop of Canterbury renewed his application that Hatton would again intercede for him with the Queen : — TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, As the remembrance of your honourable friendship and travaUs for me in this my long distress do restrain me * Additional MSS, 15891. .ET. 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 99 from importunity, so the respect of my duty towards her Majesty, and the great desire I have to recover her gracious favour, vrill not suffer me long to be silent; but still, at convenient opportunity, to renew my old suit unto you for the continuance of your honourable intercession for me to her Majesty, for the attaining of her princely benign good ness. I do assure myself that your Honour preterraitteth no convenient time, and so I understand also by relation from some of my very good friends ; but yet have I been bold, for these respects which I tell you, to pray you to do that which of your owu honourable inclination you are always most will ing to do. So, ceasing further to ti'ouble you at this present, I heartily commend you to the grace of God. From Lara beth, this 15th of November 1578. Yours in Christ, Edm. Cantuar." The " cousin Cheke," who brought Mr. Davison's next letter to Hatton, was Sir Henry Cheke, some time Secre tary to the Council in the North, first cousin to Davi son's wife, and nephew of Mary, daughter of Peter Cheke, of the Isle of Wight, Lord Burghley's first wife : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, This bearer, my cousin Cheke, can so particularly inforra your Honour of our success at Ghent, together with such other particularities as have occurred since ray last, as I forbear by hira to trouble you with a long letter ; and the rather, because the subject presently offered is such as I ara sure would Uttle deUght you. I beseech your Honour, there fore, to excuse this ray shortness ; and at all times to dispose of my poor serrice as of him that resteth faithfully at your Honour's devotion, whom I most humbly commend to the grace and proridence of God. Frora Bruges, the 18th of November 1578. Your Honour's hurably bounden, W. Davison.'' " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 30'-. '' Ibid. 16891, f. 106''. h2 100 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578. Sir Amias Paulet wrote to Hatton from Paris, in December, informing him of the approaching arrival of Simyer to negotiate the Queen's marriage with the Duke of Anjou, and who arrived in January following.* Paulet's letter shows also the distracted state of France : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It raay please your Honour to pardon ray long silence, which I could excuse in reasonable raanner, if I did not believe that your good opinion of me would not easily admit any sinister irapression ; and therefore presurae upon your favourable interpretation, I will say no raore but that in my last packet ray leisure would not perrait rae to write unto any other than to the Secretaries, saring two or three words to ray Lord of Leicester ; and, in ray other dispatch, I raay say truly, that I know no raatter worthy of you ; and now it must suffice you to be advertised that Simyer hath taken his leave of the King, and cometh unto you accompanied with ten or twelve gentlemen, and his whole train, esteeraed to araount to forty horse, or near thereabouts. The Pro testants continue in their accustomed jealousies, and especi aUy of [? the] Queen-Mother, whose painful journey into Languedoc hath been vrith small profit hitherunto, the Pro testants refusing to come to any conference with her. The other subjects of the Realra seem to be no better satisfied, requiring with threatenings to be restored to their ancient form of governraent. They will pay as in the tirae of Louis the Twelfth, and no more. It may be doubted lest this dis contentment have such furtherers and favourers as will bring the sarae to sorae dangerous issue ; and I would believe it, if I did not think that by the cunning and policy of sorae great personages the full rage of this storra will fall upon the Pro testants. It seeraeth that the King is not greatly troubled with these alterations, and it perchance fareth with him as with those who, being sick in extremity, feel not their ovra " Lodge, Illustrations of British History, ii, 143. ^r. 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. lOl sickness. His troubles and dangers are so thick and so many as he cannot easily judge which requireth the speediest re medy. The garae is jdready begun in Gascony, where La ReuUe hath been lately surprised by the Catholics, not with out some slaughter. It raay please your Honour to be raind ful of my revocation ; wherein you shall show your good-will towards me, and shall bind rae to be at your coraraandraent, as knoweth the Alraighty, who always preserve your Honour. From Paris, the Gth of December 1578. Your Honour's to coraraand, A. Paulett." It appears from the foUowing letter that Lord Burghley had disapproved of some suit of Hatton's arising out of a grant which the Queen had made to him : — FROM SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO LORD BURGHLEY. My very GOOD Lord, I humbly thank you for your most honourable letters. I am fully persuaded that duty to her Majesty, and not any other private respect to rae or against me, hath led you into the course you hold. I heartily com mend you for it, and reverence you in that, as in the rest of your faithful and most diUgent deaUngs in this estate, you rightly deserve, and I in truth ara bound to vritness. My poor case hath no defence ; demisso vultu dicendum, rogo. I ask, because I want : ray reward is made less, but I confess my unworthiness. I do my service vrith diligence and travail, according to God's gift in rae ; and therefore in chari table goodness I should not in any reasonable cause be so contemptuously rejected. Evil men are made examples; but I, that made no offence, should not be punished for Grey's fault. I seek a debt which grew to rae through her Majesty's reward; but your Lordship's direction will lead me to fur ther charge, vrithout any comfort of her Majesty's care and goodness in the gift she made to relieve rae. But, Sir, if this be for her general service, I, in ray little particular, raost hurably subrait rayself not only without offence towards » Additional MSS, 16891, f, 108, 102 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1578, your Lordship, but with sincere and hearty good Uking of your Lordship's proceedings ; and, touching ray present state, I will justify it to be reasonable and every way agreeable vrith my duty and estate. How it is hindered, I hear by her Majesty ; but by whora I know not: but I know and feel it is an easy thing to do harra, and therefore vrill pray to God to give us grace to do good each to other, while we raay. I hope your Lordship vrill not hinder rae, because ray doings are direct in this suit ; I offered her Majesty what 1 ara able, to the advanceraent of her ordinary revenue. I did acknowledge ray gain, through her goodness, for my com fortable relief. I made your Lordship privy, and you mis liked not. But now this little is thought too rauch, and so do content myself vrith what shall please her I am most bound to. I humbly beseech your Lordship not to conceive so hardly of me, that I vrill so rashly forget my duty toward you. I love you according to your worthiness, and I vrill serve you for your goodness towards rae heretofore, so long as I live. No cause shall lead rae to raislike you, for I believe in ray heart you wiU do nothing but that is good and honour able. And so, with the coraraendation of ray faithful good wUl, I hurably take ray leave. This 14th day of December 1578. Your good Lordship's most bound poor friend, Christopher Hatton.* Doctor Thomas Bynge, the writer of the next letter, was Master of Clare HaU, Cambridge, and was the Chancellor of that University in 1572 and 1578 : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Though I doubted not. Right Honourable, but this bearer would not only advertise your Honour sufficiently of his late success in our election of Fellows, but also report of my duty therein accordingly ; yet I was right glad to take the occasion by him to be the presenter thereof myself; the ' Murdin's State Papers, p. 318. ^T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 103 ratiier, for that I am therewithal to render to your Honour my most humble thanks for the great courtesy which your Honour vouchsafed me this last sumraer at the Court at Audley End ;' whereby I^have ever sithence accounted rayself so much indebted unto your Honour, that I heartily wish my poor service in any respect could be such as might seera worthy your Honour's acceptation. Howbeit, what it is, or how simple soever it is, I am to crave that it would please you to reckon it to be at your comraandment. And so, most humbly taking my leave, I comrait your Honour to the blessed tuition of the Almighty. Frora Carabridge, this 24th of De cember 1578. Your Honour's humbly at commandraent, Tho. Bynge.*" Sir Amias Paulet's first letter to Hatton, in 1579, is only remarkable for the notice it contains of the Order of Saint Esprit, which was instituted by Henry the Third, on the 30th of December 1578 :— TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour to bear with these few lines until my hand shall be strengthened with the news of ray successor ; and I trust to trouble you with longer letters, if any good occasion be ministered. This Christraas yieldeth no new thing worthy of the writing, and this vrinter season serveth for a bridle to our French humours ; and yet the same break out in some places into dangerous accidents. In Provence, no quietness ; open wars in Languedoc, in Guyenne, towns surprised of both sides ; and yet Queen Mother per- sisteth to urge a conference, whereof no good eifect is ex pected. Burgoigne, Normandy, and other prorinces are nothing appeased, and vrill accept no moderation of their de mands; and some think that the King shall be forced to yield to the raalice of the tirae. The new Order of Knight hood hath been celebrated with great soleranity ; and although » Vide ante. * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 46. 104 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. this Order be especially affected by Knights of the Romish reUgion, yet the Bishop of Rome hath not yet allowed thereof, and his arabassador hath refused to assist at the cereraonies. The Duke of Guise will see the next spring before he corae to the court. I ara advertised divers ways of your friendly furtherance to ray revocation ; raost humbly praying you to take hold upon every good occasion occurring. And thus I coramit your Honour to the merciful tuition of the Almighty. From Paris, the 12th of January 1578 [1578-9]. Your Honour's to comraand, A. Poulett.* The departure of the Duke of Anjou from the Low Countries, in February, was announced to Hatton, with other intelligence, by Mr. Davison, on the Sth of that month : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, If I seera slow in reraerabering your Honour with ray letters, I beseech you excuse it with the want of leisure, which doth raany tiraes restrain ray will. Now, in part to raake the araends, the best news I can send unto your Honour is the fiight of the Duke of Anjou frora hence to Alencon, I wot not whether with his greater discontentraent, or this Country's good liking. He was appointed to stay a tirae at La Fere, upon the frontier of Picardy ; but that deliberation was suddenly altered upon the return of his secretary out of England. His arabassador remaining here doth, notwith standing, make great instance to have the Deputies of all the Provinces assembled, to deliberate upon the renouncing of their subjection to the King of Spain, and accepting of his raaster for their Prince, in case they do intend to change raasters, as they have often borne hira in hand. But this inotion is not without irapediraents. The new solicited peace hangeth in suspense. The Eraperor's ambassador is returned once again to the enemy to break with hira in that behalf, upon whose success dependeth the burying or reviving of the " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 34. ^T. 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. ] 05 Duke of Anjou's raotion. The Marquis of Haurech is era ployed in Artois to hinder the intended reconcileraent of those frontier provinces with the eneray, where it is doubted he shall effect little. In Flanders the boors have taken arras against the soldiers in respect of the spoUs comraitted araongst thera, and have this last week disarraed two companies of French, and defeated three companies of Scots with one CampbeU their colonel, in the viUages of Isegem and Mespelare, between Alst and Dendremond. The rest of the soldiers do upon this accident fortify themselves as they best may for their surety and defence, and I doubt the mischief vrill not rest where it is. A cornet of the D. Casiraer's reystres hath been this last week defeated about Guyeck uponthe Maes, by the enemy; the Walloons lie yet in Meinen and Cassels, attending their first two months' pay proraised them by the accord. The eneray is passed to the hither side of the Maes, having abcradoned the enterprise of Guelder, which he made a countenance to besiege. Some think his drift is, to cut off as many as he can of the States' reystres, and other forces, which Ue straggUng over the country. The Colonels of that Nation do soUcit hard for pay, but hitherto to Uttle purpose. If they be dismissed ill-contented as they are yet, it is doubted they wiU take a sluttish farewell. Here is news out of Spain of the death of another of the King's sons, the certainty thereof may be known of his ambassador Mendoza. Here, commending your Honour to the provi dence of the Almighty, I most humbly take ray leave. At Antwerp, the 8th of February 1578-9. Your Honour's humbly at comraandment, W. Davison.* Queen Elizabeth's instructions to Sir Amias Paulet, which are not dated, but were probably sent about Fe bruary in this year, respecting her marriage with the Duke of Anjou, are extremely interesting, and bear evi dent marks of having been dictated by Elizabeth herself. » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 37''. 106 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. After stating her objections to the conditions proposed by Simyer, she expresses her suspicion that the youth ful suitor sought her "fortune" and not her "person," in terms which a wealthy heiress would now use towards a lover who had shewn rather too much attention to the marriage-settlement. The hint that the Duke ought to have come to England, and the satirical aUusion to the discreditable termination of his proceedings in the Low Countries, are very neatly conveyed, while the com placency with which she adverts to her own attractions, personal and mental, is perfectly characteristic. Her praise of Simyer, whom Camden caUs " a most choice courtier, exquisitely skilled in love toys, pleasant con ceits, and court dalliances," will not pass unnoticed by those who remember the Queen of Scots' remark respect ing her conduct towards him* : — THE queen to sir AMIAS PAULET. Trusty &c.. Finding De Simyer, at a certain late con ference between him and some of our Council about the treaty of marriage between the Duke his master and us, to insist very peremptorily upon certain articles that have always heretofore been denied to such Princes as in former tirae have sought us in way of raarriage, as also to the King, the said Duke's brother, (a thing falling out far contrary to our ex pectation,) considering that before his repair hither we caused one of our Secretaries to advertise hira (upon view of certain letters of his directed to the King's ambassador here, by which he signified unto him that he was to repair hither about the interview and the concluding of the articles,) that our mean ing was not to enter into any treaty of articles, being re solved not to yield to any other than were before agreed on between us and other Princes that have sought ......'' like ' Vide ante. ^ The MS. is torn away in these and other places. JST. 38,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 107 case, and therefore advised hira to forbear to if he were sent to any such end; only thus that in case any of the said articles were doubtful or obscure, to explain and make them more clear. We have therefore thought meet, for that we know not what to judge of such a strainable kind of proceeding, even at that tirae when to our seeming we were growing to a conclusion touching the interriew, to acquaint you therewith, to the end that you may let both the King and Monsieur know what we conceive thereof. And for that you may the more substantiaUy and fuUy deal therein, you shaU understand that the articles, upon which he did at the said conference vrith certain of our CouncU insist, were three. The first, that the said Duke might jointly have authority vrith us to dispose of aU things donative within this our Realm and other our dorainions. The second, that he might be, after raarriage, crovyned King ; offering certain cautions, that nothing should be done thereby to the prejudice of our Realra. And lastly, that he raight have threescore thousand pounds' pension during his Ufe. Touching the first, the inconveniencies were laid before him by our said Council, who declared unto him that it was a raatter that greatly toucheth our RegaUty, insomuch as Mon sieur might have thereby vocem negativam ; and also, that, in the marriage between the King of Spain and our late sister, the contents of that demand was by an especial article prohibited in the treaty between them, which afterwards was ratified by ParUaraent: yet was he not vrithout great diffi culty drawn to desist from nrging us to yield our consent therein, notvrithstanding he was plainly given to understand that our consenting thereto could not but breed a dangerous alienation of our Subjects' goodwiU from us. And, for the other two articles, it was showed unto hira, that, the con sideration of the said articles being coraraitted to our whole Council, it was by thera after long deUberation had thereon resolved, that they were not presently to be granted or con sidered of, but by the Counsel of the whole Reahn in Parlia raent, without whose consent they could no wise be accorded 108 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. unto, and therefore thought raeet to be held in suspense until the Duke's coraing over ; with which answers he not resting satisfied, did still pereraptorily insist in pressing the granting of the same, plainly protesting as weU to ourself as to our Council, that though he had very ample and large authority to treat and deal in the cause, yet durst he not take upon hira (considering what curious eyes there were bent to behold his actions and doings in this cause) to qualify the said articles. And th . . . would no otherwise be satisfied unless he might have our private allowance and assurance that the said .... articles should be both pro ed by con sent of Parliament ; wherein, though it was very unto him, .... dishonourable it would be for us to give any such private assurance in a matter that rested in the aUowance and consent of others, and how much the same would raislike our subjects that any such thing should be yielded unto be fore such tirae as it were seen what contentraent of our per sons raight grow by the interview, yet did he not forbear still to press us therein. Whereupon, we finding that by no per suasion that could be used, either by us or by our Council, he could be induced to allow of our answers, both we and certain of our Council did plainly let hira know that such a kind of insisting upon such articles as had been denied to other Princes, (specially having before his repair hither let hira understand that our raeaning was not to alter forraer articles, but only to clear such as were obscure and doubtful,) did rainister unto us just cause of suspicion, either to think that they had no raind of further proceeding (by standing upon such hard points as in reason we could not yield unto), or else that they sought this raatch to sorae other end than hitherto hath been by thera pretended, having always here tofore, as well by letters as by raost earnest speeches and protestations, given out, that not our fortune but our per son was the only thing that was sought: which, upon the con clusion seeming to fall out otherwise, as manifestly appeareth by their insisting upon points chiefly incidental, and depending upon our fortune, giveth us just cause to suspect that the ^T. 38.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 109 mark that is shot at, is our fortune and not our person ; for if the affection were so great as is pretended, neither would the Duke have directed him, his Minister, to have stood upon so hard conditions, nor himself raade so great difficulty to have come over and seen us without standing upon so many ceremonies, being persuaded that a Duke of Anjou could receive no dishonour by taking a journey to see a Queen of England, whatsoever success the end of his coraing took ; when as, at the least, there could not but grow thereby in crease of friendship. For we are well assured that his repair unto us could not be accompanied with harder success (we will not say with so great dishonour) than his late voyage into the Low Countries ; and therefore we saw no cause why the one raight not be perforraed with as little difficulty as the other, if they were both sought with like goodwiU and devo tion. It was also declared unto him, that if they had to deal vrith a Princess that had either sorae def .... of body, or some other notable defect of nature, or 1 ts of the mind fit for one of our place and quality, such a kind of strainable proceeding (carrying a greater show of profit than of goodwill) raight in some sort have been tolerated. But, considering how otherwise, our fortune laid aside, it hath pleased God to bestow His gifts upon us in good measure, which we do ascribe to the Giver, and not glory in thera as proceeding from ourselves, (being no fit trumpet to set out our own praises,) we may in true course of modesty think ourself worthy of as great a Prince as Monsieur is, without yielding to such hard conditions as by persons of greater quaUty than himself (being denied upon just cause) hath not been stood upon. And so we concluded with him, that seeing we saw apparently by their course of proceeding that we were not sought either with that affection or to that end we looked for, that we had just cause to think ourselves in this action not so well dealt vrith as appertained to one of our place and quahty; having not without great difficulty won in ourself a disposition to yield to the match, in case upon the interriew there should grow a hking of our persons. 110 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. Wherein we showed him, that if the Duke his raaster knew what advertiseraents were received frora Foreign parts, what effectual persuasions were used towards us at horae, to dis suade us from the same, and how carefully we travailed to win our subjects to allow thereof (who are not the best affected to a Foreign match), he should then see what wrong he had done us (we will not say unto hiraself) to stand so rauch upon terms of profit and reputation. Assuring hira therefore, that seeing we saw we had just cause to doubt that there was not that account made of our plain and friendly dealing in this action towards him that we looked for, and as we conceived that we have deserved, that the Duke his raaster should perhaps hereafter hardly draw us to yield so far forth as we have already done, unless we should find hira, and that by effects, to be otherwise affected towards us than as yet we can perceive he is; wishing hira therefore, and rather advising hira, to proceed in the other matches that by some of his nearest friends are (as we be not ignorant of) erabraced, whereof it should seera, by the raanner of dealing, both he and they have better liking. And as for the gentle man himself, De Simyer, whora we found greatly grieved for that he saw we could not allow of his insisting upon the said articles as a matter very offensive unto us, we did assure him that we had no cause to mislike of him, who in no other sort than either he was directed; ..... otherwise, (though his authority were large,) he could' not, without peril to himself, in respect of such as are not the best affected towards him, follow his own discretion and affection to the cause ; having found in him otherwise so great fidelity towards his master, so rare a sufficiency and dis cretion in one of his years in the handling of the cause, and so great devotion towards the match itself, as we had both great reason to like of him, as also to wish that we had a subject so well able to serve us. And therefore we would have you let both the King and the Duke his master under stand how weU we conceive of the gentleman, and how happy his master may think himself to have so rare a servant. .ET. 88.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Ill Haring thus at large laid before you the whole course of our late proceeding with De Simyer, and the effect of such speech as both by ourself and om- Council have been delivered unto him, we nothing doubt but that you wiU report the sarae both to the King and to the Duke in that good sort as both they may be induced to see their error, and we discharged of such calumniations as perhaps by such as are maliciously affected towards us in that Court raay be given out against us. Your Sovereign.' In February, and again in March, Hatton was made acquainted by Sir Amias Paulet with what had taken place in France ; but those letters are not of much in terest : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour to be advertised that I have received your courteous and friendly letters of the 20th of the last, and may perceive by her Majesty's letters of the same date, signifying her gracious pleasure touching ray revo cation, that your travail in my behalf hath been no less friendly than effectual. This is not the first time that I have tasted of your favour; and can remember, and vrill not forget, that at some other time it hath pleased you to use me with Uke roundness. I presurae to find you in this good disposition towards me at my coming into England, where I trust to be shortiy by your good furtherance ; and here, and there, will be always at your commandment. No change here of late. The governor chased out of Provence. La ReuUe rendered to the Protestants. Queen Mother urgeth the conference, and yet no hope of any good success to ensue. The Deputies of the Prorinces are here, attending the King's resolution, and continue peremptory in their demands. The castle of Beaucaire is in danger to be rendered to DomviUe. The return of Monsieur into those parts will discover the humours ' Additional MSS. 16891, f, &>. 112 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579, of this unquiet people, and now perchance the King will be raore careful to conserve the goodwills of his subjects. As knoweth the Alraighty, who always preserve your Honour. From Paris, the 9th of February 1578 [1578-9]. Your Honour's to coraraand, A. Powlett.* TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour to give me leave to trouble you sometimes with the occurrents of these parts during the time of ray abode here ; which I trust will be the shorter by your good raeans, wherein I have tasted of your favour al ready, and do not doubt of the continuance thereof. The troubles of Guienne and Languedoc are said to be appeased, and many things granted in the favour of the Protestants ; so as Queen Mother returneth to the Court, and now it is likely that those of the religion here shall pass this year in quiet ness. Queen Mother is resolved to see Monsieur before she come hither, and perchance wiU do her good-will to bring hira vrith her. We say here that Monsieur will be in Eng land very shortly, and that the King alloweth of his journey. The Provinces continue their coraplaints ; and now the other Provinces, which had yet said nothing, make haste vrith double diUgence to overtake the foremost. The murrauring is great, and cannot end vrithout danger or loss. The Duke of Guise is reconciled, and will be at the Court within seven or eight days. The Low Countries raust look for a fresh as sault, to which purpose the Spaniard is said to raake great preparations by sea and land, I would think rayself happy if I raight be the raessenger of ray next advertisements from hence. And thus, resting at your commandraent, I. commit your Honour to the mercy of the Highest. From Paris, the 10th of March 1578 [1578-9]. Your Honour's to comraand, A. Powlett.*" Neither the date nor the circumstances mentioned in this letter have been precisely ascertained. It is evi- » Additional MSS. 15891, f, 47", " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 66, MT. 89.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 113 dent that Hatton had taken an active part in suppress ing some riots near London ; and, from the remark that the afi'air was not " a trifling Pale matter," it is probable that the riots were those which are thus mentioned by Stow," and that this letter was written early in April, 1579— : " A° 1579. The 4th of May were arraigned at Barnet in Hartfordshire certain men of Northall Mims, and the parts near adjoining, for puUing down a pale at NorthaU, late set up (on the common ground) by the Earl of Warwick. Eight of them were condemned : two were brent in the hand, two were hanged betwixt Barnet and Whetstone, and other four condemned remained prisoners in Hartford Gaol long after," &c. This conjec ture is the more likely to be correct from Hatton being then with Sir Ealph Sadler, whose seat was in Hert fordshire, not far from the scene of the disturbance, which evidently arose from an attempt to inclose a com mon. The subject is again noticed in another letter. TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. I MUST begin vrith her Majesty's coraraandraent, as duty bindeth me ; which is to signify unto you, Mr. Vicechamber lain, in how gracious part she taketh this your careful and diligent serrice done for the dispersing and quieting of these rebeUious and tumultuous persons lately gathered together in those parts. Her Highness hath been inforraed of the great pains you have taken, of the vrise and discreet orders which you have prescribed, as well for the establishing of good and assured ways to prevent any further inconvenience by these lewd people for their proceeding, as to search out what hath been the cause, as also their further intent in following this enterprise. These your doings, I assure you, she takes in raost gracious sort. And, learing to tell you what particularities she understandeth of your doings « Annals, p. 685. VOL. I. I 114 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. by sundry raeans, I raust let you know what her express pleasure is for herself to do. Albeit she was most desirous to hear of your speedy return, haring brought all things to so good pass as you have done, yet being advertised of your travail and watch you have sustained in this business, ¦ she would have you in anywise rest you at least all day to-morrow, notwithstanding some of us did let her know that her former desire to have you to retum was written . by us unto you before ; and hath charged rae thus spe cially to signify her pleasure that she would have you take some rest ere you put yourself to travel again; and for that purpose hath she sent this bearer with her own comraandment to you beside, who can also declare unto you how acceptable your service is unto her : and thus much by her Majesty's direction. Now, Sir, to the mat ter; for my part I think you in a raost happy hour to prevent so great and dangerous a raischief as this lewd enterprise was like to have grown unto, both to her Ma jesty's person and to her estate. I perceive you find it was more than a trifiing Pale matter ; and I fear, if this be not made a full example, you shall hear of far more greater of this sort : but her Majesty is bent to make her subjects know that she can and will raix justice with mercy. It is time, you see, for us to look further into the dispo sitions of the common people further off, when so near hand they wiU so audaciously take the Prince's authority into their hands. I trust you have been the instrument to save both treasure and blood, and that is a happy piece of serrice. For ray brother's private respect and mine, wherein you have showed yourself a most faithful friend, I will say no raore, but, what raay lie in so sraall powers to requite, either you raust be sure of it, or God send shame upon us. I will here end, and pray God to send you all good hap, even as I can wish for rayself; and refer the rest to this bearer, who must excuse ray brother, for that it was late, and I willed hira not to stay for any letter frora hira, for he was a-bed and asleep, and now past 11 ^T, 89,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 115 o'clock, and besides troubled with his gout. God be with you, and commend rae to Sir Ralph Sadler. Your most assured, Ro. Leicester.* Walsingham also wrote to Hatton about the riots in Hertfordshire ; and his letter proves not only that he was famiUarly called by the Queen her " Mutton," but that the term was well known to the Court ; — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I acquainted her Majesty this afternoon with the par ticular letters you sent me, who did very greatly coraraend your discreet manner of proceeding ; and willed me to let you understand, that, upon report made unto her of an outrage cominitted upon certain of Sir John Brockett's sheep, she feareth greatly her Mutton, lest he should take some harra amongst those disordered people. I am glad. Sir, that mat ters are so well appeased that her Majesty raay be merry vrithal, and no further cause of your absence from hence ; at whose return, upon conference vrith you, her Majesty and my Lords raean to take order for the extending of such punishment upon the offenders as the quality of their offences requireth, and may serve for a terror to others. And so, pray ing you, good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, to commend me to Sir Ralph Sadler, your coUeague, I coraraend you to God's good protection. At the Court, the 23rd of April 1579. Fran. Walsingham. Postscript. We are at this present so troubled vrith St. George's cereraonies,'' as we cannot thoroughly consult upon matters of substance.*^ Several curious letters occur from Henry Howard, who was apparently the second son of Henry Earl of Surrey, » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 46''. '' The observance of the Feast of St. George by the Knights of the Garter « Additional MSS. 15891, f. 36''. I 2 116 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. and was created Earl of Northampton by James the First. His eminent talents did not procure him any share of the Queen's favour untU the latter part of her reign, though he used aU the usual arts to propitiate her. It is not certain that this curious letter, which was accom panied by a present for the Queen, was addressed to Hat ton, whose relationship to Howard has not been traced; — FROM HENRY HOWARD. As I have ever been too well acquainted vrith my own de fects to chaUenge any place among the chosen, so, lest by negligence I raight be cast among the reprobate, I thought good (my own dear Cousin) to require your favour in pre senting ray humble service to her Majesty, with assured warrant that a number, which have raade more curtesies, have not said so many prayers for her Majesty as I have done since her departure frora this place ; for raen's rainds are. never more inclined to contemplate than while the senses are sus pended frora their cliief felicity. There is no bush nor flower in this garden which yieldeth not a corafort or a corrysine. Violets are gathered to make conserve. Rosemary begins to bloom, but it is too coraraon. Priraroses seera raore pleasant for their season, than sweet by their favour. Eglantine hath ten delights for every other's one, if it had no prickles ; and heartsease is so raised upon the tops of the walls as I cannot reach it. The grace which coraeth frora the windows is raost welcome, for by this raean I can say what was, though wiser men than I can hardly tell what shall be. Every favour brings a thirst, but the streams retire ; and everj- fancy putteth us in hope of fruit, but Tantalus is famished. This sharp sauce to ray sweet conceits enforceth rae to write and seek that comfort, by assurance of her Majesty's good health, which cannot be conceived by my deepest raeditations in her absence. And though araong so raany heaps of dainty pre sents as other men's abundance may bring forth according to the merit of her Majesty's great bounty, this simple pledge ^T. 39,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 117 and token of ray duty may be driven to shrink aside, and hide itself for fear of sorae disgrace ; yet, if it please her to conceive that sorae things are as welcorae for their figure as other for their weight, and that the sender of this token deemeth not the richest crown in Europe worthy of that head which closeth in itself the treasures of true wisdora, and letteth out the springs of happy government, I doubt not but her Majesty wUl accept the same ex congruo, though neither I nor anything of mine can claim her favour ex con- digno. The fancy, many years agone, hath been derived from the Franciscans; but I am rauch deceived if, by the turning of one loop or two, her Majesty may not convert it to a truelove's knot. The mean I know, but not the manner, further than that I am assured that no woraan of less virtue, grace, and beauty than the best can make this change, be cause it passeth raore by skiU than sleight, by wisdom than by hazard: only this I promise, that whatsoever knot her Majesty doth bind shall be my fast in faith; and whatsoever band her fancy shall not Uke, shaU be ray loose at liberty. And thus, my dear Cousin, requiring you in my behalf to kiss that sacred hand, whose print is here, though the pattern be not extant ; and withal to recoraraend my faith, my life, and service to herself, who bindeth me more ways than she shall ever know, I take my leave, kissing the soil where her foot hath left impression of so rare a personage. From White haU, this 1st of May 1579. H. Howard.* It does not appear who the person was to whom Dr. Bynge gave the following letter of introduction to Sir Christopher Hatton : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your honourable raessage that it pleased you to send me by Mr. Hamond, a FeUow of our House, doth draw rae eftsoons to renew that duty which I justly acknowledge I owe unto you. And therewithal I have taken further boldness » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 96^ 118 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. even to be a solicitor to your Honour in the behalf of another ; wherein, nevertheless, if I seem perhaps to presume too far as I am humbly to crave pardon for the sarae, so upon raonition I shall be easily reformed: and yet at this present I could hardly avoid to yield to the petition of this bearer, who, being an humble suitor unto your Honour, de sired only ray testiraony in furtherance of his cause; the report whereof as I leave to himself, so for his person 1 can truly say, that I know hira to be both discreet and learned, and, in the faculty, fit for the roora he desireth. He is this year to proceed Doctor, and hath to that end already done acts in the public schools. Now, if his good hap may be such as to find favour with your Honour, I shall be doubly glad: first, for my friend's sake, whose preferment I vrish; next, for rayself, in that my dutiful meaning hath been well ac cepted at your Honour's hands. Even thus hurably taking ray leave, I coraraend your Honour to God's most blessed tuition. Frora Cambridge, the 6th of May 1579. Your Honour's humbly to be coraraanded, Tho. Bynge.* The unfortunate Archbishop of Canterbury again besought Hatton's intercession with the Queen in May of this year. The great man to whom he aUudes was the Duke of Anjou : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The consultation about the coraing of yonder great raan (being a cause of greatest importance) hath long occu pied her Majesty and your Honours of her Council ; in which time I thought it my duty to abstain from troubUng you with suit in ray private cause. That Foreign matter being (as I hear) clearly laid aside, so good opportunity of tirae being offered, I ara bold to renew my suit, praying your Honour to renew your intercession to her Majesty for my » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 56. MI. 39,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 119 restitution to her favour and execution of mine office. I trust that the reraerabrance of ray two years' restraint of liberty in this my old and sickly age will move her Majesty to some coraraiseration over rae, according to her accus tomed most gracious inclination to all benignity, goodness, and clemency, and the rather by your honourable and good mediation. So, ceasing further to trouble your Honour at this tirae, I heartily commend the same to the grace of God. From Lambeth, the 22nd of May 1579. Yours in Christ, Edm. Cantuar.* On the 17th of July a circumstance occurred which placed the lives of the Queen, the Earl of Lincoln, the French ambassador Simyer, and Sir Christopher Hat ton in some danger. Being in her private barge on the Thames, between Deptford and Greenwich, accompanied by those persons, a shot was fired out of a boat, which struck one of the rowers within six feet of her Majesty, and passed through both his arms. The wound was so severe as to cause him to scream piteously; but the Queen did not lose her presence of mind in the slightest degree, and giving her scarf to the wounded man, bid him be of good cheer, saying, he should want for nothing. When it was insinuated to Elizabeth that it was an attempt to murder her or Simyer, she magnanimously observed, " she coiUd believe nothing of her people which parents would not believe of their children ;" and though the author of the accident was condemned and brought out for execution, he was pardoned.'' A few days after this afi'air, the Duke of Anjou arrived privately in England, and came unexpectedly to Green wich, where he had some secret conferences with the " Additional MSS, 15891, f, 31". is little doubt it was entirely acoi- <> Stow's Annals, p. 685. There dental. Speed, 1169. 120 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. Queen, and returned soon after to France, " being seen but of few.* Although Hatton did not become High Steward of Cambridge until after the Earl of Leicester's death in 1588, he seems to have taken much interest in the afi'airs of the University long before that event : — DR. BYNGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Upon receipt of your Honour's letters directed to me, and to other Assistants and Visitors of Gonrille and Caius Col lege, in the behalf of Mr. Booth, one of the Fellows of that House, who found himself grieved vrith some hard proceed ing (as he took it) of the Master and certain other of the FeUows there in a cause of defamation against him, for further examination whereof we were required by your Honour to call before us the parties differ ej%-the'' better to understand the truth of that matter. Ma!y it please your Honour to be advertised that, upon Saturday last, being met together about that business, and intending, according to the purport of your Honour's letters, to sen^^M the. Master of the CoUege and other parties, Mr. Booth thjfere, in presence of us all, raade earnest request that we wduld not enter to deal further that way, aUeging that otherwise he might incur - the danger of perjury, by reason of a statute of their House whereby it is ordained, as he said, that no FeUow ought to decline the order of the Master and the Company unless they do it by appeUation, and that to be raade unto none other Judge but to their Visitors only. Upon this his inforraation I stayed to proceed, and wished hira to use advice of some that might sufficiently direct hira in his doings. What course he is resolved to take I know not; but this much I thought best to advertise your Honour, remaining ready to yield unto the same what duty I can: and so most humbly I take my leave. From Cambridge, the Srd of August 1579. Your Honour's hurably at comraandment, Tho. Bynge." » Camden's Annals, b, ii, p. 96, " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 33". MT. 39.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 121 Lord Burghley having gone into Northamptonshire in August, he transmitted his opinion on the afi'airs of Ireland and the Low Countries to one of his Colleagues, and apparently to Secretary Walsingham, in the foUow ing letter. James Fitzmaurice, who had raised a rebel Uon in Munster, went to France and thence to Spain for assistance, and landed from three ships with two priests, to one of whom, caUed Nicholas Saunders, the Pope had given a consecrated banner, and some soldiers at St. Mary Wick, in Kerry, where he erected a fort. He placed his vessels close under it, where they were gaUantly boarded and taken by one of the Queen's vessels, commanded by Captain Coui'tenay". LORD burghley TO MR. SECRETARY WALSINGHAM. Sir, I most heartily thank you for acquainting of me vrith your advertiseraents both from Ireland and the Low Coun tries, which came hither to rae this foul rainy moming, being Sunday, at Althorpe. I do return all your letters, having made Mr, ChanceUor'' acquainted therewith. And for the matters of Ireland, I ara of opinion that it is stUl necessary that the ships should go on, and that they should be double- manned, for to be able to set two or three shot on land, as occasion shovdd serve, and as the Justice might think meet : for if the eneray tarry still at the Dingle, it must be the force of the ships that raust reraove them ; for, as I re member, there is no good access by land through Kerry to approach the Dingle ; whereof my Lord of Ormond can best inform you. If the enemy should not now be removed, from his settling in Ireland, though presently his forces be small, yet his holding, and taking of footing and of a haven, would be dangerous to receive from Foreign parts further forces to offend her Majesty; whereof I ara very jealous, if discon- ' Camden's Annals, " Sir Walter Mildmay, Chancellor of the Exchequer. 122 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. tentation grow betwixt France and us upon a breach of this interview, or if the King of Spain shall be free frora his troubles in the Low Countries, and have his will there for reUgion. This smaU entry of Fitzmorris wiU be a gate for any of those two Princes to offend her Majesty in Ireland in recompence of former offences ofiered unto thera. And, besides that, the sufferance of Fitzraorris with his Papistical forces, and offers for restoring of religion, wUl undoubtedly be a continual comfort to all lewd and discontented people of Ireland ; whereof I think three parts of four, or rather nine parts of ten, are for raatter of religion evil satisfied with the English Government : and thus you see I cannot forbear to write ray conceit, subraitting it nevertheless to the better judgraent of others. For the Low Countries, I think surely you shall find that the articles of peace sent from Cologne will draw all the people to accept the conditions, saving only the people that are weU devoted in religion ; so as surely the war that shall continue will be for religion : and I pray God they that are Protestants be not also divided among theraselves by provocation of the Lutheran Princes of Gerraany. When I consider the articles of Cologne, and the accord of Gant established, (whereby Holland and Zealand are to continue their religion, and the strangers to depart,) I could rather yield to the acceptation of these articles than to have the war continue ; wherein if the Prince should quail, then surely the pacification of Gant will also fall. I pray you. Sir, vrith ray hearty commendations, tell Mr, Vice-Chamberlain that Mr. ChanceUor and I, in our way to Northarapton, raean to sur vey his house at Holdenby, and, when we have done, to fill our bellies with his meat, and sleep also, as the proverb is, our bellies-full all Monday at night ; and on Tuesday in the morning we will be at Northampton where after noon we mean to hear the babbling matters of the town for the causes of religion, wishing that we may accord thera all both in raind and actions ; at the least we will draw thera all to follow one line by the rule of the Queen Majesty's lavvs, or else to procure the contrariant to feel the sharpness of the sarae laws. ^T, 88,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 123 And so, praying you to coraraend us hurably to all our good Lords and others of the Council, we also do pray for her Majesty's prosperity in all her actions. Frora Althorpe, the 9th of July [August*] 1579. Your assured loving friend, W. Burghley." Despatches having reached Burghley relating to Ire land after he had written the preceding letter, he answered them in the afternoon of the same day : — TO SECRETARY WALSINGHAM. Sir, This morning afore dinner I wrote to you in answer of your letters, by which you made mention of your direction to Bland and to Mr. Tremayne to stay some part of the rictualling, upon some opinion that you conceived of the smaUness of James Fitzmorris' forces. And now this after noon I have received your later letters, with copies of writings from the Lord Justice and Waterhouse, by which I see that the perU is presently greater than before appeared, but surely no greater than in time coraing would prove if the matter be not at the first rooted up, as by ray forenoon's vnriting to you I did pronounce. But now no cost is to be spared nor time lost, for, if haste be made with the ships, I hope they shall come thither before the Pope's nuncio and Saunders shaU retum vrith their supplies from Spain ; which surely they wUl, vrith their large reports of their Ukelihood of success for the matter of reUgion, procure out of Spain under colour of the clergy and holy-house of Spain vrith con nivance of the King CathoUc, Therefore, the more haste be used vrith the ships, the more sure to vrithstand the new supply ; and the forces of footmen from England are as necessary to withstand the inward revolts in Munster, where- ' The date of " July" in the on Monday ; and on Monday the " Letter Book" is certainly a mis- lOth of August he wrote lo Hatton take, Burghley says the day he from that place. See also Hatton's wrote was "Sunday." The 9th of letter of the 9th of .4ag«s<, welcom- July did not, and the 9th of August ing him to Holdenby. did fall on Sunday. Moreover Burgh- " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 110", ley says he should sleep at Holdenby 124 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. in I fear raore the authority and rooted raalice of Sir John of Desraond than the untruth of his brother. The departing thither of the Earl of Orraond is worth the sending of five hundred raen : the loss of Davill* is very great, Mr. Chan ceUor is privy to this my writing, in testiraony whereof I have required his subscription. W. Burghley." Pursuant to the intention announced in one of the preceding letters, Lord Burghley went to Sir Christo pher Hatton's new mansion at Holdenby, and its owner not being able to receive his distinguished guest in per son, he welcomed him there by the foUowing letter. As Holdenby was built in imitation of Burghley's seat at Theobalds, he requested his Lordship to mention to the surveyor any improvements that might occur to him : — TO LORD BURGHLEY. My singular good Lord, I yield you as friendly and thankful a welcome as may be given you by any raan or in any place in this world. I fear rae that as your Lordship shall find my house unbuilt and very far from good order, so through the newness you shall find it dampish and full of evil air; whereof I pray God your health be not im peached. Before God, Sir, I take great corafort of your raost honourable courtesy to visit your poor friend in so kind manner. I pray God I may deserve it by my true serrice towards you. I hurably beseech you, ray honourable Lord, for your opinion to the surveyor of such lacks and faults as shaU appear to you in this rude building, for as the sarae is done hitherto in direct observation of your house and plot at Tyball's, so I eamestly pray your Lordship that by your good corrections at this tirae, it raay prove as like to the same as it " Henry Davill, " an English gen- vill's servants : and boasting of the tleman and stout soldier," and deed to Father Saunders, the priest Arthur Carter, Lieutenant of the commended it " as a sweet sacrifice Marshal of Munster, were murdered in the sight of God." — Camden. in their bed at Traly by John Des mond, who afterwards killed all Da- " Additional MSS, 16891, f. 111. ^T. 39.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 126 hath ever been meant to be. I beseech you. Sir, use patience in your too too rude entertainment, and think how much he doth honour and love you that would have wished it to have been much better and fit for so honourable a personage. Your Lordship will pardon my lack of presence to attend on you, because you know my leave cannot be gotten. God bless you for ever my good Lord, and a thousand and ten thousand times I humbly bid you fareweU. Mr, Secretai-y telleth me he hath written the news unto you, and, therefore, I wUl no further trouble your good Lordship. Her most ex cellent Majesty hath good health, God be praised for it ; and hath commanded me to write her most gracious and loving commendations unto you. Order is in part given to pre pare against Monsieur's coming. And thus my honourable good Lord I humbly bid you my dutiful farewell. Green wich, this 9th of August 1579. Your Lordship's most bound, Chr. Hatton.* Before Lord Burghley left Holdenby, he wrote to thank its owner for his hospitaUty ; and his description of the house shows its magnificence. In a postscript he acknowledged Hatton's letter of the 9th : — LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I may not pass out of this good house vrithout thanks on your behalf to God, and on mine to you, nor without memory of her Majesty, to whom it appeareth this goodly, perfect, though not perfected work is consecrated; and all this 1 do in mind largely conceive, and in writing do mean but to touch, because I am hastened to Northampton, and I vriU reserve matter to enlarge at my retum, to yourself. I came yesterday in the aftemoon to your house with Sir Walter Mildmay, who came with very good will to visit this house. I was first met on the way with Mr. ColshiU and your good uncle Mr. Saunders," your cousin Mr. Tate and * Autograph in the Lansdowne Lord the Lord High Treasurer of MS, 28, art, 63, addressed to " The England, at Holdenby." Right Honourable my singular good " William Saunders of Harring ton, his mother's brother. 126 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579, others, and then vrith a great raultitude of your gentlemen and servants, all showing themselves, as by your direction, glad of my coming. But approaching to the house, being led by a large, long, straight fair way, I found a great mag nificence in the front or front pieces of the house, and so every part answerable to other, to allure liking. I found no one thing of greater grace than your stately ascent from your hall to your great chamber ; and your chambers answer able vrith largeness and lightsomeness, that truly a Momus could find no fault. I risited all your rooras high and low, and only the contentation of raine eyes raade rae forget the infirraity of ray legs.. And where you were wont to say it was a young Theobalds, truly Theobalds I like as my own ; but I confess it is not so good as a model to a work, less than a pattern, and no otherwise worthy in any comparison than a foil. God send us both long to enjoy Her, for whom we both raeant to exceed our purses in these. And so I end with my prayer for her health, and thanks humbly for her Majesty's reraembrance of me her weak Spirit.* From a monument of her Majesty's bountifulness to a thankful servant, that is, from Holdenby Queen Elizabeth's meraory, by Sir Christopher Hatton her faithful servant and counsellor. 10th August 1579. Yours raost assuredly, W. Burghley, Postscript. — The abundant raeraorials of your house had alraost raade me forget to thank you for your kind letter, which came to me in the midst of a sumptuous supper." The disturbances in Ireland, to which Sir Thomas Heneage alludes in the following letter, have been al ready mentioned. That Queen Elizabeth translated parts ' Queen Elizabeth had a peculiar and Hatton was certainly " Lyddes" name for most of her ministers and and her " Mutton." favourites ; Burghley was her " Spi- " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 32. rit," Walsingham was her " Moon," The date in the Letter Book is " 19th and Lady Norris was her " Crow." of August, 1678," but it was ob- There is some reason for supposing viously a mistake of the copyist. that Leicester was called her "Turk," ^T. 39.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 127 of Seneca is weU known ; and a copy of her translation ofthe 107th Epistle, which she gave to her god-son. Sir John Harington, in 1567, is printed in the " Nugss Antique :" — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Being here yet much worse than I looked for, and, I think] than you vvould have rae, it would make rae the better to know that you did well, and her Majesty did best; for which cause 1 have sent ray man unto you. How the fire made by the rebels and runagates in Ireland now grows to flame, (yet I trust but Uke a wisp of straw,) the Country takes knowledge of, and I doubt not but the Court takes care of. Her Majesty, of those that love her, shall have leave to think of these things according to her vrisdom, but not to take thought for them according to their wrong. So may these things rather touch her than trouble her. And surely. Sir, by the great goodness of God, which hath led her, and whereon she leaneth, and by her Highness' fore-ordained feUcity and virtue, whereof we have tasted, I am persuaded that there is no mischief nor harra meant her but shall tum to her honour ; so as that shaU be verified of her that Seneca wrote wisely, and her Majesty translated more sweetly, — of adversity and virtue, illustrat dum vexat, it graces whora it grates. More lines ray bad health vrill not afford you, but more goodvrill shall no man alive bear you ; which I beseech you to accept until I can send you a better token. And the Lord of Life send you long life with great honour, accom panied with most continuance and contentation. From Cop thaU, the 12th of August 1579. Your own so bound, T. Heneage.* The first letter from Philip Sidney to Hatton related to his memorable quarrel with the Earl of Oxford, the particulars of which, though fully described by Lord ' Additional MSS. 16891, f. 36". 128' THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. Brooke," are imperfectly told by later biographers. WhUe Sidney was playing in the Tennis Court belonging to the Palace, Oxford came in, and after some conversation, peremptorily ordered him to quit the place. Sidney having refused to comply with so rude a request, the Earl twice called him a " puppy." Sidney then gave him the lie, which Lord Brooke gravely says he had a right to do, inasmuch as puppies are the produce of dogs, and not of men, and then left the ground. Not hearing from Oxford in the manner he expected after so public an insult, Sidney sent on the following day " to awake him out of his trance," and thus incited, the Earl challenged him. The matter was immediately taken up by the Privy Council, who tried in vain to induce Sidney to make submission ; and the Queen herself remonstrated with him on the impropriety of quarrelling with so high a personage. But he properly felt that he was the guardian of his own honour, and having posi tively declined to make any concessions, withdrew from the Court, to his sister, the Countess of Pembroke's seat at Wilton, and there composed the ,' Arcadia." TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The great advantage which I have by the singular goodness and friendship it pleaseth you to show rae (which in truth I do, and have a good while reputed araongst the chief ornaraents of ray life and fortune,) raakes rae find my self at as much disadvantage when ray heart, longing to show rayself grateful, can present nothing which may be service able unto you. But as I know, and have well found, that you do esteem a true goodwiU of some value, in that kind * Lord Brooke does not say when date of this letter be correct, it took this affair occurred. Dr. Zouch as- place in August 1769. signs it to the year 1580 ; but if the .BT, 39,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 129 only can I show myself, and assure you that the Uttle that I am, is and shall be at all times and fortunes so to be disposed by you as one that hath promised love, and is bound by desert to perform it. This is all therefore I can say ; though you lose me, you have me. As for the raatter depending between the Earl of Oxford and rae, certainly. Sir, howsoever I raight have forgiven him, I should never have forgiven rayself if 1 had lain under so proud an injury as he would have laid upon me ; neither can anything under the sun raake rae repent it, nor any misery raake rae go one half-word back frora it. Let him therefore, as he vrill, digest it For ray part, I think tying up makes some things seem fiercer than they would be. Su-, let me crave still the continuance of my happiness in your favour and friendship ; and I will ever pray unto God, that, araong those I most honour, I may ever see you have prosperous causes of contentment. 28th August 1579. Your Honour's to be commanded, even by duty, Philip Sidney.* Nicholas Saunders, the writer of the foUowing letter to one of the sons of the Earl of Clanrickard, and pro bably to his second son John Burgh, afterwards created Lord Leitrim, was the celebrated priest before men tioned," who aided Fitzmaurice in his rebellious pro ceedings in Ireland, and to whom the Pope entrusted the consecrated banner. In the " Letter Book" this letter is thus described : — THE SEDITIOUS LETTER OF THE MOST TRAITOROUS REBEL, SAUNDERS, TO THE SON OF THE EARL OF CLANRICKARD. The more I am unacquainted, the more I am to be borne vrithal ; forsorauch as I write, not for any private commodity of my own, but rather for yours and the Commonwealth's. God, permitting your father (for whose preservation I heartily pray) to be taken prisoner, meant to warn you, his son, to ' Additional MSS. 15891, fo. 31". " Vide p. 121, ante. VOL. I. K 130 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. provide as well for his liberty as your own. Look then which is the safest way for both, and that are you bound to take. Protections of men are neither Uberally always granted, nor faithfully always kept, nor available when the granter dieth ; and least of aU to be trusted when they are granted for fear. The protection of God is that which can never fail ; and there is no way under heaven sooner to obtain God's protection than -the defence of God's honour. For if you wiU . . . .... protection of him that hazardeth his goods and life what will God do, or rather what will He not do, for him who fighteth and warfareth for His glory? Now-a- days the heretics, as you know, do so violently oppress God's honour in this world, that they overthrow His temples and places, cast down His altars, take away His sacrifice, deny His priesthood, burn His iraage, abandon His vicar, conteran His sacraraents, and, by false pretence of God's word, cut off and wipe away whole books of the Holy Scriptures. They also refuse to come to General Councils, to keep unity of faith with other Christian Princes and Countries, to follow the ancient Doctors of the Church, and, to say all at once, they would have none other judge, rule, or law to be tried by than tlieir own fantasy and sensuality. And what a dis honour to God and to our Saviour Jhesu Christ is it, that He, instituting a kingdom in this world which is commonly called His Church, should be thought to leave it so dis ordered that there should be in it neither altar for God's ser vice, nor any chief pastor or governor to whom the rest of the Christians should be bound to obey. Would any good or vrise man order such a coraraonweal in any part of the world ? If, then, they make our Saviour Christ so ungodly as not to leave an altar whereupon we raight offer sacrifice to His Father, and so indiscreet as not to leave an order and a Judge to end all our controversies — if this opinion be to the great dishonour both of God and of Christ His Son, our Sariour, seeing we fight against thera that do and teach these blas- pheraies, and seeing we fight against thera, not of our own heads, but by the raost lawful authority of hira to whora, as ^T. 89.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 131 to the true successor of St. Peter the Prince of the Apostles, Christ committed the keys of the kingdora of heaven, that is to say, the supreme government of His Church, which is a kingdom not of earth but of heaven ; if it please you to join with us in this holy quarrel, (as I pray God to give you His grace so to do, and without His grace it cannot be done as it ought,) you shaU doubtless be under the protection of Almighty God, and of that Prince whom God shaU set up in place of this Usurper that now unjustly reigneth, and of God's Vicar, who vriU see every man rewarded for the ser rice that he doth to the Church. You also shaU deserve weU of your Country, which, having fed and nourished you, re- quheth you again that you help to deliver her from the tyranny of heretics. The time yet is such that you may deserve thanks and reward; but when our aid is corae, which we look for daily, when the Scottish and EngUsh nobiUty are in ... . as we doubt not they vrill be shortly, and when begin to invade England itseU, as divers of the self English nobility labour and procure, — afterward I say it shaU be smaU thank before God and man to be of our company, seeing that the very heretics vriU then hold with us, at the least for fear of us. Certainly God raeaneth better to your Worship if you know the time of His merciful call ing and gracious visitation. Touching the controversy of in heritance which is said to be betvrixt your brother and you, where may you hope to know that better decided than in his Holiness's camp, where so wise and discreet governors be as you know the Earl's brethren are ? There lack not also other grave and learned men whose adrice may be profitable in that behalf. Once, whatsoever service I may do you, either in counseUing or testifying your readiness in this cause, or otherwise, it shaU never fail, God wilUng ; whom I beseech to direct and prosper you in aU your doing. The 23rd of September 1579. Yours to command always, Nicholas Saunders.' » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 8. 132 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1679. Though there is ample evidence of the aversion of the people of this Country to the Queen's marriage with the Duke of Anjou, it is nowhere more strikingly shown than in the annexed letter from the Bishop of London : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, I thank God your travaU and raine with the preacher hath taken good effect ; and the instruc tions which you rainistered unto him were very zealously and, I doubt not, profitably remerabered, and with such earnest ness advisedly uttered, that it hath rauch stayed the heady, confirmed the good and the wise in the great good opinion conceived generally of her Majesty, and somewhat quenched the sparks of murrauring, misliking, and misconstruing of matters of State, wherewith the seditious libeller had kindled raany of the busier sort. The preacher accused stoutly, and sharply reproved the author of this seditious paraphlet of arrogancy and lack of charity ; that he, being a private man, durst so far presume to look into the secret bosom of Princes' councils and high Magistrates, and to meddle with raatters both above his reach, and that did not belong unto hira; that so uncharitably he would or could not only conceive hiraself, but set abroach evil and ingrate a conceit thing that should tend* of the Gospel, which she hath both carefully and happily raaintained ever since her entry into her raost gracious reign ; and that he or any man should think or mistrust her that she will not continue ever herself, and the same wherein she hath been bred, and adventured so far vrith the raisUking of the greatest Potentates in Europe, with raany arguraents tending to that end : accusing also sorae of the people of curiosity and unkindness, that they could not read as rauch in the book of her Majesty's dealing in governraent, written by the ex perience of twenty sweet peaceable years, to confirra them "¦ These lacunae are caused by the MS. being torn. ^T, 39.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 133 in a good and assured opinion of her great love and care over them, to corafort and to warrant thera in the good continu ance thereof, as they could learn out of such a seditious treaty, devised and hatched by some green head to raake them to doubt of her who giveth unto us all most apparent shows and demonstrations, that, as she hath been bred and brought up in Christ, entered and reigned by Christ, so she will live and die in Christ, &c. Whereat the people seeraed, even as it were with a shout to give God thanks ; and, as far as I could perceive, took it very well, that she was com mended for that her zeal and constancy. I have understood since the sermon, that as the people well liked of the com mendation attributed to her Majesty vrith the great hope of her continuance, so, to say plainly, they utterly bent their brows at the sharp and bitter speeches which he gave against the author of the book; of whom they conceive and report that he is one that feareth God, dearly loveth her Majesty, entered into this course being carried with suspicion and jea lousy of her person and safety. Whereby I perceive that any that bend their pen, wit, knowledge, or speech against the foreign Prince, is of them counted a good patriot and pius subditus ,- and. so long as theu- eye is fixed upon her, they find themselves as it were ravished : but looking aside at the stranger, (though vrithout cause peradventure,) they are Uke them that by long looking on the sun, their eyes are become so dazzled that they judge everything else to be raonstrous. Of the people of London I hope well, that by the good instructions of the preachers they vrill stay them selves from all outrages. But I am inforraed that abroad in the country (and the further off the worse) the preachers are .... in speech against Monsieur, and the people to ... . edit to hear any blemish in that nation. But I have sent for sorae of thera, and would send for raore, but that I am afraid to have too many irons in the fire at once ; for, if by sending for them in the country the Londoners should un derstand of the grudging and groaning abroad, it would make them the worse, and I ara greatiy careful of ray own flock. 134 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. Of one synod and conventing of the ministers yesterday this fell out, that upon ray discourse to thera in recital of the Queen's Majesty's zeal and good nature, blessed gifts of vrisdora, learning, and happy governraent, many of thera wept, and drew down ray tears for company, which was not the best part of an orator ; but, in the end, some of thera told rae that they could not but raove their people to prayer and fasting for her Majesty's good estate, which they feared was now like to be, in great peril, praying God upon the knees of their hearts that they raight be deceived. Whereby, to tell you truth, there is singular love towards her, and great heartburning towards him. To mitigate that their evil opin ion, I showed a piece of the Tocsin, bitterly written against the raassacre of the French Protestants, wherein the very Protestants do appeal to Monsieur, and also to her Majesty, for their patrociny and defence against the tyranny of the enemies; which wrought somewhat with thera, but not so much as I vrished. Thus, praying you to bear with Mr. Cox's so long tarrying, (for I could not but with some leisure gather any likelihood of the people's and preachers' humours,) I bid your Honour most heartily fareweU. From Fulhara, this 28th of Septeraber 1579. Your Honour's most assured at comraandraent, John London.* A large part of the correspondence in the " Letter Book " is without any date ; and the difliculty of ascer taining in what years letters were written which con tain no particular fact, and allude to obscure trans actions, is extremely great. In many cases it is indeed impossible to fix the precise date of such letters ; and there is scarcely any better reason for assigning the fol lowing ones to this period, than that they occur among others of the years 1578 and 1579; but which, as has been before observed, cannot be relied upon as proof that they actually belong to those years. • Additional MSS, 16891, f. 5. MT. 89.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 135 Dr. Humfrey, Dean of Gloucester, the Queen's Pro fessor of Divinity, and President of Magdalen College, Oxford, the writer of the two following letters to Hatton, was appointed to that Deanery in March 1570; and, some time after, he wrote to complain of an infraction of the liberty of his Church by the Mayor's having executed civil processes within its precincts : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My duty humbly remembered. Sorae occasions have lately fallen out, of great iraportance and of no small weight, especiaUy to the church of Gloucester, and presently a grief to me, a poor Dean of a very poor corapany during her Ma jesty's pleasure ; which state I could be glad to raaintain and further for the best, and no way diminish. The substance and circumstances I vrill not particularly declare, because it is an incurabrance to your Honour, and Mr. Oldsworth our solicitor, a good gentleraan and a vrise lawyer, can certify you thereof; and we have already signified the raatter to the body of the Right Honourable Privy Council. It is in effect a new atterapt of the Mayor of Gloucester and others lately against our old liberties, in arresting a gentleraan of my Lord of Leicester's within our own precinct, in beating and im prisoning our servants and oflicers defending the privilege, and other many outrages in articles specified, which touch generaUy aU Cathedral churches. And because I know your Honour of yourself well inclined to the preservation of right, and hath of your goodness accepted the patronage of our Church, I beseech you let the matter be examined, either by your Honour or by the ecclesiastical commission, at your pleasure: and I will shortly attend you of purpose. In your other matter in Southwark order is taken, as at ray coraing I will declare. The Lord Jesus preserve us. Oxon, Nov. 13. Your Honour's to command, L. Humfrey.* » Additional MSS. 15891, fo. 118. 136 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. Sir Christopher Hatton's nephew, mentioned by Dr. Humfrey, was WiUiam Newport, the son of his only sister, who was born about 1565, and who seems, when this letter was written, to have belonged to Magdalen Col lege. On his uncle's death, he succeeded to his estates, and assumed the name and arms of Hatton. Dr. Humfrey was made Dean of Winchester in October 1580, which promotion was probably the fulfilment of the Vice-Chamberlain's promise alluded to in this letter : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It raay be your Honour desireth to hear frora your ne phew, being far frora us ; and therefore I could not but certify you of his welfare and well-doing at this tirae by this raessenger. The continuance of thera both I wish in the Lord, the Giver of aU grace, and will further as I raay. I perceive, for the French, Mr. Gyles taketh good pains ; and the gentleraan wiU learn well both that and other things, if he raay have time, and good and godly instructions. I raay not forget thanks in hurable manner to your Honour, for that I ara by friends certifled of your good raeaning and late proraise for ray preferraent : which as it is before desert of my part, and of small acquaintance with rae or ray qualities, so must I account the raore of your goodness ; hoping, for the one, you shall find me not unraindful, and touching the other, upon further knowledge and experience you shall have no cause to repent for any good word or deed bestowed on me. This benefit, above aU things, I hurably request of you ; that, whatsoever bruit or coraplaint coraeth to you against me, (as the malice of this world is great, yea, against the greatest, and spareth not us poor men,) it would please you to hear my answer before credit be given. It was the worthy virtue of great Alexander, and it is one of the best and wisest parts in a nobleman ; whereof nothing doubting of yourself, I cease. MT. 89.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 137 desiring the Lord long to preserve your Honour in all pro sperity. Your Honour's to coraraand, Laur. Humfrey." It is impossible to say whether the annexed letter from Henry Howard preceded or foUowed the one before inserted: — '' TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, It raay please you to understand, that as it grieved me not a little to perceive by your most courteous and honourable Unes that any raan could deal so hardly and un justly with me as to report unto a person of your quality how forward I had been in preferring discourtesy so near unto a place, the very sight whereof alone were able to stir up a reverend and dutiful respect in any well-disposed raind, so can I not esteera this as the least of raany your most friendly favours towards me, that you, whom I desire to satisfy in any doubt, vouchsafe to call me to mine answer before you yield to their unjust reports, which seek to cover with the greatness of their countenance, in coraparison of me, what cannot be defended in the presence of a better than us both. Wherefore at this time I will only complain unto yourself as mine assured friend, that all respects of duty which I used in that place, perhaps against ray nature, (which soraetirae is no less ready to reject a wrong than other raen to proffer it,) cannot so far shield rae frora reproof but that my greatest merit is perverted to ray most disgrace : and to suffer wrong is not supposed to be punishraent enough for me, unless I be accused of a double guilt in suffering. This six years' space I have reraained in this Court without so rauch as proffer of disgrace to any raan. I look for nothing but the grace and favour of the Queen (which till the last drop of my blood I will deserve by duty). To my friend I seek to be reputed constant, and as open to ray enemy. No day passeth over without sorae wrong conceits, which need » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 56. " Vide p, 116, ante. 138 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. no other answer but their own uncertainty. Mine able friends are few, ray raighty foes are raany; the plight wherein I carae first to the Court I keep in every raan's belief that disdaineth not so poor a friend. And notwithstanding false reports and wrong surraises of divers sects, the tirae is yet to come that either I was touched vrith default in duty to my Prince, or in desert to ray approved friend. Wherefore, good Mr. Vice- Chamberlain, let these exaraples move you to believe, that, after so long harbour in a calra, I find but sraall delight in storms of quarrel, further than I ara enforced by discourtesy ; which I love as ill to bear as to proffer : assuring you, that if their lives, which sought to lead you from well-wishing to wards me by this report, were so precisely looked into, their causes canvassed, their steps observed, and their dealings deci phered, as mine have been these many years, either they would not be thought so clear, or I should not be accounted and reputed faulty. But because I raean so quickly to attend on you rayself, and my defence requireth some discourse, I crave no more but that you will suspend your judgment either way till you hear what may be answered. God I take to witness, and as raany as were present, that in this raatter I gave no raore cause of just offence to any man than he that was as far from Greenwich at that instant as myself was frora London. And touching my well-raeaning to yourself, I beseech you humbly to persist in this conceit, that as I never faulted towards you in any thought, so can you not employ me further than ray service shall be ready to discharge your pleasure. There were no cause for rae to wade in this apology, were it not that proof hath taught me in what bitter sort some persons have dealt with me, whom you hold in great account too, far meaner than yourself in calling, and weaker in authority. Notwithstanding, as an honest, plain, and constant course fears no encounter ; so doubt I not, by good desert, to let you understand the difference between ray friendly raeaning and the malice of raine enemies. Thus humbly craving pardon for my posting lines, and reposing that assured trust in your upright and honourable friendship .^T. 89.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 139 that you wiU not otherwise adrise rae than may stand with honour, which I am resolute to keep unstained till the last spark of my life, I recoraraend both myself and all I have to your devotion. In haste, from my lodging at Ivy Bridge.* Your Honour's faithful and assured friend at coramandraent, PIenry Howard.'' There is nothing to show when the following letter was written : — SIR THOMAS heneage TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Because I am to no man more bound, I ara of no man more bold, than of yourself, whereby in good right no raan hath more interest in rae ; and though ray state and fortune raake my letters less worth unto you than I would, yet your great goodness to rae is your praise and my band ; and my true good-vriU shall never faU to love and honour you to the uttermost of my power. Wishing you all you would, now and ever. Your own, raost bound at commandment, T. Heneage.'^ The next letter of the series refers to a proceeding which stands disgracefuUy conspicuous in the annals of Queen Elizabeth's reign. From religious as well as pa triotic feelings the French marriage was, as so many of these letters show, extremely unpopular in England ; and in the autumn of this year a pamphlet was published by a gentleman of Lincoln's Inn, called John Stubbes, "with" what Camden calls " a stinking style," entitled " The Discovery of a Gaping Gulph wherein England is like to be swallowed by another French marriage, if the Lord forbid not the bans by letting her Majesty see the sin and the punishment thereof;" '' in which the alliance was * Near Plymouth. , ' Additional MSS, 15891, f. 46". " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 40". ¦> Small octavo, August 1679. 140 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. denounced as dangerous to the Protestant religion, and the French Prince and nation were grossly abused. A proclamation iinmediately appeared, defending Monsieur, and declaring that the book " was nothing else but a fiction of traitors, to raise envy abroad and sedition at home," and commanding it to be publicly burnt. The Queen's vengeance fell upon its author, the pub lisher, and the printer, who, under an Act passed in the reign of Philip and Mary " against seditious words and rumours,"* were condemned to lose their right hands. The printer was pardoned; but Stubbes, and Paget the publisher, both underwent this barbarous punishment in the market-place at Westminster on the Srd of November. Camden says he was present, and that " their right hands were cut off' with a cleaver driven through the wrist with the force of a beetle;" and that, as soon as the execution was over, Stubbes took off" his hat with his remaining hand, and exclaimed with a loud voice " God save the Queen !" WeU indeed may Camden be believed that " the multitude standing about was altogether silent : either out of horror of this new and unwonted punishment; or else out of pity towards the man, being of most honest and unblameable report ; or else out of hatred of the marriage, which most men presaged would be the overthrow of religion." It is re markable that both Camden and Stow should assign this transaction to the year 1581.'' Though Hatton had taken an active part in Stubbes' prosecution, he ne vertheless applied to him to intercede with the Queen for his release from further persecution. » Stat. 1 & 2 Phil. & Mar. cap. 3, lating to Stubbes' work and punish- " In Park's edition of the " Nugae ment occur. Antiquae," some curious papers re- JET. 39.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 141 TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The round deaUng which your Honour used at ray first examination, and your severe sifting out of that fault which bred me all my woe, doth not, for all that, affray me frora coming to your Honour with some hope of pitying me, now fallen into the extreraity of affliction. For as your serviee to her Majesty's coraraandraent, and place in high counsel, re quired at that time all diligence and wisdoin to discover the author of so great offence to her Highness ; whereupon hath also followed a tirae for Justice to do that which was her part in giring and executing judgeraent according to law ; so now I humbly pray that it raay not seera out of tirae for the poor offender, after his pains endured, to sue for pity, and to crave that Mercy raight save so much as Justice hath left ; which thing, next under God, heth in her Majesty's gracious hands to do. For truly. Sir, though ray iraprisonraent hath been long; mine expense great, even to the disordering and almost undoing of my poor estate ; the cutting off ray hand and heaUng raost painful and dangerous, the perpetual want thereof a loss most piteous and inestimable ; yet is the con tinuance of her Highness's indignation raore to my heart's grief, and pincheth me raore nearly than all the rest. And, indeed, as under this burden I can but fall ; so, if it raight please her Majesty of her accustomed and great grace to release me thereof, the greatness of that new joy would swallow up aU mine old sorrows. I humbly beseech your Honour to say for rae that you found me no perverse exami nate. For albeit upon the first examination the terror of a Prince's wrath made rae trerable to accuse rayself, yet did I, without any accuser, after a while lay rayself open. The judgement-seat, which gave sentence against my fault, will yet testify ray humble and dutiful reverence throughout all my defence and answering for rayself. The scaffold of exe cution can witness ray loyal care to give all good exaraple of raeet obedience ; insorauch as, notwithstanding the bitter pain and doleful loss of ray hand immediately before chopped off. 142 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1579. 1 was able, hy God's raercy, to say vrith heart and tongue, before Heft the block, these words, "God save the Queen !" I dare report myself to my very keepers, under whom I was severaUy a prisoner, what was ray obedience ever unto thera in regard of her Majesty, in whose narae I was comraitted; as also for all my other usage, how far it was from any work ing or practice for intelligence with any by message or writ ing, whereof I thank God I had no need. But all these duties are such, and so due, as their desert endeth in the doing of thera, and reacheth no further than the very per forming. It will affect her tender roj^al heart to understand that my poor wife and little child, who had no coramunity vrith rae in the fault, have yet their society and satiety in these laraentable troubles ; in whose favour I hurably crave the rather your raediation. But this the only thing that I can put in your Honour's hands wherewith to raove her Ma jesty's raercy, even ray poor heart sorrovring to have offended and troubled her Majesty's person, laws, and state, humbling itself at her feet in all submission, and vowing henceforth such religious and careful obedience as may show how rauch I love that most honourable, profitable, and necessary ordi nance of God, wherein we are coraraanded to obey our sove reign raagistrates, especially the govemraent of the Queen of England, by whom the Lord hath dispensed such benefits to our country, both bodily and spiritually, as five hundred years past cannot speak of. If in tender raercy of these things, or rather by natural motion of her Majesty's natural cleraency, it raay please her to show some grace, she shall enlarge the number of her benefits towards him, whose duty of humble thankfulness is already owing unto her Majesty in such measure as it cannot be increased. And if by your mean I may obtain so great a good as is the relief of her heavy offence and of my grievous imprisonment, your Honour may so be a mean also to save ray hfe, which, in these terras of extreraity, hasteth fast to an end. The Lord bless her Majesty with health and peace, with long life and honour; and grant you the grace of God, and continuance of her ^T. 39,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 143 Highness's favour, by serving the Lord and her in all single ness of heart, which is the truest honour! Frora the house of ray strait iraprisonraent, the 1st of Deceraber 1579. Your Honour's humble suitor and suppliant, Jho. Stubbes.* Very few particulars of Sir Christopher Hatton in the year 1580, except what may be derived from his corre spondence, have been preserved. Though generaUy sup posed to have been unfavourable to the Queen's marriage, his letters do not convey that impression; and the Arch bishop of York, writing to the Earl of Shrewsbury from London, in March ofthis year, says, " the Earl of Leices ter, Mr. Hatton, and Mr. Walsingham have earnestly moved her Majesty to go forward with the marriage as her most safety." '' In June, a private conference took place with the French Ambassador at Nonsuch, at which only Leicester and Hatton were present, but in the even ing they were joined by Lord Burghley. ° In July a slanderous book was secretly printed at Paris, similar to one caUed a " Treatise of Treasons," being a requital of the attacks made on Monsieur, to which the lives, being no doubt scurrilous accounts, of Leicester and Hatton were added. "^ The only grant which is re corded to have been made to Hatton in this year was that of Keeper of the Manor of Pleasaunce, in Kent, for life. = The first letter to Sir Christopher Hatton in 1580 is from Mr. Davison, respecting some monopoly that had been granted to the Vice-Chamberlain, which proved injurious to the merchants of the Low Countries : — » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 26". '' Letterfrom William Parry to Lord " Lodge's Illustrations, ii. 162. Burghley, in the State Paper Office, <= Strype's Annals, ii. 319, « Rot. Patent. 22 Eliz, \ 144 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580. MR. DAVISON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I should do a vraong to the sufficiency of this bearer, your Honour's servant, to write you any news by hira, that raay particularly inforra you of the course of our doings here. Only hereof I have thought it my duty to acquaint your Honour in a word or two, that on Thursday night last his Highness sent unto me a couple of counsellors, knovra to this bearer, to coraraunicate with rae a coraplaint against the patent of one Typper, containing an exclaraation of wrongs under that pretext offensive to the raerchants of this Country trading to England. Though I knew not then that the raatter did any way touch your Honour, yet raade I thera such answer as you raay see by ray letters to Mr. Secretary ; which not satisfying thera, it seeras they are in raind to send over some one or other to seek redress of her Majesty. If your Honour should relent in the cause, I doubt not but you and the rest of my Lords there vrill, in regard thereof, take order that her Majesty's subjects trad ing hither raay be uncurabered of such wrongs as are frora time to time offered them here ; for, otherwise, I see not but that they will rather increase than dirainish. Of this, and all other particularities, this bearer raay raore at large inform your Honour: of whom, with reraembrance of ray duty, I raost humbly take ray leave. At Antwerp, the 21st of February 1579 [1580]. Your Honour's humble to cora mand, W. Davison.* A letter from Sir Nicholas Wooderooffe, the Lord Mayor of London, to Hatton, shows that courtiers had so frequently applied for the Freedom of the City for their dependants, that it was at last necessary to refuse the request : — * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 42". ^T. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 145 TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It raay please your Honour, I have irapai-ted to ray bre thren your letters of request for the Freedom of London to be granted to Richard Bateman, wherein we thank you that you so honourably refer the sarae to our custoras, orders, and considerations. Surely, Sir, our granting of Freedom is by the excess thereof grown grievous to the Comraons of this City, being already so overpressed with multitudes, that the meaner sort are not able to live one by another. Wherefore, the rather for that we lately granted one in like sort at your request, and, upon our let ters signifying the hardness of those grants to our Citizens, you were contented so to esteem the raatter, and to proraise forbearing to press us with the Uke ; it may please you to take in good part that in our consideration we have not thought convenient for the City to increase the number of Freemen vrith admitting Bateman into that Society. And so I commit your Honour to the tuition of the Alraighty. At London, the llth of Febmary 1579 [1580]. Your Honour's assured, Nicholas Woodroffe, Mayor,* Four very interesting letters occur in the "Letter Book," from Margaret Countess of Derby, one to the Queen, and three to Sir Christopher Hatton, which bring to light another instance of Queen Elizabeth's rigour to those who had the misfortune of sharing the Blood Eoyal. This "poor wretched abandoned lady," as she touchingly caUs herself, was the only surviving child of Henry Clifibrd second Earl of Cumberland, by his first wife Eleanor, daughter and co-heiress of Charles Duke of Suffolk, by Mary Queen of France, daughter of King Henry the Seventh ; and she was consequently first cousin, once removed, to Queen Elizabeth. She mar ried, in Febraary 1555, Henry Stanley fourth Earl of Derby, by whom she had four sons, of whom Ferdi- » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 66". VOL. I. L 146 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580. nando and WiUiam were successively Earls of Derby; became a widow in 1594, and died in 1596. These letters contain the only notice that has been found of the Countess of Derby's having incurred the Queen's displeasure, and which probably arose from some suspi cion of her conduct in relation to the succession. It appears that she was long a prisoner, though she was never publicly accused of any crime. None of those letters have any date ; but the following letter from the Countess to Sir Francis Walsingham, in another coUec tion, shows that they must have been written about May 1580 ; and, as they cannot be assigned to their precise dates, it has been thought advisable to place them together. Hatton was, she says, the only person in the Court that had shown any compassion for her; and he exerted himself successfully in obtaining some alleviation of her sufferings. the countess of derby to SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM. Right Honourable, If but one and not many afflictions and troubles were laid upon rae at once, I would then en deavour rayself to bear therewith, and forbear for remedy thereof to trouble any of my good friends. Sickness and weakness in ray body and lirabs I have of long tirae been accustoraed to suffer ; and, finding small remedy after proof of raany, lastly upon inforraation of sorae about me that one Randall* had a special remedy for the cure of my disease by applying of outward things, I had hira in my house from May until August next foUowing, in which time I found some ease by his medicines : but since I have understood by report that man to have Uved in great wickedness, wherewith it hath pleased God to suffer hun among other not a little to plague me with his slanderous tongue whilst he lived. What repentance he took thereof before his death God knoweth. " Stow mentions the execution of impostor alluded to above was dead a William Randall for conjuring when this letter was written. towards the end of 1580 ; but the .et. 40,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 147 Good Sir, the heavy and long-continued displeasure which her Majesty thereby, and by the accusation of sorae others, hath laid upon rae, doth raore vex my heart and spirit than ever any infirmity have done my body. And yet I ever have, do, and wiU confess that her Majesty hath dealt both gra ciously and mercifully vrith rae in coraraitting of rae unto such a place where is wholesorae and good air, without the which I had perished ; and unto such a person, whora I find, as he is, ray good kinsman. The last affliction tormented my soul with the continual clamour and outcry of many of ray poor creditors, for whom I find no remedy unless it may please her High ness to Ucense my Lord and me to sell so much land of my inheritance as may discharge the same ; whereof though her Highness be in reversion, yet be there about twenty persons inheritable thereunto as heirs of the body of my grandfather Charles Duke of Suffolk. I hurably pray you to be a raeans unto her Highness herein, and for her Majesty's cleraency and mercy to be extended towards me, whom I take the High God to vritness, that I ever have feared and loved, and so wiU continue whUst ray life endureth. Thus coraraitting myself to your good consideration, and us both to God, I cease to trouble you. May 1580. Her Majesty's prisoner and your assured friend, M. Derby.* countess of derby to SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your honourable dealing hath bound me so much unto you as it is unpossible you should make a gentlewoman more beholding unto you than I am ; for the liberty which I have attained unto at her Majesty's hands (whose feet I Ue under) I do freely acknowledge to have only proceeded from her goodness by your honourable raediation. You are the sole person in Court that hath taken compassion on me, and hath given corafort unto my careful heart, and, under God, kept Ufe itself within my breast. All these noble kindnesses are derived from your virtue and good favour > Copy, in the Harleian MSS, 787, f. 16. l2 148 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580, towards me, a poor wretched abandoned lady, no way able to yield you thankfulness worthy thereof. You are the rock I build on. That raade me yesterday so bold to send Bessy Lambert unto you to deliver you at large the state of ray body and the poverty of ray purse, whora you heard with that willingness as I ara double and treble beholding unto you, and humbly thank you for it. I well hoped by your good means unto her Majesty to have placed rayself in that air that I best agree withal. These sudden famtings and overcoraings which I am seldora out of, have so weak ened and afflicted ray feeble body since ray coraing hither, that I am many times as a woman brought to death's door and revived again beyond all expectation. My cousin Sack- ford* hath built him a house at ClerkenweU, which is not yet thoroughly finished. I would be very gladly his tenant; for the air, as I take it, cannot be much unlike to that of his house at St. John's : but I hear now they die of the sickness round about it, so that though I could and would, yet I dare not adventure to take it ; but I hope it vriU stay ere it be long, and in the raean while I purpose to provide rae of some house about Highgate to remain in until Michaelraas. If I can find out any, I will embolden myself upon your pleasure to trouble you vrith my letters, beseeching you to raove her Majesty for mercy and favour towards rae when time shall serve you ; for in effect, as I ara now, I live dying, and death were rauch better welcome unto rae than life, if I raust be still in her Highness' misliking. Pardon me, I pray you, for my tedious lines ; and God send you as much happiness as ever had noble gentleraan. Your most bounden friend, Margaret Derby."" COUNTESS OF DERBY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I am altogether raost beholden unto you for your honourable care of my man's miserable cause, whose adver sary God amend ; neither is his better void of enemies, Mr. Sackford, Master of Re- in the Sidney Papers, also calls him quests. SirHenry Sidney, in a letter his cousin. " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 84". ^T. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 149 But God alone can revenge the injury, and regard his in nocency. Myself at this instant sickly, in heart perplexed, and in mind as it were exiled, somewhat amazed, but not altogether amated. In good sooth, the hope of her High ness' favour is only ray relief; the regard of her gracious goodness towards rae in my suit shall most corafort me and depress the rage of my eneray. Well, to God and our good Queen I corarait both cause and creature ; and yoiirself, ray friend, bind rae ever yours. Thus, scribbling rudely, I leave hastily, but heartily, with ray loving salutations. Yours as faithfuUy as you to rae, Margaret Derby.* COUNTESS OF DERBY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. I HAVE sent you by this bearer my loyal and most hurable lines unto her most excellent Majesty, which I beseech you of aU nobleness of raind, for that you raay see the wretched estate of a poor woraan therein described, and my unable- ness to perform so great a part of duty by pen as is due, and should have been done before this time. That now you vriU vouchsafe I may comraend me to your honourable aid and favour for the araendraent of anything which you shall find araiss in ray letter to her Majesty: which I beg for God's sake that you vriU do, even as you tender justice and the dignity of the place that you are caUed unto. When you have seen it I expect the retum of it, with your pleasure and good advice ; which when I have written as well as I can, I wiU speedUy send it you again to be exhibited to her Majesty, whora God long preserve, and send you great hap piness in honour. Your bounden friend. Mar. Derby.'' countess of derby to queen elizabeth. My DREAD AND GRACIOUS SOVEREIGN, raost reuowued in all clemency and justice, I do prostrate myself, and most humbly crave that it vrill please your Highness favourably to read, and mercifully to conceive of these few lines and » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 32. " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 69". 150 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580- wretched estate of a very poor distressed woman, whose heart, God knoweth, hath long been overwhelmed vrith heaviness through the great loss of your Majesty's favour and gracious countenance, which heretofore right joyfully I did possess ; the only want whereof hath made me eat my tears instead of bread, and to endure all griefs beside that your gracious high vrisdora raay imagine. But, most dear Sovereign, I confess and acknowledge that I have found great mercy and goodness at your hands, in that, of your merciful con sideration, you sent me to the house of your Majesty's grave officer the Master of Requests, my very good friend and kinsraan ; and now from thence it hath pleased your High ness, according to your accustomed benignity and rare good ness, to give order unto your honourable Counsellors, the Lord Chancellor and Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, for my deli very to Isleworth House : for all which sweet branches from the tree of your Majesty's mercy I am, and so take myself to be, most dutifully bounden and thankful unto your High ness, as I trust they will testify whom I besought with un feigned tears upon my knees to be earnest raediators to your Majesty for raore plenty of your most noble favour, pity, and mercy towards me ; without the good hope where of I do account rayself, and heart and raind, to be as in the black dungeon of sorrow and despair. And therefore, with raore of loyalness of heart than ray pen can express, I lie raost hurably at your gracious feet, and pray to God that shortly ray heavy and dry sorrows raay be quenched with the sweet dew and moisture of your Majesty's abun dant grace and virtue. Your Majesty's most woful and miserable thrall. Mar. Derby.* Sir Walter Mildmay, the writer of the annexed letter, was Chancellor of the Exchequer. Of the disorder mentioned in this and some other letters, a corre spondent of the Earl of Shrewsbury gave an account on the 1st of July : — " We have here in London, and at » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 72. MT. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 151 the Court, a new strange sickness. It does grieve men in the head, and with a stitch over the stomach. Few do die thereof, and yet many are infected. I do hear it credibly reported that forty students of Lincoln's Inn were taken with the said malady within the space of twenty-four hours. At the Court, the Lady Lincoln, the Lady Howard, the Lady Stafford, the Lady Leigh ton, are at this instant troubled therewithal. The Lord Lumley is sick there, and many of the inferior sort"':— TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, According to her Majesty's pleasure, I mean to attend upon my Lord Treasurer and you to-morrow at eight of the clock in the morning; albeit I thought it my duty to let you know what hath happened. In the very next house to mine, here in this tovm, one is dead of the plague, and an other sick ; so as, whether it were convenient that I should raeet with you or no, in respect of your continual access to her Majesty's presence, I ara doubtful, and refer the same to your consideration. That occasion doth hasten" me out of town sooner than I thought, and therefore it may please you to send me your opinion. The matter of your meeting vriU be weU enough performed vrithout me ; but I say not this to be excused from any serrice of her Majesty, to whom I owe all that I have, and ray Ufe too. Thus, praying to receive sorae few Unes from you for answer, I commend you and aU your actions to God's merciful governraent. Frora London, the SOth of June 1580. Your most assured and faithful friend to my power, Wa. Mildmay." The following letter without a date from the Eari of Sussex, the Lord Chamberlain, was perhaps written about this time : — " Lodge's Illustrations, ii. 174. " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 34. 152 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580. TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I do raost heartily thank you for your letter, and ara very sorry that her Majesty is forced to remove by an infectious accident ; but better in my opinion to make any remove to a clear place, than in any respect to remain in the danger of the infection, which by degrees may grow nobody knoweth how near to herself, whom God always defend frora that, and from all other evils. I am sorry that ray unhappy accident, and the state of my own body, do at this time keep me frora doing ofher Majesty any service in that place : nevertheless I rest ready to do any thing that an absent raan raay do ; and will pray to God to preserve her in aU good contentation. Your assured friend, T. Sussex.* A letter from Hatton to Lord Burghley, in July of this year, contains two facts relating to his history of some value, namely, that his estate had been entirely ruined, and that he ascribed its restoration to Burgh ley's favour ; meaning, no doubt, that the Lord Treasurer had rather encouraged than opposed the Queen's repeat ed grants to him of lands and monopolies : — TO LORD BURGHLEY. My singular good Lord, My terra in the irapost of wines draweth (after this year) to expiration. I have therefore humbly moved her Majesty for the renewing of my lease; in the which I earnestly beseech you of your good favour towards me. The course I hold is, to pass ray bill according with ray present deraise verbatim, upon the same covenants and rents expressed in this book already passed, if so, with your Lordship's good advice, it may like her Majesty to grant ' Additional MSS^ 15891, f. 88. MT. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 153 it to rae. I hurably pray your Lordship that you will adver tise me your good pleasure herein, and give me leave to go on vrith the suit as it may please your Lordship to direct me. I do acknowledge with all thankfulness the recovery of ray poor estate, in effect all entirely ruined, to have grown out of your great goodness and favour towards rae ; for the which I wiU honour and serve you and yours so long as God giveth life in this world. And thus, with the reraembrance of my bounden duty, I pray God bless your Lordship for ever. Oatlands, this 22nd of July 1580. Your good Lord ship's most bound, Chr. Hatton.* Two more of the Vice- Chamberlain's extraordinary letters to the Queen were written during his absence from the Court in this year; but the annexed is not quite so romantic as some of his former ones : — TO the queen's most royal majesty. A A I most humbly vrith aU dutiful reverence beseech your sacred Majesty to pardon my presumption in v^riting to your Highness. Your kingly benefits, together vrith your most rare regard of your simple and poor slave, hath put this pas sion into me to imagine that for so exceeding and infinite parts of unspeakable goodness I can use no other means of thankfulness than by bowing the knees of my own heart vrith aU humiUty to look upon your singular graces with love and faith perdurable. I should sin, most gracious Sovereign, against a holy ghost most damnably, if towards your Highness I should be found unthankful. Afford me the favour, therefore, raost dear Lady, that your clear and raost fair eyes may read and register these my duties, which I beseech our God to requite you for. * Autograph in the State Paper Office. 154 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580, The poor wretch my sick servant receiveth again his life, being as in the physician's opinion raore than half-dead, through your raost princely love of his poor Master, and holy charitable care, without respect of your own danger, ofthe poor wretch. We have right Christian devotion to pray for your Highness, which God for His raercy's sake kindle in us for ever to the end of our lives. I should not dissemble, my dear Sovereign, if I wrote how unpleasant and froward a countenance is grown in rae through my absence frora your most araiable and royal presence, but I dare not presurae to trouble your Highness vrith my not estiraable griefs, but in my country I dare avow this fashion will full evil becorae rae. I hope your Highness wUl pardon ray unsatisfied huraour, that knoweth not how to end such complaints as are in my thoughts ever new to begin ; but duty shall do me leave off to cumber your heavenUke eyes with my vain babblings. And, as most nobly your Highness preserveth and royally conserveth your own poor creature and vassal, so shall he live and die in pure and unspotted faith towards you for EveR. God bless your Highness with long Ufe, and prosper you to the end in all your kingly affairs. At Bed ford, this Wednesday morning,* September 1580. Would God I were worthy to write Your bounden slave, Chr. Hatton. '' The surprise which is likely to be felt that Hatton should have written the following letter " to any one ex cept to the Queen herself, or even to her unless he were as highly favoured as he is supposed to have been, will cease when it is remembered that Heneage was, as wiU appear from other letters, certainly the confidant of » In September 1580, the 7th, " Antiquarian Repertory," where it I4th,21st,and28th,fellonaWednes- is said to have been addressed to day. This letter was probably vn-it- Sir Thomas Smith, though he died in ten on the 7th of that month. 1576. A few words are illegible " Autograph in the State Paper and the last figure of the date is Office. obUterated, but it was certainly " This letter was first printed in the written in 1680. MT. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 155 their intimacy, and was often the transmitter of com munications between them. Perhaps not the least re markable part of this letter is the passage in which Hatton presumes to compare his love for the Queen with that of the Duke of Anjou, and which from any other of her Subjects, except perhaps Leicester, would have been perfectly ridiculous : — TO SIR THOMAS HENEAGE. My GOOD Sir Thomas, I thank you much for your happy letters, assuring our dear Mistress her present health unto me ; pray God continue it for ever. I have one servant yet free of infection, which I trust I may use to deliver ray care and duty, to my singular comfort and satisfaction. I have presuraed to send hira, that I may daily know either by my own or yours the true state of our' Mistress, whom through choice I love no less than he that by the greatness of a kingly birth and fortune is raost fit to have her. I am like vrise bold to comraend ray raost humble duty by this letter and ring, which hath the rirtue to expel infectious airs, and is, as is telled to me, to be wearen betvrixt the sweet dugs, — the chaste nest of most pure constancy. I trust. Sir, when the virtue is known, it shaU not be refused for the value. Since ray coraing to this town, two other of ray poor ser vants are faUen sick ; what their disease- will prove is not yet discerned, but the physician feareth the sraall-pox. By this occasion I am determined to disperse my little corapany, and to take my way to Sir Ed. Bricknell's,'' to view ray house of Kirby, which I yet never surveyed; leaving my other shrine, I mean Holdenby, still unseen until that holy saint" raay sit in it, to whom it is dedicated. I beseech you. Sir, acquaint her Highness herewith. I will be gone in the morn ing betimes, and so pass on a solitary pilgrimage for my folk's health, until all peril of infection may with the open and be thereby purged out of my disconsolate body. Within « Query. •> Sic. = The Queen. 156 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580. six days I wiU retum to Eltham, and there abide the good call in time opportune. My commendations to yourself are most abundant in good-vriU. I pray you therefore impart of thera to such of ray friends as you shall think worthy of them. And so a thousand times fareweU, my good noble friend. Septeraber llth, 158 , [1580.] Yours raost assured, Chr. Hatton.* The receipt of a gracious letter from the Queen pro duced a reply much more like his correspondence from Germany six years before, than his letter of the 7th of September. He now again mentions himself by her familiar appellations for him of " Lids" and " Sheep." It is evident that Elizabeth also used a significant mono gram or cypher when writing to him ; and, though some of the passages are very obscure, her intended marriage with the Duke of Anjou is obviously alluded to. His remark that "against love" as well as against " ambi tion," those " violent affections that encumber the hearts of men," — the Queen had held " a long war," is some evidence that her favour to himself had nevet been in consistent with her honour : — TO THE queen's MOST ROYAL MAJESTY. A A The gracious assurance which your Highness's grave letters do most liberally give rae of your singular favour and inesti mable goodness, I have received on ray knees with such rever ence as becoraeth your most obliged bondraan ; and with like humility, in my most dutiful and grateful raanner, 1 do offer in God's presence rayself, ray Ufe, and all that I ara or is me, to be disposed to the end, and my death to do your service, in inviolable faith and sincerity. » Autograph in the Harleian MSS. 416, f, 200, MT. 40,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 157 The cunning of your Highness' style of writing, with the conveyance of your rare sentence and matter, is exceedingly to be Uked of; but the subject which it hath pleased your Majesty to endite for ray particular, exceedeth all the elo quence, yea, all the eloquence of the woi-ld. Your words are sweet, your heart is full of rare and royal faith : the writing of your fair hand, directed by your constant and sacred heart, do raise in rae joy unspeakable. Would God they did not rather puff up my dejected spirits with too much pride and hope. I raost hurably thank God for these admirable gifts in your Majesty ; they exceed and abound towards your Highness unequally in the measure of His graces amongst men, so far as, God knoweth, there is not your like. I crave most humbly your gracious favour and pardon for the offence I have made you. Frogs, near the friends where I then was, are much raore plentiful, and of less value, than their fish is : and because I knew that poor beast* seasonable in your sight, I therefore bUndly entered into that presuraption, but Miseri cordia tua super omnia opera tua. God bless your Highness in aU your kingly affairs, and direct them through your wonted wisdom in that course that shall EveR succeed to your corafort. I find the gracious sign of your letters of most joyful signification, and the abbreriation of delays will breed a much more delightful hope in that great cause. Against love and ambition your Highness hath holden a long war ; they are the violent affec tions that encuraber the hearts of raen : but now, ray most dear Sovereign, it is more than time to yield, or else this love wiU leave you in war and disquietness of yourself and estate, and the ambition of the world will be most maliciously bent to encumber your sweet quiet, and the happy peace of this » Among Queen Elizabeth's trin- conceit was a love-token from the kets was " one little flower of gold Duke of Alencon [query, Anjou ?] to with a frog thereon, and therein his Royal bet' amie, and the frog Monsieur's physiognomy, and a lit- designed, not as a ridiculous but a tie pearl pendant." (Elhs' Royal sentimental allusion to his country," Letters, first series, iii. 52.) Miss is supported by Hatton's enigmatical Strickland will probably think that remark, her suggestion, " that this whimsical 158 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1580, most blessed Realra. I pray God bless your kingly resolu tions what^veii. I trust your Highness wiU pardon this part of my presumption, because your Uttle $* siphere hath proffered the occasion. And so your Highness' raost humble Lydds,"* a thousand times raore happy in that you vouchsafe them yours, than in that they cover and conserve the poor eyes, most lowly do leave you in your kingly seat in God's most holy protection. This 19th of Septeraber 1580. Your Ma jesty's sheep and raost bound vassal, Chr. Hatton."= On Hatton's return to London he expressed his opinion on public affairs to Walsingham, especially on the state of Ireland, and the dangers that beset this Country and the Protestant religion : — TO SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM. My GOOD Mr. Secretary, My zealous care over her Majesty's safety, now fearfully stirred up with this evil news of the affairs of Ireland, doth give rae dutiful occasion in my absence to write some little of my siraple opinion, though I know it needeth not, but only for ray duty's sake. The long- expected mischief, maliciously conspired by the great and most dangerous eneraies of her Majesty, and of her Royal estate, towards that Kingdom of Ireland, is now, I hear, in action: wherein, though that maxim of Kings, which con taineth the counsel of Proridence in this sentence, Dubia pro certis debent timere reges, hath been by our gracious Sove reign and her most politic foresight very gravely observed in sending out her ships to resist these intended treacherous attempts; yet that direction, by their untimely and unfor tunate return contrary to order, having taken no place, we are again and again to prosecute our course, (as of necessity » Part of Hatton's New-year's " Lids. gift to the Queen in January follow ing, was a pair of gold bracelets, "= Autograph in the State Paper with twelve esses of small diamonds, Office. &c. Nichols' Progresses, ii. 300. JET. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 159 we be violently urged,) with a resolute perseverance of her Majesty's most noble beginning, wherein there reraaineth that her Highness, through her Kingly courage, should tiraely and victoriously resist this rabble of rebels and traitors ; and to let nothing be spared, either of treasure, raen, munition, or whatsoever else, to save that Kingdora, being, as you know, the principal key of this her Royal seat, by which raeans she should crown this her raost happy governraent with con tinuance of feUcity over aU her Dorainions. In which great and important cause the best counsel is, according to the old rule, to resist the beginning ; and so, if it were possible, to end this mischief before her other potent enemies might find opportunity to work their malice upon us. For when we behold the great prosperity of Spain through her peaceable possession of Portugal, we ought justly to fear, that, his affairs being settled there in some good sort, he will then, no doubt, vrith conjunct force assist this deviUsh Pope to bring about their Roraish purpose. Let us not forget that his sword is presently drawn, and then with what insolent fury this his rictory raay infiarae hira against us, in whose heart there is an ancient malice thoroughly rooted and rankly grovm for these raany years, apparently known to all men that do bend their eyes to behold the course of his actions ; and therefore we ought not only timely to foresee, but in time most manfully to resist the sarae. In all which proceed-', ings God's cause and her Majesty's stand jointly to be de-[ fended; the consideration whereof persuadeth me that there ; is no man that wiU spare travail or expense in any sort to re- ; duce them to good end. Cease not, good Mr. Secretary, to \ put her Majesty in continual remembrance of these perils, ! and with importunaey stir up her most earnest princely care i over God's cause and her ovm. How that matter in Scotland goeth, I do not weU know; but this rule I hold in aU cer-' tainty, that in Ireland and Scotland the entries and ways to our destruction most aptly be found. If there we safely shut up the postern-gate, we are sure to repulse the peril; but, if our enemy make himself the porter, it will be then too late 160 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580, to wish we had the keys. Would God, some wise raan were sent with the grave instruction of her Majesty to reclaira that country of Scotland unto us. The raaUce of France is there ever raade up against us, and of those raischiefs they are ever the executioners. How they trouble us in Ireland we often see and feel; but if that King should be conveyed into France, and so governed and directed by the Guisians, I dare not reraeraber, rauch less speak of, the dangers would ensue upon us. One thousand pounds eraployed now in tirae raight haply not only buy her Majesty's present safety, but undoubt edly save her the expense of threescore thousand before many years. With the disposition of France, which lieth now in her Majesty's arbitrament, I dare not meddle, for she only knoweth what shall becorae thereof; and so her judgment therein must needs be raost sound, which in truth maketh much to all these matters before raentioned. But if her Highness raean to raarry, I wonder she so delayeth it. If she do but teraporize, and vrill leave it at the last, what may we look for then, but that the Pope, with Spain and France, will yoke themselves in all ireful revenge, according to their solemn corabination so long ago concluded on against us ? Now therefore, weighing the present accidents of the world together in an equal balance, how hurtful they may be to the safety of her Majesty's most Royal estate and preservation of her blessed government, first, the weak and broken estate of Ireland, then the uncertain, suspected amity of Scotland, the dangerous action of the French, tending to the subversion of the Protestant, the irrecoverable losses and overthrows re ceived lately by the States of the Low Countries, and the fortunate and victorious success of the King of Spain in Por tugal, I cannot but mourn in my heart to see us beset on all sides with so great and apparent dangers. I beseech God continue her Majesty's raost careful and provident course to resist these so irarainent evils in good tirae, and to raake us ever thankful towards her for such her raost gracious and in estiraable goodness conferred on us her poor subjects, through her raost Kingly care over us. God bless you. Sir ; and so. MT. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HjVTTON. 161 with a thousand thanks for your honourable letters, I bid you most friendly farewell. From Hatton House, the 2Gth of Sept. 1580. Your true poor friend, Chr. Hatton." Thomas Norton, the busy informant of the following letter, was a stern Calvinist, and wrote many works against Popery. He was also the author of twenty- seven of the Psalms in Sternhold and Hopkins' collec tion, and of part of a tragedy called " Gorboduc," of which the remainder was written by his patron and friend Lord Buckhurst: — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May it please your Honour, Without all displeasant humour, and specially vrithout the base disposition to afilict the afflicted, but only of true zeal to her Majesty's service, I am bold to inform you that long since I have seen a book written in French, intituled Z.e Innocence de la tres illustre Rogne, &c. ; in the end whereof is a treatise touching the cause of the Duke of Norfolk, written to the defamation of her Majesty and of his Peers, and of some special persons of her Highness' Council. This book is there pretended to be written in French by a stranger, and to England, and not by an Englishman, for speaking of England he saith, vostre paie, and vostre Roigne, and such like ; and yet in truth it is .written by an Englishman, as by Robin Goodfellow and Goodman Gose, and an over-slipped title, and otherwise, as I am able to prove. The whole course is very seditious, and defamatory to her Majesty, her Council, and Nobility. He chargeth the Council vrith treason ; and her Majesty with abandoning herself to be abused, to the disturbing of Christen dom, to the raaintenance of rebels, to the robbing of Princes. It may be that your Honour will think it good to inquire the author, and not unfit to examine the gentleman now in restraint. The book is not only an Englishman's, but » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 18. VOL. I. M 162 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1580. also originally written in English and translated into French. Mr. Doctor Hamond is well acquainted with his style, if it please you to understand his opinion of it. Your Honour raay also send for Mr. Dalton, and ask him whether the same party have not used at Mrs. Arundell's to maintain open dis putations in defence of Papistry, and chaUenged Mr. Dalton and others in that case upon wagers. There goeth also un derhand abroad an English treatise written, wherein her Ma jesty's ancestress is termed base in contempt, the Queen is threatened with rebeUion of Nobility, some great persons are charged that under her Majesty's favour they have, as it were, tyrannized over the people. If the book be his, it is not good. Out of these books, great matters of charge may be gathered to the author. It were pity he should be untruly burthened with them ; but greater pity that he or any should carry such things clearly. And so I leave to trouble your Honour any longer. At London, the SOth of December 1580. Your Honour's humbly, Tho. Norton.* A more convenient place cannot be found for an undated letter, apparently to. Lord Burghley, on the subject of the French marriage. The writer was, no doubt, a Puritan divine, and his sentiments are ex pressed with fervid eloquence : — My very good Lord, Seeing my duty requireth it, and your goodness hath so bound rae, and the present dangers now irapending over the Church of God and this Coraraon wealth do constrain me, I trust your Lordship, of your ac customed cleraency, wiU kccept it weU that at this tirae I presume to take occasion to testify my dutiful remerabrance by these rude messengers. I hope you will not exaraine ray writing otherwise than by ray simple meaning and your ac customed gentieness. For I protest before God and His holy angels that stand as beholders of all raen's actions, I do it only in His fear, having first caUed upon His narae; and » Additional MSS, 16891, f. 76. ^T. 40.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 163 partly for the honour that 1 bear unto you, that the ill-success of those dangers which all the world may see now not only to hang over your head, but over the whole Realm, raay, through the gracious goodness of God, by doing our duties, be wisely prevented, and, if it be His will, speedily turned from us. For, seeing the whole house is set on fire, why should any raan be suspected or misUked that bringeth water to quench it? — seeing the city of God is assaulted, why should our watchmen hold their peace ? O my Lord, I be seech you in the bowels of Christ, as you tender the Church of God, love your Country, and honour her Majesty, so set yourself, and as many as you can procure, to stop this devilish derice of her Majesty's untimely, unfit, and unseasonable matching. For if it be plain and manifest to be most danger ous to our Country in the regeird only that he is a stranger, what shaU it be in respect of him that is unstayed and many ways tainted, greatly dishonoured with a bloody race, with the breach of faith, having drawn even from the teat the milk of cursed treachery, and having been schooled up in the con tinual practice of godless policy grounded upon that incarnate devU Machiavel, even yet witnessed in the fresh bleeding wounds of God's saints crying still for speedy vengeance against the whole generation of cursed persecutors ? Be not deceived, I beseech you, my good Lord, in this weighty cause ; recompense the honour that God hath bestowed upon you by means of her Majesty vrith this fidelity, to hold her back frora the gulph of her destruction. The Lord give you wisdom to quench the fire that is already kindled by this un happy attempt, which already burneth in such sort as it breaketh out into violent flames, and, unless the Lord stay it, giveth evident signs of the general subversion of our whole Country. For as warmth giveth life to the cold, and starveth the slowworm, so the Ukelihood of this raischievous attempt hath made our cold-starved Papists to gather great Ufe. They begin now to threaten us by open Ubels, by setting signs upon the doors of many professors of the Gospel in divers places, by hanging and lowering countenances, as though our M 2 164 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1580, suraraer were past, and their harvest corae ; as though our day of destruction were at hand, and their golden day, so long looked for, present. But this is our hope, that God reigneth and Uveth ; and though it be very likely that our great sins, and unthankfulness, and wretched profaning of holy things have drawn upon us His fearful judgraents, yet He knoweth those that are His, and wiU keep thera and wiU defend thera for His narae-sake, howsoever He may punish their sins in seasoning and purging thera frora their corrup tions. O ray Lord, never forget the lanientable effects of that unhappy contention in the days of King John, when those unfortunate Barons sought for aid into France, when our Country was wasted, the nobiUty dispersed, and had been utterly destroyed, had not God raade the raouth of one of the conspirators theraselves to detect that treasonable treachery. What should I speak of the miserable end of Richard the Second, through his doting love, when the blood, as I have said, is not yet dry that was shed by that cursed marriage de vised to the overthrow of so raany raillions of innocents. Be tween the King of Navarre that now is, and the French King's sister, doth your Lordship think that they rather seek her Majesty than her Crown and Kingdora ? and do you doubt but that they will spoil and irapoverish our Country, if they seek for her Crown and Kingdora, and that, doing the one, they raust not of necessity shed the blood of the other ? Though all the world should speak the contrary, yet I hope we are not such blocks as to believe it. Was it thought un raeet that they should settle in Scotland when they began to nestle there ? and by her Majesty's good raeans, to her iraraortal praise, were they driven frora thence ; and can it be good now that they be joined with us in raarriage? These are quite contrary. Good my Lord, pardon me : I lay open myself the rather to your Lordship, because you are in place to do good, and by my mouth may learn the coraraon opinion of the best, and I have no sraall confidence in your assurance and staidness towards thera. I hope God hath given you wisdora to make you see the end whereunto this ^T. 40 .] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 165 device tendeth. And I beseech you, seeing it is a raatter of weight, vvhich concerneth not only our lives and goods, but stands upon the hazarding of our souls, that you will wisely look about you, and look up to God in ti-ue repentance, that being reconciled to Hira you may be assured of His protec tion and presence, for in vain is man's help vrithout His as sistance. Beware whom you trust ; for, in your place, it can not be but raany will follow you for another end than they pretend ; their lucre is not your safety, but their own com modity. Treason is never committed but where there is ti-ust: falsehood is always in friendship and fellowship: every fair beck is not a seal of a faithful heart : poisons are mingled and ministered with honey that they may be the less sus pected. The fairer the colours are without, the raore sus picious is the ground ; and harlots use raore painting and decking than sober and honest matrons. Crocodiles have their tears, and they are very dangerous. O ray Lord, this platforra cannot be but perilous, and speciaUy to your Lord ship and many others, the undoubted professors of His glo rious Gospel. In which respect if you stand grounded, your strength is assured; and though Papists should not join with you, yet commonweal Papists, that is, such as are but civilly- vrise, will not, for their own safety, in this cause leave you. Howsoever it be, one godly man shall be stronger than ten enemies. The Lord is with thera that stand sincerely for His name and for a good cause ; yea, the death of the righteous is with honour, and what death soever they die that stand for God, for their country, and for their Prince, they shall go to their grave vrith peace. Wherefore, ray Lord, be of good courage ; faint not ; the tirae wiU come when you shall feel the fruit of constancy in this good cause, to your high honour and iraraortal farae. Good ray Lord, remeraber thera that are in bands, and raitigate as much as in you lieth the hard hand that is holden upon the best sort. I dare call them so in respect of their religion, zeal, fidelity, and truth ; whom to touch is to touch the apple of God's own eye, that cannot but draw upon the whole land a terrible vengeance. Beware 166 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581 of these elbow -informers : I mean not those that suggest good things, but such as labour to bring into disgrace good raen, that thereby they may the better estabUsh their own credits, and build up their houses with other men's ruins. If either the one or the other tell you of present danger, hear them willingly ; if of perils to come, wisely prevent thera. I pray God give your Lordship the spirit of wisdora and counsel, that you raay stand stout and faithful to defend the peace of the Church, the preservation of this coraraon-weal, and the safety of her Majesty's royal person, whora God ever raaintain and continue to His glory and all our comforts ! Arthur Lord Grey of Wiiton was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland after the death of Sir WiUiam Drury in 1579, and several letters occur from him to Hatton on the affairs of that Country. LORD grey de WILTON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I hope you have understood at large, by ray letters which I have sent unto ray Lords, what composition of peace is taken with Turlogh Leinigh.* Since which tirae I have received advertiseraent that Thoraas Nugent, brother to the Baron of Delvyn, hath banded hunself with the O'Connors, and is newly revolted, being no doubt enticed and heartened thereunto by Thurlow; with whora, I ara by secret intelU gence inforraed, there was a raessenger of his seen not many days before he withdrew hiraself frora her Majesty's obedi ence : whereby it appeareth how dangerous a back he is unto aU rebels and disordered Subjects which shall attempt any thing against this State ; beside the peril wherewith he threat eneth us daily by bringing in the Scots in great nurabers, and the preparation he raaketh to strengthen hiraself by aU raeans possible, which plainly argueth in hira great intention of mischief. I beseech you therefore, for the speedy repress- » Vide Camden's Annals, b. ii. p. 118. ^T, 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 167 ing of this raan's insolency, that you will be pleased to help forward, through your honoui-able solicitation to her Majesty, vrith more forces, and to hasten thera hither with all possible expedition : which being once well arrived, 1 hope they shall give an end to aU this war ; so we raay be therewith relieved with a new supply, and such raoney and victuals as shall be needful, whereof we have exceeding great want at this present: and so 1 coramit you to God. Dublin, the 14th of March 1580. [1581.] Your most assured friend and loving cousin. A. Grey.' In April, the Commissioners appointed by the King of France to treat for the Queen's marriage arrived in England; and Lord Burghley, the Earls of Lincoln, Sussex, Bedford, and Leicester, Sir Christopher Hatton, and Sir Francis Walsingham, were constituted her Ma jesty's Commissioners to confer with them. Sir Thomas Wilson, the writer of the annexed letter, was made one of the Principal Secretaries of State, and sworn of the Privy CouncU, in 1577, on the same day that Hatton became a member of that body. He was also Dean of Durham: and died in 1581, leaving a son, Nicholas, and the two daughters of whom he speaks; namely, Mary, who married, first, Eobert Burdett of Bramcote, and secondly. Sir Christopher Lowther; and Lucretia, who became the wife of George Belgrave, of Belgrave in Leicestershire. TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I received upon Friday such a raessage frora you by a gentleman your servant as was greatly to ray comfort, and though you had sent me no such word, yet should I never have doubted of your friendship ; for where I have once con ceived a good impression, my nature is like iron and marble, ^ Additional MSS. 15891. 168 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. that never changeth without altering the substance : and though I have received hard raeasure of sorae, of whora in truth I have best deserved, yet can I not alter ray disposition ; and love, once offered in faithful raanner, requireth love again ; and yet where it shall fail on either side, the party grieved cannot but show that flesh and blood can hardly bear it. I sent you word that I would have been yesterday at the Court, but then I was ill, and ara yet nothing araended ; so you see raan purposeth, and God disposeth. As soon as God shall raake rae able, I will not fail to see you. In the raeanwhile I have sent thither my two daughters, ray only treasure ; which I write unto you as a bachelor, to whom maidens cannot be unwelcome. And so I comrait you to God. From my house, the 23rd of April 1581. Your very assured friend, Tho. Wilson.* Of Charles ArundeU, whom Strype'' calls a "busy man," the writer of the following and of several other letters to Hatton, little is known, except that he was one of those unfortunate Papists who were the constant objects of persecution. He was arrested and imprisoned for some offence, real or imaginary, and sought the Vice- Chamberlain's interest to obtain a trial. In a letter from Monsieur Mauvissiere, the French Ambassador, to his Sovereign, in December 1583, he says, speaking of a conspiracy which had been discovered to take the Queen's life, "Meanwhile I must not omit to tell you that a great many persons are committed to prison on account of this conspiracy; and that Lord Paget, Charles Arundell, and several more noblemen and principal gen tlemen of quality in this Kingdom, fled four or five days ago, and embarked at night on board a vessel at Arundell, which still more astonished the Queen and her » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 79. " Annals, iii. pt. 1. p. 273. AiT. 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 169 CouncU." On the 17th of January following, Mauvis siere informed the King, that the Queen thought, that " if his Majesty were even inclined to deliver up to her Lord Paget, his brother Charles Arundell, and her other subjects, whom she caUs rebels, he (Mauvissifere) would prevent him from doing so." " CHARLES arundell TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, As one no less wiUing to remember you than mindful of your great goodness, I have stayed this bearer by the sleeve to increase his burden by the weight of this short letter, and to release myself of a greater debt than ink and paper can acknowledge. My meaning is not to be curabersorae, nor to trouble you with ray cause till tirae raay serve ; only, to exercise the duty I owe you, I have sent you these few Unes, and that the bearer should not return erapty- handed vrithout some show where he had been. Touching my affection to yourself, I crave no more (till time may yield you better trial) but that your virtue raay in this time of distress both plead and promise for your poor friend, that wanteth means, not vriU, to make his faith more evident. And so vrith humble remerabrance of ray duty I end, wishing the happy supply of your desires, and myself ability to do you serrice. From Sutton, the 23rd of May 1581. Your Honour's more faithful than fortunate, C. A. The subject of this letter, from Sir Walter MUdmay, is not mentioned : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I did yesterday speak vrith my Lord Chancellor,'' and have satisfied hira in such things as he was not rightly in forraed of. I found his usage towards me very good and » "Letters of Mary Queen of Scots," 18th of January, as it was evidently by Agnes Strickland, vol. ii. p. 733. written in 1683-4, and should havc The Editorof that collection has mis- followed all Mauvissiere's letters of placed the Ambassador's letter of the 1583. " Sir Thomas Bromley. 170 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. courteous, so as I trust the raatter shall receive a reasonable conclusion ; the rather if it please you to take knowledge of thus much to him, and to pray the continuance of his good favour. You see how ready I am to trouble you, for the which I have nothing to yield you but ray thanks, and that I will do ever ; and so leave you to the Lord Alraighty. Frora London, the 27th of May 1581. Yours very assured, to my little power, Wa. Mildmay.* Unless the question between Sir Christopher Hatton and the City arose out of one of his monopolies, it is dif ficult to suggest, and there is nothing to show, what the matter was to which Sir Walter Mildmay alludes in the following letter : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, This afternoon there came unto me Mr. Recorder, Mr. Alderman Woodrooffe, and Mr. Alderman Martin, sent from my Lord Mayor and the City touching the matter in question between you and thera. The sum of their message was, that by coraraon consent they had agreed to subrait themselves in that matter to the judgment of ray Lord Chan cellor, ray Lord Treasurer, and me, who, taking the advices of sorae of the Judges, raight fully determine the cause. To this end they required rae to be a raediator unto you ; but, lest I should either raisconceive or misreport their message, I have thought it best they report it to you themselves ; for which cause they are corae unto you. What an answer you shall think fit to make them I raust refer to your own consi deration, but for ray poor opinion I do not see but that this way the conclusion may be good enough for you. And therefore, as hitherto you have yielded very reasonably unto them (whereof I ara a witness), so, if you hold that course still, the end will fall out well on your part, as I think. Thus, wishing unto you always as Unto my very good friend, and « Additional MSS. 15891, f, 86". ^T. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 171 ready for you in anything I can do, I leave you in the keep ing of the Lord Almighty. From London, the 1st of June 1581. Your very assured to my littie power, Wa. Mildmay.* Bishop Aylmer's report of his persecutions in this year, are alike characteristic of himself and his times : — TO THE QUEEN. Most gracious Sovereign, I have thought it my bounden duty both to God and to your Majesty to acquaint you with the state of a part of your charge, comraitted unto you by the Lord as His lieutenant in His Church and spiritual Go vemraent. So it is, most gracious Lady, that we have daily, to our great grief, brought before us out of Gloucester diocess certain men of strange, erroneous, and perilous opinions : whereof some hold that Christ took no flesh of the Virgin, of whom we have presently one in prison ; other some there are which most shamefully and slanderously rail against the authority of magistrates ; and some other, which do assemble conventicles, study only for innovations, and do deride and jeer at aU good orders, and drive their course to so licen tious a Uberty, as it is to be feared that without speedy controlment (which can hardly be done by us who are so far ofi) this canker will creep and spread itself so far, as it will not only grow incurable there, but fall out in time to infect other countries also next adjoining. I find the cause of this corruption to be no other but percusso pastore disperguntur greges, and as the Scripture said in one sense, quia non est rex in Israel, so say I in the like sense, quia non est pastor vel Episcopus in Ecclesia, raen dare be bold with widows; and that Church being so long a widow, who dare not insult upon it? Therefore even for the tender care that your Majesty hath ever had over your Subjects, and for the princely zeal that you bear to the unity of the Church, provide that see of a Bishop, that fiock of a pastor, and that decayed house ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 76. 172 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. of sorae good architect, lest the ruin grow irreparable ; which will bring great dishonour to God, anxiety of mind to your self, and rauch. harra to your people and subjects. I most humbly beseech your Majesty, therefore, to remember it, and then undoubtedly God will remember you vrith the richest blessing of His providence ; which shall stand your Highness in raore stead than all earthly treasure, politic counsel, and warlike provision, ever more to your own safety and our coraforts, who live in you and look to die raiserably without you. Frora ray poor house at Fulham, the 13th of June 1581. Your Majesty's most hurable and dutiful poor Chap lain, John London.* So little is known of the poet or rather versifier Churchyard's life, that no light can be thrown on some of the passages in the annexed letter; but a marginal note in the " Letter Book " thus explains one part of it : — " This Monsieur Mauvissiere was then the French Ambassador resident in England, who used Churchyard as a spy for English news and advertisements of Court,'' and entertained him with money to that end; and, to do him some service in that kind, he sent him into Scotland about some exploit agreed on between them two, which was the cause that Mr. Kandall, the Queen's Ambassador at that time in Scotland, much disliked his being there, suspecting that he was there for no good to the State of England." Churchyard's application to the Scottish Parliament is not noticed in its " Acts." THOMAS CHURCHYARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Having tried ray uttermost fortune, and passed the fire of aflliction, through a perilous pilgrimage not void of many deadly dangers and irarainent mischiefs, I ara now come prostrate in raind, and faUing devout on my knees be- > Additional MSS. 15891, f. 83. " Query. ^.T. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 173 fore my Lord Governor of Bervvick, submitting myself to the Queen's Majesty's raercy and my Lord's good favour, always hoping that your Honour hath in raind the proraise which I made you for a piece of service that I raeant with hazard of ray life to discover for the discharge of ray duty to ray Prince and Country ; leaving certain notes by word of raouth, and also in paper, for that purpose with you, and yet hearing no answer of sundry letters which I sent you after ray great misfortune, I remained tiiree raonths in England, drawing myself down towards Scotland (as I wrote unto you) by the mean of Monsieur ISIauvissiere, of whom I spake with you many times before ray departure. But when I was entered Scotland, 1 found things fall out far otherwise than I looked for. And so I must either swear to be true to the King in that exti-emity, or else depart, I know not whither. If I had practised with Mr. RandaU,* it hadbeen present death to me ; besides, he disgraced rae all he could : and if I had written to your Honour, I had surely smarted for it ; so that sufferance and silence were ray only succour. AU which notwithstand ing, I obtained licence at length to raake my supphcation to the noble ParUaraent house ; but I could find no messengers till Sir John Seton went, whora I iraportunated daily to obtain me favour for ray return horae again. But God knoweth every thing went awry, and I stuck fast in the stocks among many vrild wolves and cruel tigers in the shapes of men, who would have worried and tom rae in pieces had not the King's goodness guarded rae; such is their uncivil manner and malice, and such cankered stomachs they bear to an English man. I gave the King a book before I departed thence, which manifested rauch their rudeness. If I had tarried there never so little longer, no doubt it had cost me my life ; but God be thanked for a fair escape, raost miserable wretch that I ara. How cursed raay I seera after all these storras if I have lost her Majesty's favour. I desire not to live longer than I raay enjoy her good opinion. I crave no more for all ray service than her gracious countenance ; and, that not granted, I wish I were either buried quick, or that the seas '^ Thomas Randolph. 174 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. had swallowed me. I never raeant to offend her Highness wiUingly, 1 take God to vritness ; and when I was sworn at the Council-board of Scotland,* aU the Lords can testify that I protested openly I would never be false to the Queen's Majesty and ray Country. And so, with a true face and clear conscience, I have humbled ray body and life to her raercy. Wherefore, as I have ever boldly reposed ray hope only in your honourable goodness, so I beseech you vouchsafe me some comfort, who still prayeth for the increase of your good gifts of grace in preservation of honour. From Bervrick, 23rd June 1581. Your Honour's huirfbly at commandment, Tho. Churchyard.'' Lord Grey finding, like so many of Queen Elizabeth's servants, that his most zealous exertions did not satisfy her, he, like them, used his private influence to be re moved from his employment, and for that purpose wrote to Hatton: — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER H,ATTON. Sir, Because I have certified my Lords in a general letter of the present estate of this Country, and of the fruit of my last journey, I have not thought good to trouble you further therewith at this instant, but to refer you wholly to that advertisement. Wherein perceiving, that, notvrithstanding all my endeavour and continual pains which I have taken here to advance her Majesty's service, I can no way so well satisfy her Highness as I have dutifully sought and ever wished for, my raost earnest desire is, to be now disburdened of so thank less a place, and that sorae other, that with better liking and raore sufficiency can answer that expectation, may be called hither. I am raoved herein to crave your furtherance, both in regard of her Majesty'^ servipe, which I wish raight take as happy success as herself desireth, as also for her better con tentation and ray own quietness. And yet my conscience " A marginal note says, " He Scotland to he true to the King." was sworn at the Council-board of " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 64, ^T, 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 175 in the corafortlessr irapression of this disfavour will always bear me witness that I rest simply blaraeless herein towards her Majesty, whose service never forslowing, I have ever fol lowed vrith all dutiful care and travail, as faithfully as the power of ray body and mind would give me leave. If the sway have been beyond my strengtii, the blame is justly theirs whose choice was no better; and not mine, that did plainly and simply at the first reveal that Uttle which I found in myself for so great a charge. In this cause, that toucheth me so dear, I ara now forced to fly to your promised friend ship for the reraoving of rae frora hence ; whereof I make the more assured account, for that I have ever found it ready in my causes of less importance. And so, eamestly praying herein your honourable solicitation and good fur therance, I corarait you to the grace of God. From Dublin, the 1st of July 1581. Your raost assured friend and loring kinsman, A. Grey.* Churchyard, having it appears slain a man, was im prisoned, and, being nearly destitute, he made a very ingenious application to Hatton for relief. The " poor present," of which he speaks, was no doubt one of the innumerable effusions of his prolific pen : — THOMAS CHURCHYARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your honourable and courteous taking of my sraall pains, vrith the great regard which you had of ray patience in these troubles, doth comfort rae so rauch, as ray happiness in sending unto you and your goodness in accepting my letters are at strife, the one with the other, which of them both do best deserve the victory. But flnding it folly by late experi ence to depend on fortune, and resting wholly upon God's direction and on the goodness of my friends, your favourable acceptation of ray poor present doth richly reward me for my work, and conquereth both my fortune and all other vain hope that ray presuraptuous pen raight give rae. God, that work eth aU goodness by worthy instruraents, hath offered rae great » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 64. 176 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1581. good hap, and wrought a perfect means to restore rae to li berty. The man's wife whose husband I slew is contented to abandon her suit, and henceforth to surcease her raalice, so that I hope I shall presently depart frora prison, though not able (poor wretch as I am) to depart with any raoney. The divers occasions of expense in my restraint have taken frora rae the best part of ray purse, and only left rae the bare strings to play withal. I blush, being old, to beg ; and yet not ashamed to crave, being a courtier. A soldier should rather snatch than stand at world's benevo lence ; but no man appoints his own portion, and men often fare the worse for snatching too boldly. Well ! I want, and how to get requires a cunning reach ; and then is siraplicity but a very blunt hook to take that which may supply a man's necessity. Why fear I ray feebleness ? the fortune of Poets hath been ever poor and needy. Horaer had but one eye, and knew not where to dine ; Ovid had two eyes, and yet could see but few that did hira good ; Virgil, Petrarch, Dante, Mar shall, Marot, and many more, were poor and rich, but not to continue ; and raay not I presurae among thera, as poor as the best, and a writer not always araong the worst? Though not a Poet, yet one that hath used both pen and sword with Poet's fortune, as well as they, to my own hindrance. Your Ho nour seeth my defects, and may easily help them, when you please, with some small remembrance of your bounty and goodness. I write not this to crave, but only desire some means to enlarge me, the sooner to drive away this indigence. Your Honour's servants, or whosoever please you, may now be welcorae and visit me when they will in this sweet com fort and expectation of present liberty, and bring that with thera which a prisoner is glad to see, and will be ever raost joyfully willing to receive, whatsoever shall proceed frora your accustomed goodness, whora I coramit to the grace of God. Frora the Palace of Repentance, the 10th of July 1581. Humbly at your Honour's comraandraent, T. Churchyard,* " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 60". MT. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 177 The Earl of Oxford's ill-treatment of his wife, who was Lord Burghley's daughter, has been already men tioned;" and, Hatton having interested the Queen in the lady's behalf, her father wrote to thank him for his exertions. The " disaster betwixt two great Planets " was no doubt a quarrel between the Earls of Leicester and Sussex : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Though I cannot always pay my debts, yet I use to acknovriedge them many times to raove ray creditors to ac cept my good-wiU in towardness of payment ; and so at this time, though I know myself raany ways indebted unto you for your good-vriU, except you will accept for acquittal ray reciproque good-vriU, I shall not be able to pay you that I owe you. Yet yesterday, being advertised of your good and ho nourable dealing with her Majesty in the case of ray daughter of Oxford, I could not suffer my thanks to grow above one day old ; and therefore in these few lines I do presently thank you, and do pray you in any proceeding therein not to have the Earl dealt withal strainably, but only by way of advice, as good for himself; for otherwise he may suspect that I regard myself more for ray daughter than he is regarded for his hberty. I know only the Queen's Majesty's raotions shall further the cause, and more than her raotions I vrish not. You see, being a debtor, I prescribe my raanner to increase the debt; but, if I cannot acquit it, I know it belongeth to Al raighty God to do it. I ara raost sorry to hear of the disaster fallen out yesterday betwixt two great Planets ; but I hear they know their Jupiter, and will obey her Majesty, rather to content her than to follow their own humours. It is far out of season to have these breaches ; our adversaries are ever ready to make thera greater, and to leap in also to our cora raon harra. I ara not yet fully recovered; this north-west " Vide p. 17, ante. VOL. I. N 178 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581, wind. keepeth rae back from ray port of health, which God send you ever, with increase of honour. 13th July 1581. Yours assuredly, W. Burleigh.* Sir Thomas Heneage also alludes to the quarrel of Leicester and Sussex, in the following letter. Lady Heneage was Ann, daughter of Sir Nicholas Poyntz, and died in November 1593 : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, My extrerae pain of the stone will make me write shorter than I would or should. For your buttons, which I bought for you, and would never have worn if I had thought you would after have used them, I refer to your own best liking whether I shall return thera, or pay for them ; and, how well soever they like me, I Uke better to please you than rayself in a greater raatter than this, as you shall ever find. For your favour in coraraending ray duty to her Majesty, which showeth the nobleness and goodness of your condition towards thera that dearliest love you, I think rayself princi pally bound unto you ; and though her Highness' liking as well for myself as her serrice shall ever be a law to rae, yet ray wife's leg, that still holdeth her in her bed, as well as my own present and sudden sickness of the stone, will hold me here longer than I meant, I leave to tell you ray raind of the matter of quarrel till my body be more quiet, taking it most kindly that you wUl but some tirae wish hira with you, that will ever love you; and so I coraraend rae all unto you, and us both to the Lord Jesus. The 15th of July 1581. Your own, sick and whole, T. Heneage.*" When the next letter was written. Sir Francis Wal singham was at Bologne, on his way to Paris to assist Lord Cobham and Mr. Sommers in persuading the French King to agree to certain propositions respecting the Queen's » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 73, " Additional MSS, 16891, f, 73", ^T, 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 179 marriage, and to consent to a League offensive and de fensive between England and France, Walsingham's instructions, and great part of his correspondence (but not his letters to Hatton), while on this mission, are printed in " The Compleat Ambassador."" TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Upon better consideration of the request I made unto you before my departure, to have moved her Majesty for the stalment of my debt due unto her Majesty, (to which purpose it was resolved between us that I should have written a letter unto you to that effect, whereby you might have taken the better opportunity to have moved her therein,) I have now changed my opinion, meaning to stay rmtil my return. In the mean tirae, notvrithstanding, I cannot but raost heartily thank you for your honourable offer made in that behalf. Hitherto my success, both by sea and by land, (I thank God for it,) hath been such as I could desire. But I fear in the end, when I shall corae to the matter, I shaU not perform that which is looked for by her Majesty ; not for lack of care or due endeavour in rae, but through the weak and slender direction I am sent vrithal: and yet, perhaps, if the success fall not out according to expectation, the blarae will be laid upon the poor Minister. This my doubt is greatly relieved through the assurance I have of your honourable and friendly de fence of your absent friend. And so I commit you to God. At Bologne, 17th of July 1581. Your assured friend, Fran. Walsingham." Poor Churchyard's situation again compelled him to implore his patron's assistance. The importunity of all who were in distress, for on the same day Hatton re ceived a similar letter from Charles Arundell, must have been extremely painful ; but they justify an inference ' Edited by Sir Dudley Digges, folio, 1655. " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 70. N 2 180 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581, highly favourable to his character, since the wretched - rarely appeal to the obdurate or heartless. TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My duty most hurably remembered. Your Honour know eth my calaraity — long letters purchase sraall benefit, as the weight of ray sorrow showeth. God and good men raust help; and, in the nuraber of the good, yourself is one in ray poor judgraent that raay and vrill do what raay most relieve rae. I beseech you then weigh ray affliction, and so work as the world raay behold your integrity and up right dealing, to God's glory and to your own iraraortal farae. I live in raisery ; stained in credit, cut off from the world, hated of some that loved me, holpen of none, and forsaken of all; for what just cause I know not. My distress is great, ray calUng siraple, and not able to avaU anything without the assistance of your goodness. For God's sake, bring me to my answer ; and, as you shall see it fall out, my accusers can prove nothing against me. Vouchsafe me speedy remedy, or, at the least, the justice of the law g,nd the benefit of my Country ; and, if I have failed of my duty wilUngly, let rae feel the price of it. I crave no pardon, but humbly sue for favourable expedi tion ; for the which I appeal to your honourable judgraent, and pray for your good success in all your desires. Frora the Marshalsea, the 20th of July 1581. Your Honour's in all faithful devotion, T. Churchyard.* TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, It is a fault in grief, that either it coraplaineth too ranch, or else saith nothing : and yet, for ray own part, I seek as much as I can to shun extremities. I have largely unfolded ray whole estate to this bearer, because I would not be curabersome unto you; only craving of charity and justice that ray trial, which hath been long proraised, raay » Additional MSS, 15891, f, 63, MT. 41.] ;SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 181 not be auy long ^er deferred: for then shall my enemies sink with shame, almid 1 depart out of the field with honour; and whatsoevereq either malice hath unjustly built, or a fool derised upon ., V& false ground, must play castle-come-down, and dissolve c)?' to nothing. And all that 1 have said or set down shal'j.c' be confirmed by the formal depositions and oaths of thoscfig who were present when he talked idly, and told wo^tJ^. I wiU say no more, untU either trial or liberty may be obtained, which I wish to enjoy by your media tion, whora I commit to the grace of God. From Sutton, the 20th of July 1581. Your Honour's fast and unfeigned friend, Cha. Arundell.' Sir Thomas Heneage was Treasurer of the Chamber, from whose office payments for couriers and special messengers were made, which explains this letter : — TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I understand Mr. Secretary goeth presently into France ; and therefore, both for her Majesty's service and raine own discharge, I have thought good to let you know that in his absence I can grant no allowance to any gentleraan, or courier that shall carry letters to or from him, except they be signed with the hand of my Lord Treasurer, ray Lord Chamberlain, or yourself. Wherefore, as occasion may faU out for her Majesty's service, I beseech you my servant may attend on you to inform you of the right order of these dispatches for my discharge. And so I pray God to bless you with health, and honour, and the happiness I would my self. From CopthaU, the 23rd of July 1581. Your own bound to love you, T. Heneage.'' When the manner in which the Queen was importuned by her Courtiers for grants of every kind is remember ed, the fact stated by Walsingham when making a > Additional MSS. 15891, f. 79", " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 63". 182 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF f'^^^' request for his brother-in-law, Mr. St. 1,'the w;^*^***' ^^^ lie had never asked a favour during the eigb 7^^^^ lie had been in her service, is very remarkable ; , ""^ " is con sistent with the integrity of his character, ; *™ accounts for the honourable poverty in which he lived a>^^j. j^ddied;- ^ as SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HA^WSS^V^ Sir, The Dean and Chapter of Winchester are content at the request of this gentleman, my wife's brother, to grant him a lease in reversion of their parsonage of Hursley in the county of Southampton for fifty years, in respect of the well- deserving of their house, as well of his father as of his elder brother deceased, who were both their Officers for the re ceiving of their rents ; a matter usual and comraon araong thera to pleasure those gentlemen vrith such like grants that have any doings for thera touching their lands. But they desire, for their more orderly granting of the same, that her Majesty, to whom the lease is to be passed to his use, would write her letter unto thera in coraraendation of the suit ; upon the receipt whereof they will not faU to grant it, being of theraselves already very forward to pleasure hira therein. My request unto you therefore is, that it would please you to favour the gentleman so much for my sake as to move her Majesty in the inatter, and procure her hand to the letter to be directed to the Dean and Chapter, which I send you herewith inclosed ready for her signature ; not doubting but that by your good means her Majesty wiU easily be drawn to yield to so reasonable a suit, being no way any loss or hin drance to herself; and the now tenant of the thing no old tenant, but one that bought it very lately, and otherwise of so great wealth and ability that he may well forbear the profit of it, without any such prejudice to his estate as may justly be drawn into consideration to move her Majesty to raislike of the suit ; wherein I ara besides persuaded she will the rather hicline to do the gentleraan good, for that he is brother to a gentlewoman of whom she seemeth to have a ^T. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 183 ' good liking. In the moving of the matter it may please you to put her Majesty in mind, that, in eight years' time wherein I have served her, I never yet troubled her for the benefiting of any that belonged unto me, either by kindred or otherwise; which I think never any other could say that served in the Uke place. And so, once again praying you that it will please you to deal effectually in this cause, for your travail wherein I shaU think myself greatly beholding unto you, I corarait you to God's good keeping. At Bologne, the 27th of July 1581. Your very assured friend, Fran. Walsingham.* Dr. Mathew, then a candidate for the Deanery of Durham, was the Dr. Toby Mathew from whom several letters have been inserted. Many others will be found from him on this subject; and, though he succeeded in his wishes, it was not until August 1583. He was after wards Bishop of that diocese, and in 1606 became Archbishop of York : — sir THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I received a raessage from you by Lee, ray raan, yes terday, that when I Uked to come to the Court, if you might know it, you would make my way to be presently welcorae. Surely, Sir, it is a place I do honour and esteera, and would be glad to be welcome to ; but to corae thither before I should be welcome accordeth Uttle with reason, and less with ray liking, except it were to do service to such as I ara bound to love, which is yourself and a few others. By letters which my Lord of Leicester wrote unto me frora Wanstead, (which I have sent you to peruse,) it appeareth that her Majesty is neither well pleased with my absence, nor in anywise con tented I should come over soon. My wife's sickness and lameness, so as she could not stir out of her bed, was the cause I could neither in reason nor honesty come out from ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 70". 184 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. ray house tiU she were better amended. And now, to come before her Majesty thought it fit, you know it were very inconvenient; wherefore I beseech you let me know your mind how long or short ray return raay be with her Majesty's best expectations, and I shall appoint myself so as I may know from you how best to please her. Sir, by my entreaty, Mr. Secretary Walsinghara hath been a raean to her Ma jesty for the Deanery of Durhara for Mr. Doctor Mathew, and found her Highness weU-disposed therein. He hath prayed rae to be a raeans Ukewise unto you to further him, which he will deserve with his prayers and all thankful ser vice towards you. A raan of the Church raore fit for the Church than himself I know not in all England, nor raore worthy to be preferred. My most earnest desire therefore is, that it would please you to help him, as a man well deserving advanceraent, and one whom you may command. Besides, I ara most humbly to pray you for a poor raan of raine, John de Vique, (that useth with great diligence to carry the Queen's packet,) that it would please you to grant hira the next dispatch to Mr. Secretary, or otherwise but your own letters of advertiseraents unto hira, which he vrill carry with all speed and faithfulness ; and they, with ray Lord of Leices ter's, which I will procure, raay draw hira sorae littie allow ance. Further I will not trouble you, but ever love and honour you. Frora my house at CopthaU, 30th July 1581. Your own bound to you, T. Heneage.* The wardship, which led to the imprisonment of the person mentioned by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, seems to have been granted to his son, Mr. Mildmay; whose interests, under that iniquitous and tyrannical system, were in some way affected by the conduct of the lady's husband, most probably in defence of what would now be considered to have been his own property. * Additional MSS. 16891, f. 63. ^T, 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 185 TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Being informed that Mrs. T. is an earnest suitor at the Court by raeans of her Majesty for the enlargement of her husband, comraitted by the Lord Treasurer in the Court of Wards for such a contempt against her Majesty's authority in that Court as none before this durst ever atterapt, 1 have thought good to send up this bearer, ray son, both to hearken to her doings and to impeach anything that she goeth about to work indirectly upon untrue surraises ; and because ray son in this raatter frora the beginning hath been much bound unto you, I ara the rather bold to make you thus far ac quainted, and therevrith also to pray you to favour and further him as he shall have occasion to desire your aid. I trust her Majesty wiU be gracious herein, and not to in cline to favour them that so unjustly have sought to benefit themselves to the raanifest injury of others, and now seek to conceal the proceeding of that whereby they claim ; the matter also toucheth her Majesty, for, if this may be suffered, it may reach to her prejudice in greater things. And so, recomraending the cause to your friendly and good reraem brance, I leave to trouble you any further; but vrith most hearty commendation do wish unto you aU prosperity in God Almighty. From Apthorpe, the 6th of August 1581. Your assured loring friend, W. Mildmay.* " Danger of infection," the constant bugbear of the time, was the principal theme of numerous letters : — SIR THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, 1 perceive by your letter her Majesty's pleasure is, I should, ere I came to her presence, remove from my own house to some other air. To obey her Highness's liking, which I esteem as my life, as soon as I can conveniently I will get me hence, though I know not yet whither to wander. You " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 80". 186 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1581, shaU stiU understand what becoraeth of rae ; and I raost earnestly beseech you that I raay know from you frora time to tirae how her Majesty and yourself doth. And so, wish ing you in ray banishraent the corapany raost contents you, and none that loved you worse than myself, I coramend me humbly unto you ; and so doth ray wife, your poor friend, not yet aU recovered. Frora CopthaU, the Yth of August 1581. Your own at coraraandraent, Tho. Heneage.* Upon the day on which Walsingham wrote the an nexed private letter to Hatton, (if its date be correct,) he made two reports of his proceedings, one to the Queen, and the other to Lord Burghley,'' but in neither did he mention the same facts. His other letters from Paris are also silent about Monsieur's having relieved Cambray, which was besieged by the Prince of Parma ; but on the 24th of August Lord Burghley informed Walsingham of the Queen's satisfaction that Monsieur had " entered Cambray according to his honourable in tention and promise, so as her Majesty rejoiceth greatly with this his fruits of so great an enterprize." " SIR FRANCIS walsingham TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The raatter ofthe treaty of the League is now brought to this pass with Monsieur, that he hath wholly referred the same to the King, to be proceeded in without raarriage if it shall so like hira, so that there be nothing concluded in the said treaty that raay anyways be prejudicial to the raarriage ; whereupon it will shortly appear what issue the matter is like to have. There carae news yesternight to this town, that Monsieur was entered into Carabray, which were very well welcorae to all those that are sound and well affected to » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 86. " Compleat Ambassador, p. 392. •= Ibid. p. 397. ^T. 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 187 this State, but as ill-come to divcrs that are at the devotion of Spain. This happy beginning vvas accorapanied with the mishap of the loss of the Viscount of Tureen, who, hazard ing himself to have entered into the town with fourscore and ten horse, or thereabouts, was charged and taken by the enemy, and all his company (some very few only excepted that got into the town) takeii or slain, Tbe loss is great of the gentieman, being of that virtue and value that he was, and one so earnestly devoted to her Majesty as no nobleman in France raore. And thus I corarait you to God. At Paris, the 10th of August 1581. Youi- very assured friend, Fra. Walsingham.* Lord Grey gave Sir Christopher Hatton further infor mation of his proceedings in Ireland, on the 12th of August: — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, As your raanifold courtesies have given me cause, so could I not choose, reputing you in the number of my best friends there, but yield you ray right hearty thanks for the sarae ; taking the opportunity of this raessenger ex pressly to salute you. I forbear to trouble you vrith the particulars of my late joumey into the North parts, for be cause I know you shall be partaker of them by ray letters . which I sent unto their Lordships. If her Majesty would have been pleased to have granted ray deraands, I would not have doubted, vrith the assistance of God, but to have settled sorae better order in this joumey, as well in sup pressing the pride of Tirlough, as also in expulsing the Scots. But being now tied to those directions, which were set down by the table there, and her Majesty's disposition to peace, I have done my best endeavour to foUow the one and to satisfy the other. I have, against my will, concluded, or rather patched up, a peace vrith Tirlough ; » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 96. 188 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1581. being such, indeed, as I can neither repose any assurance in the continuance of it, nor for the honour of it justly commend it. The best is, that by this occasion some time may be won, to yield us the more liberty to deal with the mountain rebels; against whora I purpose, with God's help, to bend rayself with aU present speed. 1 beseech you to have in reraerabrance the gentleraan whom, before my departure thence, you so often commended unto me ; I raean Ned Denny ; that through your honourable" raedia tion he may find her Majesty gracious in his old suit, without the which, his forwardness to countenance her Ma jesty's service will bring hira to late repentance, and deeply touch hira in credit. I most earnestly pray you, therefore, to stand to him, and you shall no less increase ray band towards you through your good favour vouchsafed hira therein, than bind the gentleman himself to remain ever yours in all faithful devotion. And so I comrait you to God. From DubUn, the 12th of August 1581. Your assured friend and most loving cousin, A. Grey.* Hatton seems, from the following letter, to have wish ed that his nephew, Mr. Newport, should make a cam paign under the Duke of Anjou in the Low Countries ; but Walsingham considered that his reception by the Prince would depend upon the Queen's acceding to his Highness' request for a loan. Elizabeth's usual parsimony showed itself about the expenses of Drake's voyage ; and Lord Burghley wrote to Walsingham on the 18th of August, " Now that all things are ready, as ships, victuals, men, &c., the charge whereof cometh to 12,000/., she hath been moved to impart 2000?. more, as a thing needful for the full furniture of this voyage; wherewith she is greatly offended with Mr. Hawkins and Drake that the charges are grown so great above that was said to her when the » Additional MSS. 16891, f, 85, JET, 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 189 5000/. was demanded of her." " On the 24th of August Burghley informed him that " her Majesty seemeth reso lutely bent not to exceed 5000/., whereby your charge is the greater, which I have essayed to qualify as if it had been my own case." '' SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, After the closing up of my forraer, I received your letters by your servant Pyne, wherein you recoraraend your nephew unto my favour, and best advice for his preferment into Monsieur's serrice in this journey for the Low Coun tries. Concerning which matter I am to let you understand, that, at Mr. Sommers' late being with Monsieur, he pro posed a motion for a loan of raoney to be granted hira by her Majesty, for the better furnishing of his necessities in those actions he is entered into. If this request be heark ened unto by her Majesty vrith effect, then is it well to be thought that any EngUsh gentleraan that shall come to serve him shaU be well accepted ; but if it happen other wise, no doubt their entertainment wiU be cold, and not worthy the erabracing. In which respect ray advice is, that it were first best to attend how her Majesty will resolve that way ; which faUing out accordingly to the P 's° desire, I vriU then both advertize you what I think raeet to be prorided there, and send over for this gentleman ; and fur ther give him the best advice and direction how to carry hiraself there, and the best address to be well received, that I can. I hear that I stand in so hard terms vrith her Majesty as I fear any persuasion I can use in furtherance of Sir Francis Drake's voyage vrill rather hurt than help. I am blamed as a principal counsellor thereof ; and though I did concur with the rest in raatter of adrice, yet I do assure myself that her Majesty shall, ere a few months come to an end, have more cause to allow of the authors ' Compleat Ambassador, p. 388. "i Ibid. p. 396. ¦= A cypher, rather than a word, occuis here. 190 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. of that council than of the dissuaders thereof. The mis chief vrill be, that the remedy will not be allowed of until it be too late to apply it. And so, with ray hearty thanks for your friendly and courteous letters, I comrait you to God. From Paris, the 20th of August 1581. Your assured loring friend, Fra. Walsingham.* The learned and accomplished Lord Buckhurst, after wards Earl of Dorset, in asking Hatton's patronage for another, expresses the deepest sense of his own obliga tions to him : — LORD BUCKHURST TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I know well enough, that, of your own good dispo sition towards this gentleraan, you are forward of your self to further his poor suit now in hand. But I that do haply see more than another how much it iraporteth hira to have a speedy end, and that delay and protraction of time will easily consurae both hira and the benefit which, with the help of your goodness, he is Uke to reap by the same, cannot but earnestly intreat the continuance of your favour toward him, and that you would be pleased to bind for ever unto you so worthy a gentleman. Good Mr. Vice- Charaberlain, reraeraber that without your help and honour able raediation he is like to sink in his adversity, and that it is needful he should in sorae sort be relieved. Your self was first pleased to becorae the only raean to her Majesty for him : there wanteth nothing now but that you would effectuaUy perfect so noble a work as you have vouch safed to begin in his favour; for which God shall reward you, the gentleman shall serve you, and I shall for ever, as you have bound me, both love and honour you ; adding this to the great heap of the rest of your favours towards rae, which burden rae so rauch, as, being unable to requite » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 91, ^T. 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER II.ATTON. 191 them, I must be forced to sink and fall down underneath thera. And thus, resting ever your own, I forbear any raore to trouble you. SOth August 1581. Your own assured for ever, T. Buckhurst.* The Deanery of Durham became vacant by the death of Sir Thomas Wilson, the late Secretary of State, in 1581 ; and Dr. Mathew, as has been already observed, was a candidate for the appointment, which he obtained in August 1583, when the office had been vacant two years. His letter to Sir Thomas Heneage shows the great competition there was for the Deanery, and the natural indignation of the learned divine, that a physi cian, and "such a man, by such means," should have had the least chance of success : — DR. MATHEW TO SIR THOMAS HENEAGE. Sir, I beseech you first accept ray humble thanks for that exceeding great care which I do hear it pleaseth you to continue in ray cause; very tedious, I am sure, to you, and almost desperate to rae, if that be true which is re ported. It is said, great and mighty means are made for one Mr. Bellamy a physician: I pray God, with all my heart, that country stand more in need of physic than of dirinity; not that I vrish the people sick in their bodies, but saved in their souls. If aurum potahile be so full and effectual in operation, I can find no fault with so many that have spent so much to make elixir, the philosopher's stone, whereout is to be drawn quidlibet ex quolibet : and then that old paradox, omnia sunt unum, is verified by a new device. But, good Sir Thomas Heneage, is all your good purpose, your great persuasions, your favourable letters, your open and often speeches, corae to this issue, that Doc tor Bellaray, professed in physic, a stranger at Court, never seen there yet, never heard of till now, and now spoken " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 78". 192 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. of abroad, and broadly enough, shaU run away with such a room ; I say not frora rae, that ara less than the least, but from all the chaplains her Majesty hath, frora all the learned known reputed preachers in Oxon, in Cambridge, in aU this realm ? Have I (poor raan ) intreated my Lord, mine old Master, chiefly by yourself, by my Lord of York's grace, by my Lord of Sarura, by Mr. Captain Horsey, Mr. PhUip Sidney, &c. ; hath my Lord of Warwick been contented to stay his own suit for Mr. Griffin, in respect of rae, that a third man, and such a man, and by such means, raay prevent both us and aU others ? I hurably be seech you. Sir, continue forth your favour yet still, till the success and event be seen. Hit I or raiss I, I shall all one most bounden unto you, though not able alike to be thank ful unto you. There be good causes that move me to be now raore earnest than ever I was. I would before this have been at the Court, but for your absence : if you be now returned, and think ray presence raight lessen your labour, or further the suit, I will, upon any the least word frora you, repair thither, and so expect Mr. Secretary's arrival. And so I humbly comraend you arid the good vir tuous lady to the Lord Jesus. Sarura, Yth September 1581. Yours, hurable and bounden, Tobias Mathew.* Walsingham's and his colleagues' official report of his last interview with the French King, as well as his private letter, both written on the same day as the following one to Hatton hitherto unprinted, are in the " Compleat Ambassador" : — sir FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I write the less unto you at this present, for that I hope to see you shortly, having taken this day my leave of the King and Queen Mother. The only corafort I can take of this voyage is, that though I have done no good, yet have I " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 87. .^T. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 193 done no harm, otherwise than that I spent the King and Queen's money. I raean, in my way homeward to visit the Duke of Anjou ; at what time I will not fail to recommend your nephew, as also your particular desire you have to do hira honour and service. By a letter I received this day frora hira, I do find that he raeaneth, notwithstanding that there are divers of his troops gone away frora him, to con tinue in the field the space of six weeks ; in which time your nephew shaU taste the incomraodities of the war, espe cially now that the winter approacheth. And so, hoping shortly to see you, I cominit you in the raeantirae to the pro tection of Almighty God. Frora Paris, the 12th of Sep tember 1581. Yours, most assuredly, Fra. Walsingham.* Sir Francis Walsingham's letters to the Queen form a striking contrast to those of her other Ministers. Neither Burghley nor Leicester, nor even Hatton, ever presumed to remonsti-ance so firmly, nor to vindicate themselves so boldly, as Walsingham did, whenever he thought it was his duty to speak the truth either in relation to her interests or his own character. There is also an honest frankness in his style, which is quite refreshing after reading the vapid adulation of his contemporaries ; and in no part of his correspondence is this more remarkable than in the foUowing fine letter. Who but Walsingham would have dared to reproach Elizabeth for having con demned him unheard, or, after justifying his own con duct, have ventured to tell her plainly, that, if she reaUy meant to marry at her " years," she had no time to lose ; that her meanness about money ruined all her pro jects ; that it had lost her Scotland, and that it was likely to lose her England ; that no Foreign power valued her friendship, because whenever money was wanted, ^ Additional MSS. 15891, f. 95". VOL. I. 0 194 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. she would do nothing unless it were " underhand," and that her predecessors never acted in such a manner? While on that subject, he adverted to her treatment of the Earl of Shrewsbury, whose aUowance for keeping the Queen of Scots, whom Walsingham caUs " the bosom serpent," it was proposed to reduce, though the Earl was then driven to such extremity as to have contem plated the sale of aU his plate ;^ and he concludes with the emphatic declaration, that, if the Queen persisted in such a course, every one of her true counseUors would prefer being in the furthest part of Ethiopia, to the enjoyment of the finest palace in England. It was, however, no small merit in Elizabeth to have appreciated Walsingham's integrity of purpose, for, though rarely in favour, she was fully conscious of his merits. SIR FRANCIS walsingham TO THE QUEEN. It may please your raost excellent Majesty, the laws of .Ethiopia, my native soil, are very severe against those that condemn a person unheard, but most sharp against such as do judge amiss of those that sit in Princely chair, as Gods here on earth. To tell your Majesty what others conceive upon the late stay here of our proceedings (who can not think that such effects should grow upon naked and weak causes), I hope is not to condemn, as by your letter, which it pleased your Ma jesty to vouchsafe to write unto me, it seemeth you conceive. When I either look into your Highness's own princely judg ment (who for your own honour's sake ought to have care to pre serve your Minister's credit), or consider ray own duty, which teacheth me not to condemn those whora I ara bound to de fend, I should then be worthy to receive the sharpest punish ment that either the Ethiopians' severity or Draco's laws can yield, if I should wittingly by wrong supposal grow to * See a Letter from the Earl of February in this year, in Lodge's Shrewsbury, dated on the 23rd of Illustrations, ii. 196, jet. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 195 so hard a censure as to think that your Majesty should prefer in a raatter of trust a stranger, before a servant who in loyal ty will give place to neither subject nor stranger. 1 cannot deny but 1 have been infinitely grieved to see the de sire I have had to do your Majesty some acceptable service in the present chai-ge comraitted unto rae, to be so greatly crossed. But I wiU leave to touch ray particular, though I have as great cause as any raan that ever served in the place I now unworthily supply ; being at home always subject to sundry strange jealousies, and in foreign service to displea sure, though I dare make the greatest enemy that I have the censurer of my actions and proceedings in such foreign charges as have been comraitted unto rae. But now to your pubUc, wherein if anything shall escape ray pen that raay breed offence, I most hurably beseech your Majesty to ascribe that it proceedeth of love, which can never bring forth iU- effects, though sometime they may be subject to sharp cen sures. And first for your Majesty's raarriage ; if you raean it, and your proceeding therein doth give the world cause to judge the contrary, reraeraber then, I most humbly beseech you, that by the delay your Highness useth therein you lose > the benefit of time, which (your years considered) is not the ; least thing to be weighed ; if you mean it not, then assure "yourself it is one ofthe worst remedies your Highness can use, howsoever you conceive that it serveth your turn. And as for the League that we were in hand withal, if the King would have assented that the same should have proceeded in general terms according to such direction as we have lately received from your Majesty, I am for sundry causes led to think that it would have proved as unprofitable as general. I know that there is a precedent to confirm the sarae : but if in that tirae a King of Scots, pretending title to the Crown of England, were Uke, by raatching vrith Spain, to have wrought that peril toward your Majesty's father as he is towards you, he would not then have stood upon generality, as your Ma jesty doth now; for in diseased bodies there is not always like\ use of raedicines. Sometime, when your Majesty doth 0 2 196 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. behold in what doubtful terms you stand with Foreign Princes, then do you vrish with great affection that opportunity offered had not been overslipped ; but when they are offered unto you, then, if they be accompanied with charges, they are altogether neglected. Coramon experience teacheth that it is as hard in a politic body to prevent any mischief without charges, as in a natural body diseased to cure the sarae with out pain. Reraember, I humbly beseech your Majesty, that respect of charges hath lost Scotland ; and I would to God I had no cause to think that it might put your Majesty in peril of the loss of England. I see it, and they here stick not to say it, that the only cause that moveth them not to weigh jouT Majesty's friendship is, for that they see you do fly charges otherwise than by doing soraewhat underhand. It is strange, considering in what state your Majesty standeth, that, in all the directions that we have now received, we have special order not to yield to anything that raay be accom panied with charges. The general league raust be without any certain limitation of expense ; the particular, vrith a vo luntary, and no certain charge ; as also that which is to be attempted in favour of Don Antonio.* The best is, that if they were, as they are not, inclined to deal in any of these points, then were they surely like to receive but small com fort for anything we have direction to assent unto. Hereto fore your Majesty's predecessors in matter of peril did never look into charges ; when their treasure was neither so great as your Majesty's is, nor their Subjects so wealthy nor so willing to contribute. A person that is diseased, if he look only upon the raedicine, without regard of the pain he sustaineth, cannot but in reason and nature abhor the sarae : if there be no peril, then it is in vain to be at charges; but if there be peril, it is hard that charges should be preferred before immi nent danger. I pray God the abating of charges towards the nobleman that hath the custody of the bosom serpent hath not lessened his care in keeping of her. To think that in a man of his birth and quaUty, after twelve years' travail in a ' King of Portugal ; vide p. 202, post. .ET, 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 197 charge of so great weight, to have an abateraent of allowance, and no recompense otherwise raade, should not work sorae discontentment, no man that hath reason can so judge ; and tiierefore to have so special a charge coramitted to a person discontented, everybody seeth that it standeth no way with policy. What dangerous effects this loose keeping hath bred, the taking away of Morton, the alteration of the King, and a general revolt in religion intended, wrought altogether by her poUcy, doth show ; and therefore, nothing being done to help the same, is a raanifest arguraent that the peril that is Ukely to grow thereby is so fatal as it can no way be pre vented. I conclude, therefore, (be it spoken in zeal of duty, without offence to your Majesty,) if this sparing and unprovi- dent course be holden on still, (the raischiefs approaching being so apparent as they are,) there is no one that serveth in place of a CounseUor, that either weigheth his own credit, or carrieth that sound affectioii to your Majesty that he ought to do, that would not wish himself rather in the furthest part of .Stliiopia than to enjoy the fairest palace in England. The Lord God, therefore, direct your Majesty's heart to take that way of counsel that may be most for your honour and safety. From Paris, the 12th of September 1581. Your Majesty's most hurable, obedient subject and servant, F. Walsingham.' Another instance of persons being forced by the Court upon the City for appointments, and of the difficulties with which the authorities had to contend, is shown by the foUowing letter from Sir John Branch, the Lord Mayor : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May IT PLEASE YOUR Honour, Upon the receipt of your letters signifying her Majesty's commendation of William Parker's request to be an alnager, or surveyor of search of » Additional MSS, 15891, f. 93. sador," p, 426, where it is said to This letter, with some trifling varia- have been dated on the 2nd of Sep- tions is in the " Compleat Ambas- tember. 198 -THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1681. cloth in this City, we did consider what we reasonably could for the relieving of Parker, in such manner as might be con. venient, vrithout hurt of this City, and our raarket, and the coraraonweal. Some difficulty we find in it, with some other matters touching Parker as we thought raeet to inform your Honour toward her Majesty's satisfaction ; and for that cause we did appoint some of our brethren to attend upon you, by whom we had report that they supposed your Honour to be sa tisfled ; so as we hoped we should not have had further follow ing thereof on his behalf, unless he could by agreement with the other that carae in by Parker's noraination have raade a place erapty for hira. Since that time we perceive that he hath said that we would make hira pay 160/. for the office, as though we, for ourselves, or the City, would take raoney of hira for an office which we never meant ; and therein he offereth us wrong. Howbeit, because we have again received your second letters in his favour, and the sarae thing also pre ferred to her Majesty, and coraraended to us by our right ho nourable the good Lord, the Lord Treasurer (as appeareth in the postscript of your former letters), we have likewise ap pointed some of our brethren to attend upon his Lordship, to inform hira also of the state of the causes, as your Honour hath been, to the intent that her Majesty mayhave the better conceiving of our dutiful proceeding. We are therefore humbly to beseech you to join with his Lordship therein for satisfying of her Majesty. Nevertheless, we still retain at the coraraendation of his Lordship, and specially for the consider ation of her Majesty's favour, a purpose to do Parker any good that we reasonably may ; and therefore because, as our brethren that attended on you have raade report unto us, your Honour, aUowing their answer on our behalf to be rea sonable, did require their private proraises some other way to relieve hira; which because they had no, warrant to grant, yet they have proraised to raove it araong us; we have been contented, in respect of those frora whora he is coraraended, to give hira at our coraraon charge a pension of 30/. yearly during his good demeanour, and so long as he shall not aUen the MT. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 199 same, but keep it to his own use. And this we trust her Majesty will take in gracious part, and your Honour think well of our thankfulness towards you. And so we coramit you to the tuition of the Almighty, At London, the 20th of September 1581. Your Honour's to command. J. Branch.* From Dr, Humphry's letter to Hatton's secretary Mr. Cox, which seems to belong to this year, it appears that Cox had, through his patron's influence, in an unu sual manner obtained some piece of preferment in the gift of Magdalen College, and that it was very unwU Ungly conferred. DR. LAURENCE HUMFREY TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Sir, I have hastened from Winton to Oxford about your matter, and would before have moved it if I could; you know that 1 must foUow my course, and keep ray tirae of resi dence. And now the thing in effect is yours, if by law it raay be conveyed unto you. My company desireth the Queen's Majesty's letter, as usually is accustomed ; best for our warrant in such aa extraordinary case, and most safe for yourself. Mr. Dr. Bayly was in that piece of poUcy very vrise, vrith whora, if it please you, you raay consrdt. We have drawn aU things according to the letter and motion of ray honourable friend Mr. Vice-Chamberlain; but yet we could not seal it in the absence of others. I ara sorry it was your luck to find out this, which I have denied to ray dearest friends in that shire, being now in the occupation of one who was ray predecessor and president here. The rest you shall hereafter, and that shortly, understand. God keep you ! Oxon, Septeraber 21. Your assured friend, Laur. Humfrey.'' Though the Lord Mayor of London has still many » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 80. " Additional MSS, 15891, f. 83. 200 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581 anomalous duties to perform, he is no longer expected to lecture the City clergy. It wiU be seen that the pro ceedings of Branch's successor on this subject caUed forth an indignant letter from the Bishop of London : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON. After my hearty coraraendations to your good Lordship. Her Majesty being doubtful that certain of the preachers of the City under your charge, provoked perhaps thereunto by a lewd book lately published and seditiously scattered abroad, not only in the City, but in sundry other parts of this Realm, may be drawn to envy against the marriage now in treaty between the Duke of Anjou, the French King's brother, and her Highness, hath therefore thought raeet that your Lordship should asserable thera to-raorrow, and severely to admonish thera to have due consideration how they interraeddle in matters of State not incident to their profession and calling ; putting them in mind, that, if they would caU to their remera brance the most Christian and singular care her Majesty hath alvrays had for the raaintenance of true religion, having thereby exposed herself to the raaUce of the raightiest poten tates in Christendora, as one that hath whoUy depended upon God's protection, they should then have no cause to doubt that either this raatch now in treaty, or any other cause, can draw her to do anything that might tend to the prejudice of the same ; as one that doth acknowledge that the happiness of her governraent hath proceeded only frora the goodness of God, whora it hath pleased to raake her a nurse to his Church ; assuredly persuading herself, that, when she should any way decline frora the faithful erabracing thereof, she should then provoke God in justice to withdraw His merciful and fatherly protection frora her. And as she doth think it agreeable to their duties that they forbear to interraeddle with any such matters, so is she pleased to say and conceive in her gracious wisdora that it is raeet for raen of their callings, in case they shall understand fhat either by the publishing of / k-i. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 201 thih book, or otherwise by the sinister persuasions of such as woiild be glad to breed sorae disquiet in this state, that any ofher subjects should be carried into some doubt of change and. alteration of religion, that they should seek by all good and dutiful means to reraove all such undutiful and lewd atterapts and conceits of their Prince and Sovereign, under whora, through God's goodness and her provident care, they have enjoyed so many peaceable days with liberty and free dom of conscience. Thus much her Majesty hath vrilled me to signify unto your Lordship, not doubting but the good and godly preachers of that City, upon knowledge of her Majesty's good-wUl and pleasure in this behalf, will bend themselves, as in duty appertaineth, to do that which shall be most to her Majesty's contentment. And so I commit your Lordship to the grace of God. From ColUer Row, by Rum ford, the 25th September 1581. Your Lordship's very loving friend, Fra. Walsingham.* Mr. Newport did, it seems, join the Duke of Anjou's army, in which Philip Sidney was also serving : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, By the inclosed frora Mr. Sidney, you may perceive how desirous he is to retum, and what is the impediment : wherein I am to pray you on his behalf to procure her Majesty's assent, for that vrithout the sarae he doubteth he should offend. I send you also a letter from your nephew, by the which you raay perceive that the Duke was the 22nd of this present at Pontdorrai, but is now, as I am otherwise informed, departed frora thence to a place called Blangy, in the way to go to Dieppe ; which maketh rae to conjecture that his determination for the Low Countries holdeth not. 1 fear that a letter which her Majesty wrote unto him about ten days past hath wrought that alteration in hira ; and, if it fall out so, it will breed a great change in the Low Countries such as cannot be but very perilous to her Majesty : so * Additional MSS, 15891, f, 57. 202 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1581. / that it is apparent that danger on all sides groweth fast ujion us ; which, if it grew not through our own default and lack of providence, I should fear the less. The haste this bearer raaketh, forceth rae to make an end. At Barn Elms, the 26th of September 1581. Yours most assuredly, Fra. Walsingham.* " The King," upon whom Philip Sidney describes himself to have been in attendance at Dover in No vember in this year, must have been Don Antonio, who had been elected King of Portugal by the peo ple; but, being driven out of his dominions by the Spaniards, came to France and thence to England in this year. According to Camden, Elizabeth received him with kindness, and " bountifully relieved him as a kinsman descended from the House of Lancas ter;" but this statement does not agree with the ac count given of the unfortunate Prince's condition by one of his English servants in 1582, who writing to Burgh ley said, " The King, my master, lies in London in the greatest misery that ever any man lay, desolate not only of necessaries, but of comfort: for he, feeling extreme sick at Uxbridge, sent hither to have the help of one of her Majesty's physicians." No one came however; and he adds, that, if the French Ambassador had not supplied him daily, "the poor Prince had remained altogether without any comfort." Though the Queen had ordered two rooms to be furnished for him, he was then living "between four bare walls, void of all good comfort.'"" Don Antonio was in England several years, and many letters are preserved about his affairs, but it appears » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 83". relating to Don Antonio are in the " Wright's Queen Elizabeth and same volume, and in the Lansdowne her Times, ii. 176. Other letters TWSS. .Kr. 41. j SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 203 from Sidney's letter that in September of this year he was at Dover waiting for his ships from the Thames. It was intended that Sir Francis Drake should assist the Prince in taking the Azores." MR. PHILIP SIDNEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The delay of this Prince's departure is so long, as truly 1 grow very weary of it, having divers businesses of mine own and ray father's that something import me ; and, to deal plainly vrith you, being grown alraost to the bottora of ray purse. Therefore your Honour shall do rae a singular favour if you can find means to send for me away ; the King him self being desirous I should be at the Court to reraeraber him unto her Majesty, where I had been ere this time, but, being sent hither by her Highness, I durst not depart without her especial revocation and commandraent. The Queen means, I think, that I should go over with hira ; which at this present might hinder me greatly, and nothing avail the King for any service I should be able to do liim. I find, by hira, he will see all his ships out of Thames before he will remove. They are aU wind-bound, and the other that carae hither, the wind being strainable at the east, hath driven thera toward the Isle of Wight, being no safe harbour here to receive them ; sa that he is constrained to make the longer abode, if it were but to be wafted over. I beseech you, Sir, do rae this favour ; for which I can proraise nothing, seeing all is yours already. At Dover, the 26th September 1581. Your Honour's hurably at coramandraent, P. Sidney.*" In appearances at least Hatton and Leicester lived on good terms with each other ; and every letter that passed between them was, like the annexed, fuU of expressions of courtesy and good-wiU : — » Lansdowne MSS. 31, art. 8l, " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 61. 82, 83, 204 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1581. THE EARL OF LEICESTER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Mr. Captain, I have received both your letters at one tirae, and touching your request in the one for your servant, albeit I did raove her Majesty long ago for a very tall and good footraan that is ray own servant, and one her Majesty did very well allow of, yet for your sake, knowing how far you may dispose of anything in my power, you shall com mand and be sure of ray furtherance for your raan before all men. I trust her Highness will give rae leave, as all other ray predecessors in this office have done, to place these rooras with such persons as I shall prefer ; and, if I place any unfit raen, let rae have blarae with their reraoval : and so. Sir, raake your reckoning for your raan as far as I have power. I thank you for the comfort you sent me that her Majesty remaineth in her gracious disposition ; I vrill pray for no life to give just cause to the contrary. So," commending me to you as heartily as I can, I bid you as myself farewell, in sorae haste, greatly occupied, with affairs such as you raay guess at about this poor house. This 27th September 1581. Yours always assured, R. Leicester.* If success be the proper reward of perseverance and as siduity. Dr. Mathew well deserved the Deanery of Durham. His letter on this subject to Hatton's Secretary explains his motives for so earnestly seeking the appointment : — DR. MATHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Sir, For your good friendship I have greatly to thank you already, which if you in my absence continue towards me, you shall doubly raake rae beholding unto you; in hope whereof, now going to Oxon for a week or more, I think it necessary to put you in remembrance by these few notes. The causes that move rae to desire Durham be these, as I have imparted to you, and pray you to inforce thera, as you " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 63". MT . 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER H.\TTON, 205 can right well, to Mr, Vice-Chamberlain at his good leisure. First, I seek it not in any ambitious or covetous respect, as being in degree a place of no greater name than I have already, and assuredly proraising to resign for that alone all the promotions I have; but rather to deliver myself of a troublesome roora in Oxon full of contention, a kind of life far frora my disposition and further from my profession. Secondly, the Livings I presently possess, though they be not so great as they are reported, yet be they more than I would they were, whereby my body is overtoiled in travailing up and dovsTi, my conscience less quieted, and duty less done in many than it might in that one. Thirdly, my good friends have persuaded rae, whom I credit well, it is no small touch to my poor reputation among raen best given in religion, and to myself not worst affected, that I keep Lirings ecclesiastical so far distant; that albeit I have, nor never had, but one benefice vrith cure of souls, yet those other things I have, being so far distracted, make me more than almost infaraous, especiaUy in their eyes who look not upon the nature but into the number of them. Hereto may be added, if you so think it good, that if to seek and not find be either a folly in the beginning or a raisfortune in the end, or rather both, as the wiser sort esteem it, I raust reckon myself not singly disgraced to see a physician preferred before a divine ; a mere stranger before an old servant; one that will depart from all he hath, rejected for him that hath nought to leave ; one by whose preferment raany raay be gratified, for hira by whose preferment none can be pleasured but himself alone. This minute if you vrill enlarge, and descant with your cunning upon my plain song, you may make this of raine with raore of your own well serve the turn. What shall I further say ? Though there be no cause why I should ira- portune Mr. Vice-Charaberlain but his own honourable and favourable goodness, whereof no man hath tasted more deeply than myself, (he hath ray daily service and prayer to God for it, and shall have while I live, however this succeed,) yet, that 1 cannot with raodesty say by word to his Honour I 206 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581, am bold to crave you to discourse as opportunity wUl serve. Sir Thomas Heneage I hope will once again debate it with him; and that Mr. Vice-Chamberlain be not alone, and so wax the wearier, I trust my Lord of Leicester and Mr. Secretary will bear the burden with thera, or the one of them at the least. Well, good Mr. C, want not you for your part, but raake rae ever beholding to you and ever bounden to your Master. And even so now and ever I wish you to fare well in the Lord. At London, the last of Septernber 1581. Your assured friend, ToBYE Mathewe." Philip Sidney appears in his next letter as a suitor for the lands of Powerscourt in Ireland for a friend. Nothing could more strongly mark the contempt which was then felt for the Irish than his saying that the man of whom he speaks was " indeed a good honest feUow according to the brood of that nation ! " MR, PHILIP SIDNEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, Right Honourable, I have spoken with my father touching Powerscourt, which Mr. Denny sueth for. He tells rae assuredly that it is raost necessary sorae EngUsh raan should have it, being a place of great iraportance, and fallen to her Majesty by the rebellion of the owner. As for hira that sueth for it in the Court, he is indeed a good honest fellow, according to the brood of that nation ; but, being a bastard, he hath no law to recover it, and he is much too weak to keep it. So that your Honour may do well, if it please you, to follow this good turn for Mr. Denny, who can and wiU endeavour to deserve it of her Majesty, and do you service for it in all faithful good-will when soever you shall command him. And so I hurably take my leave, and rest at your devotion. From the Court, the 17th of October 1581. Your Honour's humbly at com raandraent, as you have bound rae, P. Sidney.'' » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 94". ' " Ibid. ^t. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 207 Mr. Tremayne, the writer of the following letter, has been before mentioned." The particulars of the suit are not stated. MR. EDMUND TREMAYNE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Upon an opinion that my poor credit in Court raay do some good in the reasonable suit of a country gentle man, there is occasion taken, through some forraer friendly acquaintance that the party hath had with rae, but espe cially by the near neighbourhood, and consequently the loving intercourse of friendship daily practised with ray brother, the Treasurer of the Church of Exeter,'' to desire my adrice and help for the procuring of a quiet end in a cause very veheraently foUowed in your Honour's narae ; the course and state whereof I am bold to send you herein inclosed. When I was told this raatter was carried and pro secuted principaUy under the countenance of your favour, to whora I ara both especially bound in duty, as also for raany loving and favourable usages towards rae ; and that the forfeitures (if any grow) do appertain to the executors of Mr. ColshiU, deceased, and to Mr. Mackwilliara, ray especial good friend, that hath always, and upon all occa sions, showed himself desirous of my well-doing; I have been in raind in this case to leave both friend and bro ther, and in country raanner to attend to ray own quietness, or, at the least, not to busy rayself with that wherewith I need to have Uttle or nothing to do. Considering, nevertheless, with better adrice of the discourse of the raatter as it was laid down before rae, and iraagining that you raight be other wise than rightly inforraed, or haply than the truth vrill fall out upon due and indifferent proof ; and holding such opi nion of your integrity, and likewise of the good conscience of Mr. MackwiUiara, as no respect of gain to your friend can be able to draw you frora justice ; I have not thought it imper- » Vide p. 96, ante. " Richard Tremayne, who was installed in 1561, and died in 1684. 208 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. tinent to ray duty towards your Honour, rauch less to pass the bonds of an honest friend to Mr. Mackwilliara, to send the case unto you as it was delivered unto rae, desiring nothing for the party but justice with indifferency ; a matter due to every Subject, and the more aptly to be ministered when both parties are heard. And thus, though I hold the gentleraan as wise a raan as any in this country, a good Jus tice, and well Uked of the better sort that be best inclined to the State and to true reUgion, and is besides a friend to rae and to ray nearest friends ; yet I protest unto you, as I am a true man, that no respect doth so much raove rae thus to trouble you as the zealous regard that I have of your Ho nour, of whom I desire so good a farae to be spread, and so much advancement in aU happiness, as to hira that I am most bound to honour and love in aU faithful devotion. And so, beseeching you to accept of ray true and plain raeaning herein, I shall ever pray to God to prosper you according to your noble heart's desire. Frora my poor house at CoUo- curab, the 27th of October 1581. Your Honour's raost bounden and assured at commandraent. E. Tremayne.* Mr. Dyer, for whom Sir Christopher Hatton interest ed himself with Winchester College, was no doubt his intimate friend Edward Dyer, from whom a remark able letter has been given.^ On the 1st of December in this year, Edmund Campion, a celebrated Jesuit, and two other Priests, were executed for high treason. Dr. Hum-; frey's reply to Campion, of which he speaks, was his " Jesuitismi Pars Priraa, " which appeared in 1582. DR. HUMFREY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My duty in hurable wise reraerabered to your Horiour. Receiving a letter frora your Honour at Winchester, to me, and the FeUowship being then tied there by residency, I retumed with as rauch convenient speed as I could to Ox- » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 89. " Vide page 17, ante. .ET. 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 209 ford, and have so dealt for Mr. Dyer that I trust he is satis fied, and the party the farmer well contented. I thought the way wliich is taken raost coraraodious for all parties, and so I hope your Honour will accept it. The circurastances were such by the provision of corn set down in statute, and by space of years which the old tenant hath, and by the sraall time by our statute received to the next incumbent, that a present pajrment in my muid was better than a long expectation and an uncertain event. And so it is concluded, except your Honour vrill othervrise advertise rae ; wherein I shall be £ilways ready as rauch as shall Ue in rae to accoraplish your coramandraent. I have written long since to your Secretary Mr. Cox, unvrilling to trouble your Honour un til some reasonable conclusion did appear, and therefore hurably request pardon for my long silence ; the rather for that I have been of late occupied in raaking a reply to Cara- pion and his accomplices, whose case I laraent, and crave of God his reformation ; and would beg fm-ther mercy here, if I durst, upon repentance, if it raight be wrought in him. The Lord Jesus be merciful to us aU, direct us in His ways, pre serve her Majesty from aU privy and apert practices, and keep your Honour for ever in all feUcity. Oxon, November 13th. Your Honour's always most bounden, Laur. Humfrey.* AU the printed accounts of the Lords Montjoy state, erroneously, that James the sixth Lord died in the thirty-fifth year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, 1592-3, and the manuscript pedigrees are silent on the subject ; but it appears*" that he died in 1581, to which date the following letter may be referred. The wardship of his son, WUliam the seventh Lord Montjoy, was of short » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 69". Montjoy, on the 9th of November " Letters of administration were 1581. granted to his son, William Lord VOL. I. P 210 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581 duration, as he was of full age in the ensuing year,* and died unmarried in 1594 : — F. a. to sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I am now to address myself as a suitor unto you, out of the conceit I hold of your just and plain dealing with such as have cause to use you : in so much as, being so sick myself at this present of an ague as I durst not go to the Court to speak with you, I determined raore wiUingly to take a plain denial frora you than a fair unsound promise frora any other. My suit is this : My Lord Montjoy being lately dead, his son is thereby, as I take it, become her Majesty's ward. If it might now please her Majesty, of her favour, to vouchsafe the same in gift on rae by your honourable mediation, for the preferraent of a niece of mine that I love and greatly care for, I should acknowledge rayself infinitely bound to her Highness, and greatly indebted to your goodness, whora I earnestly beseech to afford rae your favour in raoving it to her Majesty ; and, whatsoever the success shaU fall out to be, to conceal it frora all others, as a thing never spoken of to any but to yourself, whose honourable happiness I wish raost heartily raay accorapany all your actions. Your assured friend, F. A." It ill accords with the popular idea of the chivalrous Philip Sidney, to find him, like the shoals of obscure Courtiers, whose names are either totally forgotten or remembered only to their discredit, saying that " need obeys no law and forgets blushing," confessing himself, like them, overwhelmed with debt, and beseeching Hatton to obtain the Queen's signature to some grant by which he might extricate himself from his difficulties : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I do here send you ray book ready drawn and prepared " Inquisition on the death of his grandmother, Anne Lady Montjoy in October 1582. " Additional MSS, 15891, f, 86". ^,T. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 211 for her Majesty's signature, in such order as it should be ; which I humbly beseech you to get signed accordingly with so much speed as you may conveniently. For the thing of itself in many respects requireth haste ; and I find ray present case more pitied now than perchance it would be hereafter, when haply resolution either way will be hard to get, and make my suit the more tedious. Mr. Pophara thought it would be little or nothing worth unto rae, because so raany have oftentiraes so fruitlessly laboured in it ; and this is the general opinion of all raen, which I hope will raake it have the easier passage. But indeed I ara assured the thing is of good value ; and therefore, if it shall please you to pass any thing in ray book, you shaU command it as your own for as much or as Uttle as yourself shall resolve of : it vrill do me no hurt, that seek only to be deUvered out of this cumber of debts ; and if it may do your Honour pleasure in anything of importance, I shall be heartUy glad of it, I pass nothing by any other instrument than by your own servant, and it shall greatly content rae that the fruit is of such nature as I may have raeans at the least to show how ready I ara to requite some part of your favours towards me. If it be not done be fore this day sevennight, I shall be in great fear of it ; for, being once knovra, it wUl be surely crossed ; and perhaps the time will not be so good as it is at this present, which, of all other things, putteth me in greatest confidence of good suc cess, vrith the help of your honourable favour. If you find you cannot prevail, I beseech you let rae know it as soon as raay be, for I will even shamelessly once in my life bring it her Majesty rayself. Need obeys no law, and forgets blushing : nevertheless, I shall be much the raore happy if it please you indeed to bind rae for ever by helping me in these curabers. And so, praying for your good success in everything, and in this especially, ray greatest hope of comfort, I hurably take ray leave. Frora Baynard's Castle, the 14th of November 1581. Your Honour's hurably at comraandraent, P. Sidney.* » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 60. p 2 212 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581, In November the Duke of Anjou arrived in England, and was received with every mark of confidence and honour. The Queen's conduct towards him, especiaUy her having publicly taken a ring from off her own finger and placed it on one of his, " upon certain conditions betwixt them two,"* convinced her Courtiers that she really intended to make him her husband. " At home," says Camden, " the Courtiers' minds were diversely affected ; some were astonished, and some were cast down with sorrow." Though Leicester, Hatton, and Walsing ham were commissioners for the treaty, and though Hat ton had often alluded to, even if he did not urge, the alUance, yet, according to Camden, when they thought it would actually take place, " Leicester, who had begun to enter into a secret conspiracy to cross the marriage, Hatton Vice-Chamberlain, and Walsingham, fretted as if the Queen, the Eealm, and religion were now undone." Moved by the wailings and weeping of her women, as well as by their representations, the Queen passed a sleep less night, and the next day, sending for the Duke, a pri vate conversation ensued; after which, retiring to his apartments, " he cast the ring from him, and soon took it again, taxing with one or two quips the lightness of women and the inconstancy of Islanders." The sequel. is too well known to be here repeated. After dallying for three months in uncertainty, the Duke of Anjou quitted England for ever ; and the Country was spaired a most unpopular alliance. Sir George Bourchier, thus flatteringly recommended to the Queen by the Lord Deputy of Ireland, was the son of John second Earl of Bath, and had com- ' Camden's Annals. ^T. 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 213 manded the Queen's troops in Munster before Lord Grey's arrival : — ARTHUR lord GREY DE WILTON TO QUEEN ELIZABETH, May it please your most excellent Majesty, Sir George Bourchier, upon advertiseraent received from some of his friends out of England, of a conveyance intended by my Lord of Bath for the inheritance of his lands, whereof he forraerly passed a promise to this gentleman before his coraing over, hath craved Ucense of rae to repair into England for the space of three raonths ; which I was the raore willing to grant him, both for that the cause concerneth him deeply, and chiefiy for that the heat of this service beginneth now somewhat to be assuaged. Nevertheless I could not let him pass without deUvering to your Highness such coraraenda tion of him as, by his good service in this country, and ready forwardness in all occasions of employraent, he hath well deserved : humbly beseeching your Majesty hereby to take knowledge thereof, and to show him such gracious fa vour and countenance as he may be confirmed in his well doing, and others thereby encouraged by the Uke means to deserve your Majesty's good opinion. And so, vrith most hurable reraerabrance of my bounden duty, praying God for your Highness' long health and happy prosperity, I humbly take ray leave. Dublin, the 28th of November 1581. Your Highness' raost hurable servant and faithful subject. A. Grey.* Sir Henry Cheke's letter from York may be inserted without comment : — SIR HENRY CHEKE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have ever since ray coraing to York been entertained in such sort between sickness and business as I have not had « Additional MSS. 15891. 214 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. any good opportunity to -write unto your Honour, unto whom 1 must confess I have ever desired, as I ara bound, to show rayself dutifully thankful ; and, as the present tirae falleth out, I have now raore good-will to write unto you than matter worthy wherewith to trouble you. The country here yieldeth few occurrences, and I find they are blown hither from other places with a scant wind. I had some news not long sithence which were strange unto me and unex pected ; but I hope God will direct all things to the best, and raake your Honour a good instruraent thereof, according to the expectation generaUy conceived of you. I will not cease continually to reraeraber your Honour in ray prayers, nor forbear to do you any other service I may ; unto whom vrishing raost happy success in everything, and, above all, the grace of the Highest, I humbly take my leave. From York, the 15th of Deceraber 1581. Your Honour's most assured to command, Henry Cheke.* Philip Sidney appears in the following letter in a character perfectly consistent with his reputation; de clining, as when he received his death-wound, to allow his own necessities to be relieved at the expense of others, still less to become the instrument of impeding the Queen's mercy to the unfortunate : — PHILIP SIDNEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, I must ever continue to thank you, because you always continue to bind rae, and for that I have no other raean to acknowledge the band but my humble thanks. Some of ray friends counsel me to stand upon her Majesty's offer touching the forfeiture of Papists' goods: truly. Sir, I know not how to be raore sure of her Highness in that than I thought rayself in this ; but, though I were, in truth it goeth against ray heart to prevent a Prince's raercy. " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 74", MT. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 215 My necessity is great ; I beseech you vouchsafe me your honourable care and good advice ; you shall hold a heai-t from falling that shall be ever yours ; and so I humbly take my leave. At Salisbury, the 18tli of December 1581. Your Honour's hurably at coraraandraent, P. Sidney.* Mr. Davison had, by Katherine, sister of Francis Spelman, of Bolebrook in Sussex, several sons, of whom Francis Davison, the eldest, was the editor of the " Poetical Rhapsody;" to which work he and his brothers, Christopher, who, it now appears, was Sir Christopher Hatton's godson, and Walter,^ were contributors : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have received raany favours at your Honour's hands, which have already infinitely bound me unto you : araongst which this is not the least, that it hath pleased you to send down this gentleraan expressly, in your behalf, to give the narae to ray young son ; whom, as a testiraony of my own devotion, I have desired to offer and dedicate to your service. And because I know your Honour is both an enemy to cere monies, and of judgraent sufficient to discern the affection of such as your deserts have bound unto you, I do forbear in these any other testification of ray thankfulness than that which I trust your Honour doubteth not of, which in a word is a faithful and dutiful offer of rayself and all that I have, to be, whilst I live, at your Honour's good devotion ; whora beseeching God to bless vrith all increase of happiness, I most humbly commend to His good providence. From my poor house at Bolebrook, this 28th of December 1581. Your Honour's most humbly bounden. Will. Davison. » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 74". to the last edition of the " Poetica " Memoirs of these sons, and of Rhapsody." the other contributors, are . prefixed 216 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581-2, Postscript. — Though the suddenness of this gentleraan's departure frora me hath half broken my charity, yet acknow ledging rayseU" greatiy bound unto hira in taking so foul a journey to do me this pleasure, and not able otherwise to deserve it, I must beseech your Honour to supply my want in giving hira thanks, tiU I may myself in some sort be able to raake hira the amends.* Of the numerous undated letters, the following appear to belong to this or to the early part of the next year, though with respect to some of them the date is very uncertain. The first four are from Charles ArundeU, from whom two letters on the same subject have been already inserted : — CHARLES ARUNDELL TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have conceived such corafort of your last message sent rae by this bearer, as I ara eraboldened thereby raost hurably to crave your honourable aid and good favour in my cause ; and, of your goodness, either to procure rae trial, that I ara sure will acquit rae, or to release me of my bands, with free enlargement, that would greatly ease and reUeve rae. If her Majesty shall pretend to take a pause upon your raotion, or require time to be adrised, as she hath done all this while without fruit, it raay please you to do rae the favour (if in your wisdora you shall think it meet) to answer that excuse by alleging unto her my eight raonths' iraprisonraent, a raore grievous punishraent to hira that either regardeth the cora fort of her Majesty's favour, or his own poor reputation, than an honest raind is able to bear without many tears and continual affiiction. I hope her Majesty vrill not deny you the sweetness of her princely goodness in the behalf of me her poor distressed servant, lightly suspected, nothing faulty, and never offending her so rauch as in thought, I take God " Additional MSS, 15891, f. 71. ^T, 41,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 217 to witness ; seeing she hath lately vouchsafed the same to some others in the favour of my most hateful and wretched adversary, a person convicted, as you know, of great abomi nation, and notably detested of all men for his wickedness. WeU, I must and will ever rest obedient in all lowliness of duty, as becometh me, to her Majesty's coraraandraent ; and what in her wisdom she shall think raost reasonable, I will always repute most just and full of princely goodness. And so, expecting stUl, as I have done long, the happy hour of my deliverance through your honourable mediation, I hurably take ray leave, and commit you to God. Your Honour's wholly to coraraand and dispose at your pleasure, Charles Arundell.* charles arundell to sir christopher hatton. Right Honourable, I raay not forget ray humble duty, but let it always occupy the chiefest place in ray letters, as a thing raost fit for me, and most due to your Honour. 1 was glad to understand by this bearer of your good acceptation of my last, but so much comforted by your honourable raes sage as this paper sufficeth not to let you understand at full. And my hope is, that ray innocent cause, that hath long lain asleep, shaU be shortly awakened and reraerabered by your Honour as convenient opportunity shall serve you. Because I would not be curabersorae unto you, I have requested this gentleraan to unfold unto you ray poor estate, and how I Uve, which is rauch harder I assure you than Icom- plain of. But God and truth being on my side, is all my corafort ; and I now know well, that whatsoever the devil or his rainisters could derise against me was not wanting, and, if there had been any probability in my enemies' accusations, I had been ere this tirae past laudato. What I know, and of whora, I will say raore unto you, when tirae shall serve, than to any person liring. In the mean while I humbly take my leave, and corarait you to God. Your Honour's most assured, Charles Arundell.'' • Additional MSS. 15891, f. 58. " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 73". 218 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581-2. CHARLES ARUNDELL TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Though hitherto I have had small raeans to declare ray good affection towards you, yet hath there not wanted good-will to wish well with the best ; and so wishing as with effect I might express it, and leave you satisfied of my good raeaning. I speak not this to merit the more, but only for the due respects I owe you, by whose aid only I have been enabled to live the better ; praying you to esteem of me as truth shall try me, and as hereafter upon better proof you shall find me. The hope I had to see you here hath stayed me thus long frora writing ; ray case requireth your favour, and rayself your corafort. I have most plainly unfolded before you ray knowledge in aU points, not concealing anything to excuse rayself, nor adding raore than is truth to harra others. I therefore hurably crave your favour in this my perplext estate. My restraint of liberty troubleth me nothing ; but the disfavour of her Majesty grieveth rae so rauch, as I would rather choose to die, than thus to continue my lingering sorrows in suspense, without assurance of any certain remedy. God I take to witness I never faulted against her Majesty's person ; and as no raan hath raore cause to honour and serve her than I, so hath no raan held her virtues in more adrairation, nor defended them further when some other have not been so forward to perforra that towards her Highness which in duty they ought to have done. As this is true, so God deal with rae, and dispose your raind to do rae good, who resteth raore yours than I ara able to express. Your Honour's hurably to dispose and coramand, C. Arundell.* CHARLES ARUNDELL TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your desire to do rae good can do no more than con firm ray former intent and readiness to deserve as well as I can of you and your friends. My case requiring in differency will abide any trial, and I account it not my least ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 95. .^T, 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 219 good hap that you shaU have the hearing of ray cause. As I have already raost plainly and sincerely betrayed ray know ledge in aU points of my examination, so I beseech you with all humihty to be the mean to restore me to ray forraer hberty, and to her Majesty's good favour, vrithout the which I desire not life ; and, if plain and open confession raay pur chase pardon for my former offences to the law, I will, as I have begun, unfold unto you what I raeant to impart to her Majesty ; and, because the offence was not committed wilfuUy, I presume of pardon through your mediation easily. And so, recoraraending rayself and cause to your honourable direction, I hurably take ray leave, with full and faithful vow to be yours in all service. Yours raore bound than I have raean to acknowledge, Charles Arundell.* The name of the writer of the following letter, to whom Hatton had given permission to state his opinions on public affairs, has not been discovered : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Being so rauch bound unto you as I ara, I were rauch to blarae to be slack in obeying your comraandraent, es peciaUy at this present, when, in respect of your singular favour to rae and mine, I must confess ray band to be greater towards you than ever it was at any time, and my debt much increased by your late goodness. It is no small grief unto me, that, beholding your virtuous and godly disposition, I ara not any way able by ray poor serrice to further it ; never theless, seeing you were pleased to give me leave, whensoever occasion should occur, to deliver my simple opinion, I will humbly obey your direction, and beseech you to excuse my presuraption with the authority of your own coraraandraent, which I erabrace with that reverence and regard of duty, as lo neglect it were a raanifest arguraent that I little respected " Additional MSS, 16891, f. 90, 220 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. ray own comfort. I will not, for all that, be so bold as to take upon me to judge what were needful and convenient for you to do in the consideration of these great causes, though your courtesy hath vouchsafed me that liberty, and greatly encouraged me to that end. It shall suffice that 1 presume no further than to declare what reasons induce rae to hope of sorae good conclusion of peace between her Majesty and the French King; which, how siraple or weak soever they may seera, shall argue notvrithstanding an honest desire of a good effect, and such cannot but greatly redound to the general quiet and preservation of the state of Christendom. It is not Ukely that (the state of France being such as it is now) the King wUl be brought to yield and conform hiraself to peace, unless he may have Milan ; and to make them aban don the wars of Italy by force, were a hard course, and such as they theraselves (who always make their hope a certainty) will sooner wilfully perish than endure. Experience hath already taught us that it is no easy matter for her Majesty to draw that people by violence to forsake their right. And though it were, yet it is not to be wished that her Highness should build up her own estate with the ruins of so mighty a Prince, who hath both power and will to do what he can, and as much as any King in Christendora is able to do, against the Turk, our coraraon enemy ; whose forces he would never cease to oppugn by continual war, if he found not all other Princes so contrarily addicted as that they will rather (to wreak their malice against him) choose to stand to the raercy of the Turk, than suffer hira to recover his right, which they cannot detain frora him in justice. Her Majesty hath already given him sufficient cause to fear her ; and though there be no warrant to be assured of the insolency of that nation, yet raay I boldly say, that, being so rauch afflicted and broken with troubles as they have been lately, they will have now the raore reason to make account of those that have power to hurt thera. And of this (if I may speak it without offence) I dare adventure my life, if it were worth the least part of her Majesty's favour. If I should speak all MT. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 221 that I think, and that needfully occurreth to be considered of, I should hold you too long, and yet say nothing that you do not see rauch better than I am able to imagine. I will there fore here conclude ; only beseeching you to pardon my bold ness, and to vouchsafe me the favour to think that ray desire of her Majesty's quiet and greatness, and not any trans portation of passion, hath raoved me to make this motion. And so 1 commit you to God.* Nothing can be stated in iUustration of the two fol lowing letters: — TO Sir, I have taken no small comfort to understand that the State of Venice hath called you to so honourable a degree, vrith such fame and reputation as your faithful service hath worthily deserved. To express my joy and gladness for this fortune which your virtue hath laid upon you, I have pre suraed to send you these few lines, which shall testify unto you as much as paper and ink can specify for my hearty good-vriU towards you. I rejoice even in ray soul, that in your most tender years your virtue, accompanied with fortune, hath brought you to that good state of credit and favourable opinion vrith the world, which raany raen, even in their ripest age, have laboured to get with long study, and could never attain to. I do not doubt but that the effects of your actions vrill correspondently answer the expectation which your value promiseth. One thing I will be bold to tell you for the especial love I bear you, which is such as can suffer no increase ; and this it is : that the same Glory, with whose beauty you were in your youth and tender years so greatly enamoured, may purchase you perpetual fame and comfort, if with your study and painful industry you will now carefully follow and continue it; whereby myself, with the rest of » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 62". 222 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. your friends and servants, which are infinite, shall rejoice to be partakers of your honour and well-doing. God keep you in health, that you may be always an instruraent to rainister good to many raen, as you have done hitherto by your gravity and virtue. Your loving friend. TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I will not violate the law of our ancient farailiarity and friendship by recoramending this gentleman, ray friend, unto you with long and ceremonious letters, for so should I do injury both to your grave judgment and goodness ; the party being a raan of quality as he is, and accompanied with such rare and singular conditions. I shall not need to say any raore but that he is ray friend, and worthy of your favour and acquaintance. The rest you shall gather of your self; which when you have done upon further trial and proof of his desert, I am assured you will not only love him, but likewise embrace and accept his faithful devotion towards you in most thankful part. He is now come frora Venice upon the occasion of sorae private business of his own, for the expedition whereof he shall stand in need of your good favour and assistance. I know your gentle nature, being so officiously disposed to do good as it is, will work as rauch readiness in you as I wish for; and so will the merit of the gentleraan, not so rauch in respect of ray entreaty, as by the instigation of your own virtue and of his desert. I shall be glad that he may know you by this occasion to be a free and liberal steward of the benefits of courtesy and vrisdora that God hath given you, and you hira to be a grateful and kind receiver in requiting you with the Uke, as his poor ability will suffer hira ; in which respect, to be plain with you, I think you to be as much beholding to rae in acquainting you with a gentleraan of so rare virtue, as he is unto you for en joying of the possession of your friendship, and in receiving this pleasure at your hands by ray raediation. God prosper you in the highest degree of happiness ; whom I beseech so to ^T. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 223 direct your mind as that I may always have placc in the bosom of your love and good favour, so far forth as yourself doth desire it, and I may deserve it. Your vowed true friend. The lady who solicits Hatton to prevent, if possible, the inconvenient and expensive honour of a visit from the Queen, was, no doubt, the Lady Anne Askewe who presented the Queen with a gold anchor ornamented with diamonds, hanging to a gold bodkin, as a New- year's gift in 1581 : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, This short warning, and my unfurnished house, do ill agree ; for, besides her Majesty's diet, there be many things which I know to be fit for her ease that I want : wherefore, if her Majesty's pleasure would otherwise determine, my shame were the less, and ray band to you the greater. Neverthe less, if it be her Highness's direction, I with ray little might wiU do all vrith the best will I can, and pray you, ray honour able friend, to help by your coraraandraent that otherwise is beyond ray reach. And so, expecting her Majesty's pleasure, I beseech God to bless you with all happiness. Your true friend in her abiUty, A. Askewe. Post. — I would gladly Mr, KilUgrew would take the pains to come to-day and appoint what were fittest for her places of ease, and how they should be ordered.* None of the following undated letters can be illus trated, either by identifying the writers, or by explain ing the several matters mentioned in them : — " Additional MSS, 15891, f, 87", MS. 26 ; and two other letters from A letter from Lady Anne Askewe to her, written in October and Decem- Lord Burghley in September 1677, ber 1582, are in the Lansdowne MS, asking for some concealed lands for 36. her husband, is in the Lansdowne 224 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. WRITER UNKNOWN, TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, It is thought by those that know us that I may do much with you ; which is an opinion rather grounded upon the reciprocal good-will which we bear to each other, than either upon any raerit on my part, or any duty other than of * love and kindness on yours. Howsoever it be, I raay boldly assurae thus much to myself, that the sincereness of ray good meaning towards you deserveth your friendly acceptation, which is enough to make rae think that I raay do somewhat raore with you than coraraonly other men can do. Pardon rae, I pray you, if I trouble you oftener than I would ; it is only my earnest desire to benefit and pleasure ray friends in their honest causes that raoveth me thus to importune you. My good affection to this party makes me raost careful in cora raending hira to your favourable and good opinion ; wherein if I should use but ray wonted and ordinary words of en treaty, I should neither satisfy his need nor ray own desire. The gentleman meriteth much, and reposeth great confidence in ray poor furtherance ; therefore I pray you, whatsoever you shall find wanting in my letters to express ray earnestness to pleasure him, let your goodness supply it with your own be nignity and wisdora in vouchsafing hira courtesy, whose virtue is worthy of all favour and advanceraent. Himself shall deliver his own careful cause and complaint unto you. Let me be so much beholding to you as to make him know that his hope which he conceiveth of rae is not deceived, and that I raay assure rayself of the comfort which your love hath always proraised rae ; so shall he have cause to acknowledge a per fect obUgation unto rae, and I yield you infinite thanks in his behalf, as you have bound me. God give you all good effects of your honourable desires, and the due reward be longing to your virtue ! Your friend, ever one and all your own.* * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 102. :r. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 225 WRITER UNKNOWN, TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, If the malice of raen were not sooner supplanted by silence than by words, I should be as forward to speak as I ara now vriUing to hold my peace. But seeing raost raen in Princes' courts are subject to slander; to be passionate with those and such other abuses, were but to complain without remedy, and to call your wisdora and grave judgment into doubt, which I wiU not do. I will shut up ray lips, therefore, to avoid all further danger ; and rather endeavour with pa tience to suffer wrong, than give thera cause to exasperate their raalice by answering to their reproachful speeches. As near as I can, I wUl have care of ray own reputation, howso ever other men's tongues are led to report of me ; neither will 1 much regard the opinion of such persons, whose commenda tions cannot greatly increase ray credit, and whose discom- raendations cannot turn me to imputation of blarae by their obloquy and infaraous reports. It was never the office of ill- vrill to speak weU ; and such is the condition of malice, that it ever worketh trouble where it is least deserved. I am content they shaU excel rae in ill words, so I raay be able by good deeds to keep myself harmless. It is enough for me they know that I hold not ray peace for fear ; and that, if they have their tongues prompt and prepared to utter eril, I have my pen as ready as they when vrisdom will so coraraand me. But vrise men are of opinion that words should not pass the circuit of a parlour or a chamber, and man's talk is the iraage of his mind ; I will therefore use my ears, and forbear my tongue. Wishing you health and all other happiness now and ever. Your poor, oppressed, unfortunate friend.* It would be vain to attempt to explain the following well- written letter of counsel to some one who had en tered a foreign service : — » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 103. 226 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. UNKNOWN TO UNKNOWN. Sir, You do wrong to the love I bear you to pray rae to do that which in duty I ara bound to do without any entreaty. The only remerabrance of your goodness had been a suffi cient coramandraent of itself to raove rae to do anything that concerneth your service. The trust which you seera to re pose in rae is my greatest corafort in this world ; and I hope I shall so well discharge it, as, what fortune soever shall befal you, you shall never have cause to change your opinion of me, or repent you of the favour which you have thought rae worthy of. Because you ask ray advice, I will be bold in the sincereness of ray good-will to give it you ; but with entreaty of pardon that ray dutiful thankfulness, and your own cour teous disposition, raay excuse rae if, in saying freely what I think, I shaU happen to give occasion of offence in doing that which yourself bath comraanded rae. To flatter or disserable with you in a raatter that so much importeth you were plain treachery, and a course of deaUng as unpleasant unto me as it is unworthy of your virtue and vrisdom. It raay please you therefore in direct terms to give me leave to tell you that your departing frora the service of this State is like to prove raost prejudicial unto you, as well in respect of the bounty and goodness which you had cause to hope for in regard of your raerit, as for the singular satisfaction which all raen reaped through your wise and discreet governraent in the place you served. In few words, you have done your self injury, and forsaken the flesh to take the shadow, in preferring the service of this King before that famous Com monwealth that hath so liberally rewarded your rirtue, to the increase of your reputation and fortune. If he were such a Prince as loved our Nation, or his people such as would be content in the justice of our deserts to give us our due, there were no cause I should dislike your determina tion ; but finding that he maketh a rirtue of necessity, and only to serve his turn by your service, it moveth rae to think that you will soon repent you. I know there is reason you ^T, 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 227 should hope to win the love of one much sooner than of many; and that where there are many Unked in society together, they are neither always all virtuous, nor equally disposed to reraunerate and advance those which in all duty of faithful service have well deserved. But when I consider that as your raerit increaseth, so the envy of the Prince will be every day raore eagerly bent against you to overthrow and supplant your reputation and credit in the midst of your best endeavours, I cannot imagine how you raight better your fortune vrithout raanifest peril of your own decay and disgrace, by serring this King, as you have undertaken. It is not the least reproof that our Nation sustaineth, to become servants and tributaries, as we do daily, to strange and bar barous people; even to such as our predecessors were wont many ages since to lead bound and captive before their chariots, fraught vrith chains and fetters, in their victorious triumphs. Your own wisdom can consider that Kings are mortal, and though their sons are heirs to their paternal estates and inheritances, yet are they not coraraonly succes sors in the distribution of virtue and love to their fathers by favouring and affecting their ancient servants ; but a popular estate, which is perpetual and never dieth, because there reigneth no King, always thankfully remembereth and boun tifuUy rewardeth those that have truly and faithfully served, and wiU acknowledge it both in the father, in the son, and in all their posterity. It is superfluous that I trouble you so long in showing you my poor opinion of a matter which you may govern as please yourself, and ^ee much better in the glass of your own wisdom than I can be able to iraagine. It is my good-will, and the eamest desire whieh I have to increase your reputation, that makes rae thus bold ; which it raay please you to pardon and accept in good p^rt, vouch safing rae that favourable opinion of ray service which I hold of your virtue and kindness. Your assured friend.* » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 103". 228 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1581. Elizabeth Lady Leighton, the writer of the annexed letter, was the wife of Sir Thomas Leighton, Captain of Guernsey; and was a distant kinswoman of the Queen, being the daughter of Sir Francis KnoUys by Kathe rine Carey, whose mother was the sister of Queen Anne Boleyn. Except the little compliment to the Queen's attractions, there is nothing so remarkable in this letter as to account for its having found a place in Hatton's " Letter Book : "— LADY LEIGHTON TO SIR THOMAS LEIGHTON. My MOST WORTHY HusBAND, Though I feared you had forgot rae, (for which I must crave your pardon,) seeing as they say such effects proceed frora the greatest love, yet I perceive you will always be yourself in keeping that con stant course as not to cast off your poorest friend, whom you have once weU thought of ; which indeed is none of the smallest of your commendations. And so kindly do I now take your careful inquiry of ray well-doing, witnessed by your friendly letter, as I raust tell you my love is great towards you ; and though it be fruitless, and unaccompanied with such pains as I have lately felt, yet shall it be such as shall ever joy in your contentment, and desire you raay in crease in all happiness. These be the poor acquittals, ray dear Husband, that ray good-will can yield you for all your honourable favours ; but I hope you will accept the mind from rae, whensoever you receive the effects, and persuade yourself that nothing you can wish to be added to your fortune shall want my consent, though it were for the favour of her Majesty, which is much for a wife to agree unto. Notwithstanding, I leave you to her good grace, and myself to your wonted good opinion. Your faithful Wife, and well-wishing friend, E"". Leyghton.* " Additional MSS, 15891, f. 78. -ET. 41.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 229 Two letters from Mr. Davison to Hatton, the one writ ten while on one of his missions, and the other soliciting his interest to obtain some favour from the Queen, as well as a letter from Sir Henry Cheke, need no observations :— TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I wrote nothing unto your Honour by the last post, by reason of his sudden departure ; and though I doubt not but that want of mine was otherwise suppUed, yet I beseech you to excuse the same. Now what doth occur in the broken and confused estate of things here you raay perceive by the particulars herewith sent ; to the which referring your Ho nour, and beseeching the sarae to reckon me in the number of those whom your favours have faithfully devoted to you, I most humbly take ray leave. Your Honour's humbly bounden to do you serrice. W. Davison.* Sir, You know my raodesty in pressing the favour of ray friends in ray own particular ; I beseech you. Sir, let it not hinder that disposition you have ever had to do rae good. My state I have oft laid open to you, which to renew in these were needless. It is enough that the coramon report of ray best friends do testify of it as worthy her Majesty's gracious consideration, since neither ray purse, ray body, nor my tirae hath been spared for her service ; ray experience of whose gracious bounty to others and favour to myself doth assure rae that there wanteth but good offices frora my friends ; which as your Honour hath not hitherto been spare of in my behalf, so do I beseech you to continue it till I raay gather sorae fruit thereof, to ray perpetual obligation and your own honour. W. Davison." SIR HENRY CHEKE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The aptness of this bearer hath very easily enticed me to write these few lines unto your Honour, rather for a tes- » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 108", " Ibid. f. 101. 230 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582, timony of my duty towards you than for any good advertise ment I have to send you, wherein I hope the barrenness of this country shaU excuse rae. The latest thing which hath happened here of any raoraent is the death of Sir Thomas Boynton, old Mr. Gooderick, and divers other gentiemen, who have been taken away on the sudden ; wherein her Ma jesty in my opinion hath received great loss, the raost part of thera being very sound in religion, and weU affected to her Highness' serrice. For myself, I hope I have escaped for this year, and shall live a while to do your Honour some serrice, either here or wheresoever else it shall please you to com mand me. And so, recomraending the good and happy suc cess of all your actions to the Highest, I hurably take ray leave. Frora York, the 15th of January 1581 [1582]. Your Honour's most assured at commandraent, H. Cheke.* Dr. Bartholomew Clark, Dean of the Arches, was, it seems, a suitor to Hatton for the Archdeaconry of WeUs, which fell vacant by the death of John Eugge in 1581 ; but, as the register is defective'' until the appointment of Dr. Langworth in February 1588, the result of his application is unknown. The learned civilian's remark, that though he had not performed any services to en title him to the Queen's favour, yet that he was always ready, and that if he obtained this preferment he should be the better able to do so, is ingenious : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, Right Honourable, It raay please you to understand that one Mr. Upton of Wells, who exerciseth the ecclesiasti cal jurisdiction under the Archdeacon there, hath written to ray good Lord of Buckhurst that Mr. Rugg lay speechless and at the point of death the first of this present raonth of Feb ruary ; whereof I ara now bold the rather to advertise your ' Additional MSS. 15891, f, 96, " Lc Neve's Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanse, p. 44, MT. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 231 Honour, lest haply any raan (not knowing of ray advowson) should make suit unto her Majesty for the Archdeaconry before the breath were out of his body, and so breed me great vexation and ti-ouble in law by opposing her Highness' prerogative against my forraer right. If her Majesty shall find it strange that any raan that hath not served her in greater causes than myself should enjoy spiritual Livings, it may please your Honour to remeraber that I am not only as ready as any raan to serve her Highness to my small power, but shaU be made the more able by this accession of living to serve, either in these places or otherwise, as shall be best pleasing to her most excellent Majesty. And as the statutes of the Reahn do raake especial and express raention of the Master of the Rolls and the Dean of the Arches, touching the retaining of ecclesiastical lirings, so hath it been a con tinual use frora time to time that the Deans of the Arches (rayself only excepted) have been furnished with many spiri tual promotions ; for that they have invested in them, by the statutes of this Realra, spiritual jurisdiction, which is a far greater matter than an ecclesiastical hving without cure of soul thereunto annexed, as an Archdeaconry is by the coraraon laws. To end : that aU our whole profession raay ever acknowledge you their honourable patron, it raay please you, as occasion shaU serve, to take notice that by the statute of 31 of King Henry the Eighth a Doctor of Law is qualified for two benefices with cure of soul, rauch more vrithout cure and so great a charge ; which argueth that those tiraes thought always the raen of that profession to be very necessary merabers of our Coraraonwealth, and worthy by all good raeans to be cherished and supported : which opinion if your Honour do likewise conceive of us, you shall bind both rayself and all the rest to be ever thankfully ready in all faithful devotion to do you service. And so I beseech God to prosper you in all your honourable actions. Frora the Arches, the 4th of February 1581 [1582]. Your Honour's ever to coraraand, B. Clark.* » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 59". 282 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. SIR FRANCIS walsingham TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. I THOUGHT good to send you the enclosed, which I received sithence ray return unto ray lodging, to the end you raay send the same unto her Majesty, by the which she may perceive that the advertiseraents given of the accord between certain of the towns in Flanders and the raalcontents are untrue. It is likely that, if the Duke had not repaired thither, there raight have faUen out there some strange alteration, hav ing settled their hope altogether on him. God bless her Majesty, and send you well to do. At ray lodging, the Sth of February 1581 [1582]. Yours raost assuredly, Fra. Walsingham." Another letter was written in February by the per severing Dr. Mathew to Mr. Cox, Hatton's secretary, about the Deanery of Durham: nor is it the last by many from him on the subject : — TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Mr. Cox, Were it now possible, post multa tandem scccula, to hear a comfortable word or two frora the Court, of a suit so long forlorn as that of Durham hath been ? Hath Monsieur's departure brought on any more seasonable tiraes than during his abode such as poor I did find ? Could Dr. Bellamy's friend steal occasion to get a new grant, and cannot anybody for me have opportunity to satisfy her Majesty's former promise ? Good Mr. Cox, let me boldly desire you to learn as you can what the terras were her Highness gave my Lord of Hunsdon in the cause. The comfortable words Mr. Vice-Charaberlain vouchsafed rae at ray departure from the Court (which if you remeraber I did impart unto you) were, methought, sufficient to assure me of the place. I cannot as yet persuade myself her Majesty would so revoke or could so forget her word ; or if her Highness, so many ways affaired, " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 63". ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 233 hath past unawares any such half-allowance of ray Lord of Hunsdon's petition, I trust upon good instruction I may be restored to my former possibUity. Little thought I (God wot), when I came up hither, but I should vrith the first have been dispatched, not from it, but with it. And my heart yet serveth me, that all Mr. Bellamy giveth out by reports are but rumours, rather of crack than of cause. I pray you. Sir, take sorae time vrith Mr. Vice-Chamberlain to consider of me. I have great hope in his Honour to her Majesty, and in you to him. As hitherto you have especiaUy friended me, so I trust you vrill earnestiy further rae now at a pinch ; for although I doubt not but it liveth and will recover, yet I fear it bleedeth and Ueth in danger. If I wist the Court would have any long continuance in those parts, and that ray pre sence would further the expedition or assurance of the raatter, I should upon yom: direction soon be there. But howsoever, I heartily request to receive a few lines frora you by the next. If her Majesty be disposed hitherward, I hope we shall the better and sooner raeet, and further confer in more particular. And so I recoraraend me to your remembrance, and you as myself to God. London, 12th of February 1581 [1582]. Your debtor and friend assured, Tobie Mathew.* SIR WALTER MILDMAY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Understanding by this bearer, ray cousin Wiseraan, that he hath made suit unto you to raove her Majesty for him, I am bold, by these few lines, to recoramend his cause unto you ; praying you heartily, as tirae and opportunity may serve you, that it will Uke you to remember it, and to further hira so far as you raay. For the which he shall be greatly bound unto you, and I be ready with my poor good-will to be thankful unto you for your good favour towards hira. So, praying you to bear with rae in troubling you in such mat ters, I leave both the gentleman and his suit to your good consideration; wishing you ever all feUcity in the Lord » Additional MSS, 15891, f. 119, 234 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582^ Almighty. From London, the 20th of February 1581 [1582]. .Your assured in all that I may for ever, Wa. Mildmay.* Even a prison did not restrain the controversial spirit of the Puritans ; and Norton, who has been before men tioned, though in disgrace for his dangerous zeal, writes to Hatton, that though he lay " on the ground and cried on his knees to his Sovereign," if he were only per mitted to do so, he would let the Papists know, " that yet Norton, with a true man's heart and face, can and dare speak on tiptoe ! " — MR. THOMAS NORTON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour before any answer to your letter to receive answer to your goodness, and that is nothing but thanks unto your virtue and my prayer to God for your prosperity ; beseeching you to be assured that I am stiU, as you have ever known me, a true fool at the worst. For the raatter of your letter, I ara so thrown dovm in heart, and in loathing of raine arrogance in offending Her whom I least should, and never wittingly would, I take God to witness that since my last check I never durst enter into any raatter of State uncoramanded ; and I do so flee the peril of offence that way, that I have not conceived the hardiness once to go about any such work. I fear lest the Queen's old enemies and mine, the Papists, have spread this rumour of rae to increase my trouble, as of one that even in restraint cannot have grace or patience to be silent. Nevertheless, if I were commanded by my Lord Treasurer, ray singular good Lord, to deal in it, whom it toucheth especially, and who by em ployraent in her Majesty's service that way hath some under standing of this case, the Papists should know, that how soever I lie on the ground, and cry on my knees to my Sove- » Additional MSS, 15891, f. 84. ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 236 reign Lord and Lady, God and the Queen, that yet Norton, with a true man's heart and face, can and dare speak on tiptoe. And though I desire not to undertake any such work, but do shun it as storms in a broad sea for a weak vessel ; yet at coraraandraent I vrill refuse no adventure, and, having once perforraed it, I will then offer it to ray Lord Treasurer and your Honour to be done vrithal as they shaU think best. And, for the printing, I must not forget that I have your Honour's letters. In the mean time I commend you to the Almighty, and myself under Hira to your good ness ; beseeching you to give me your good testimony to my Lord Treasurer of ray obsequiousness in her Majesty's service. At my close prison-house in London, the 28th of February 1581 [1582]. Your Honour's most hurably bounden, Thomas Norton.* Scarcely any letter in this work is so curious as the Bishop of London's remonstrance with Sir James Har vey, the Lord Mayor. It will be remembered, that his predecessor. Sir John Branch, was commanded to repri mand the City clergy for their sermons about the Queen's marriage; and his successor seems to have obeyed the injunction with singular pleasure, adding personal re proaches and abuse to his admonitions. Harvey in his zeal spared neither his own diocesan, the fiery Aylmer, nor Home, late Bishop of Winchester'' ; and it is amusing to find a Lord Mayor calling a scholar " lack-Latin," and somewhat natural that Aylmer's want of hospitality in not entertaining the City functionaries should be a sin in the eyes of the citizens. Though the Bishop of London says he is obliged to submit to part of the Lord Mayor's of fensive conduct so long as he remained in office, yet he promised to remember it in the ensuing year when he « Additional MSS. 15891, f. 81". " Bishop Home died in June 1680. 236 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. should still be as he was, but when Harvey would be somewhat inferior. The threat to teach the Lord Mayor his duty in a sermon at Paul's Cross, when he would be obliged to listen without being able to reply, was, in those days, more than a brutum fulmen ; and, coming from such a man as Aylmer, was not to be despised : — bishop aylmer's letter to the lord mayor. My Lord Mayor, I hear that you deal very hardly with the preachers and clergy of whom the charge and oversight is coraraitted mito me by God and her Majesty's gracious direction. I must therefore needs foresee, as chief Pastor both to you and thera, that in their function they suffer no injury ; in which respect I ara to desire you to use thera as the Ministers of God, and as the keepers and rulers of your souls, which I hope you esteem to be the better part of you : of whom the Holy Ghost hath said, that they are worthy of double honour, the like whereof cannot be found spoken of you. And yet 1 hear (whether it be true or not I know not,) that you thou them, and taunt them as base, conteraptible, and abject persons : yea, such as by calhng are Archdeacons, and in quality, justice, and desert nothing inferior to yourself when you are out of your office, your son raUeth and rageth at thera with all reproachful and uncoraely speeches ; which he is Uke to answer, haply little to your corafort, and less to his ovm credit, if any coraplaint be presented against hira. You are not only content thus indiscreetly to triuraph over the raeaner sort, but you presurae farther to reach at those which are alvvays as good as yourself, even now in your Mayoralty when your reputation is at the highest, and sorae what your superiors when you are out of office. ' That Home ' (as ycfu terra hira), a worthy grave Prelate, you call him 'hypo crite and lack-Latin' with many other unreverent and disdainful speeches, no less untrue and shameless for you to utter than slanderous for hira to receive ; whose virtue, learning, wisdom, and good government hath, in the general opinion of the ^t. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 237 world, deserved as great fame and commendation as ever did any man in this age ; and therefore not to be maUgned after his death (especially by a man of your place), having in his life-tirae been so well loved and erabraced of all raen for his integrity, that had either judgraent or justice to give every man his right. Her Highness, whose person you do re present (the Lord preserve her Majesty) would not so speak of him, nor of any other Prelate within this Realra. I pass - over rayself, whora it hath pleased you of your goodness to terra farailiarly by the narae of Aylraer, as unreverently as if I should orait the title of your office and call you Harvey ; which, to teach you good manners and what you ought to do, I mean not to do, God wilUng. You say, that, when Aylmer was in Zurich, he thought a 100^. was enough for any Minis ter. Adrait he said so : so thought you, peradventure, in your prenticehood that 100^. by year had been enough for a Merchant. It pleaseth you, as a curious censor of other raen''s faults, to glance at ray poor housekeeping, objecting that the Bishop of London was wont to feast the Lord Mayor and his brethren. Your Lordship in your wisdom ignorantly raistaketh the nature of a custora. This wont was but once, and not usual ; neither convenient nor necessary for rae to follow it as a precedent. And yet, as little as you raake of Aylraer's hospitality, if you corapare five years of yours with five of his, his raay chance to overreach you 4000/. thick. My Lord, I have never spoken nor so rauch as thought unreverently at any tirae of your Lordship, neither have I been so used at any of your predecessors' hands ; and there fore I must needs say, that this is a great forgetfulness in you of that dutiful goodness, that, both by the law of God and raan, you owe to your Bishop and Ordinary ; the lack where of though I bear it now for your office sake (which I need not unless I will), yet the next year I raay haply reraeraber it when by God's grace I ara hke to be as I ara, and you sorae what inferior to what you are now. Well, to end as I begun : I pray you use the Ministers according to their calling; though not for their own sakes, nor His whom they serve, yet 238 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. for the laws of the Realra, which do provide for their safety; and in respect of her Majesty's coraraission, which is chiefly committed to our charge to the end we might see that they be not misused ; and think that the meanest of thera is richer than you in that sort of wealth which in God's sight shaU shine as gold, when yours shall be accounted as dross. I could not but as one that hath the chief charge of your soul adraonish you, that, by the despising of His Ministers, and so consequently of Him that sent them, you provoke not His wrath and offend her Majesty, who would have thera reve renced and well used ; raaking, besides, all wise raen think that there is some want in you of that gravity and discretion that should be in him that hath the Royal sword carried before him. If you take this in good part, as coraing frora hira that hath charge over you, I am glad of it; if not, I raust then tell you your duty out of my chair, which is the pulpit at Paul's Cross, where you raust sit, not as a judge to control, but as a scholar to learn ; and I, not as John Aylraer to be taunted, but as John London to teach you and all that City, and, if you use not yourself as an humble scholar, then to discipline you as your chief Pastor and Prelate. And so I bid your Lordship heartily fareweU. 1st March 1581 [1582]. Your Lordship's loving friend and Bishop, John London.* Mr. Egerton, to whom the following letter was ad dressed as the Queen's Solicitor-General, was afterwards the celebrated Lord Ellesmere : — TO MR. EGERTON, HER MAJESTY'S SOLICITOR. Sir, Where it hath heretofore pleased her Majesty to grant a warrant for the revealing and finding out concealed lands to the value of 100/. per annum, by virtue whereof there have been found out and discovered certain other lands to be concealed, over and beside the said 100/. per " Additional MSS, 15891, f. 68". .ET. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 239 annum, to the yearly value of 40/. or thereabout, which it hath pleased her Majesty, at my hurable suit and petition, to grant unto Theophilus Adams ray servant, and James Wood- shaw, in fee-farra; 1 have therefore thought good to desire you, that, according to her Majesty's gracious pleasure, you wiU have care to raake a Book thereof with what speed you raay conveniently, that it may be ready for her Highness' signature wheresoever it shall please her to call for it. You shall receive the particulars of the grant by this bearer, whom I have sent unto you expressly to satisfy you in any thing that you shaU doubt touching this matter. And so I comrait you to God. Frora the Court at Greenwich, this 17th of March 1581 [1582]. Your very loring assured friend, Chr. Hatton. Postscript. — Sir, Her Majesty is pleased to grant the averages of these concealed lands. I pray you draw the Book accordingly, for such is her pleasure.* According to a marginal note in the " Letter Book," the object of Bishop Aylmer's next letter to Sir Christo pher Hatton was the Bishoprick of Ely, and the " old tired father" whom he wished "eased ofhis place," was Dr. Cox ; but the accuracy of these marginal notes can not always be depended upon. As this letter is dated on the 20th of March 1581, it was presumed to have been in fact written in 1582 ; but, if Le Neve be correct in saying that Bishop Cox died in July 1581, Bishop Aylmer or the copyist must, however unlikely, have used the historical instead of the ecclesiastical or civil computation. The style of this letter from Hatton's " own creature," as he disgustingly calls himself, and, indeed, the whole of Bishop Aylmer's correspondence, makes it satisfactory to know, that though the Bishop rick of Ely was vacant more than eighteen years, it was ' From the Egerton Papers, ed. Collier, p. 87. 240 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582. never held in commendam by the grasping Bishop of London. BISHOP AYLMER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, The tirae draweth nigh for you to reraember your honourable promise unto me, that I raay like wise perforra mine unto you ; wherein if you should show any remissness, it may haply hurt us raore than either of us is like to gain by the bargain. I pray you be as earnest now in taking the burthen on yourself as you were willing at the first to lay it upon me. I beseech you send me word whether you raind to deal in it, or no ; and what hope or de spair you find to speed. You raay use divers arguments to help forward the raatter: as, the crookedness of the old tired father, whora if her Majesty do not soon ease him of this place of serrice, she must shortly lose him, either by death, where she can have but the bones, or by unableness of ser vice ; in which case she shall be sure deceived, and I by weariness compelled, not as the comraon saying is, to hang up ray hatchet, but as infirraity, and not lack of duty, will force me, to yield up ray rochet. Sir, if you will have her Majesty well served, your owti creature soraewhat in life pre served, and your credit kept uncracked for comraending me first, and now retaining rae still in state of reputation by this increase of advanceraent, put to your hand resolutely ; pro tract no tirae, lest danger ensue delay ; forget not yourself in failing your friend, that liveth unfeignedly at your devotion, whora I corarait to God's good providence. At Fulhara, the 20th of March 1581 [1582 ?]. Your Honour's in the best, the surest, and hurablest raanner, John London." The " Lord Dyer," whose death Sir Walter Mildmay speaks of, was Sir James Dyer, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, to which office he was appointed in January 1560. He was succeeded on the 2nd of May 1582 by Sir Edmund Anderson: — ^ Additional MSS. 15891, f. 71". -et. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 241 SIR WALTER MILDMAY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, Sir, I am credibly inforraed this morning that ray Lord Dyer is dead, and therefore I have entreated ray brother Cary to take so rauch pains as to let you know it if you have not heard it before, and therewith to say unto you a few words frora me what I would desire that it might like you to do in that matter, which, nevertheless, I refer to your own con sideration, who seeth better what is to be done there than I can. And so, praying you to bear with rae in troubling you thus rauch, I wish irato you all felicity in God Ahnighty. Frora London, the 26th of March 1582. Your assured to use as your ovra, Wa. Mildmay.* Nothing more is known about Don Antonio's ring than is stated in the following letter and in the mar ginal note : — " Don Antonio was the banished King of Portugal, who impawned this ring to her Majesty whUe he was in England for a lack of money ; — " SIR FRANCIS walsingham TO THE EARL OF LEICESTER. My very GOOD Lord, For that it is doubtful whether the ring raay be sold in France, it were very convenient that Don Antonio's agent were dealt withal to send to the King's Majesty to procure raeans for the redeeraing of the said ring, who, considering the value thereof, (being of far greater price than it is irapawned for,) when he shall see that it is deterrained to be put to sale, vrill strain hiraself to redeem the same. Herein it shall be requisite that the said Agent be pressed to use expedition, for that the tirae will draw fast on, and the King is now in the furtherest parts of France. And so, referring the ordering of this cause to your Lordship's best direction, I raost hurably take my leave. The 4th of April 1582. Your Lordship's to command, Fra. Walsingham."" » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 72", " Additional MSS, 16891, f. S5". R 242 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582, Hatton again appears in the amiable light of aiding the unfortunate; and it seems that it was mainly to his influence that Norton owed his liberation : — MR. THOMAS NORTON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My duty humbly done to your Honour, I beseech you pardon this boldness that I write unto you, which I ara forced to do, for that you are in her Majesty's Court, a place where I, a wretched publican, dare not presurae to enter, and Uft up ray eyes ; and yet must I take hardiness to open unto you my heart one way or other, or else to fall into a rauch greater fault of unthankfulness. My heart always assured me that your Honour did bear me a charitable mind, for so you ever made appearance ; and I ara well acquainted with the nobleness of your nature not to seem other than you are, specially that affection that you have borne openly towards me, being grounded upon your persuasion of ray fidelity to her Majesty: yet how rauch and in what sort particularly in my late vsoretchedness I have been bounden unto you I had no mean to understand by the closeness of ray restraint, whereunto I beseech you irapute my silence. Now, since her Majesty hath extended to rae her raerciful grace for my enlargeraent, I have attained to hear some part of your great pity towards me, beside the comfort that my poor vrife re ceived of your gracious speeches in her heavy extremity. I have no raean to acknowledge it to you but by my prayer, and that can be no raore hearty for you than it was before ; and so you have obtained of me no more but to be the raore indebted. But of honest esteeraers in the world you have won a raore knowledge of your nobleness ; and with God, I trust, a blessed acceptation of your goodness done to rae for His sake. Now, Sir, see again the hardness of ray case ; I so over-bound raust yet be ever bold, not only to pray you to vouchsafe the taking of my most lowly thanks to yourself, but also to help me yet more to give thanks for me to my Lord Treasurer, to whora I am raost highly bounden for my delivery by his mediation ; God render it in mercy to him ^T. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 243 and his. O noble Sir, if the heaviness of ray case in respect of her Majesty's displeasure (which I could never lightly esteera, regarding her so highly and dearly) had been known unto you, and the sorrow of ray soul for giring triumph to the eneraies of God, speaking Uttle of so great loss to so poor a man, so burthened with charge as I am ; and the la mentable estate of my poor wife, whereof I am not yet in fuU hope of recovery (and her loss were my utter worldly destruction) ; your honourable nature would in pity soon re cord my misery, and therevrith see what cause I have both to thank you and to beseech you, and all those that have been good unto me, to help me, that my Lord Treasurer may know how deeply the thankfid remembrance of his goodness sit teth in a poor man's heart, that daily shall pray to God for her Majesty, his Lordship, and for your Honour, whom I forbear to trouble any longer. At London, the 10th of April 1582. Your Honour's raost hurable and bounden, Tho. Norton.* The Bishop of London's letter to the Queen, about April or May 1582, is deserving of attention. A per son of the name of Eich, accused of having favoured Stubbes and of keeping his book contrary to the procla mation, was committed to prison, but was admitted to baU by Bishop Aylmer, for which he incurred the Queen's displeasure. In his defence Aylmer needlessly states that he would not have released B,ich if he could lawfully have kept him longer in prison ; and the ac count which the prelate gives of himself is not a little curious I*" — bishop aylmer to the queen. Most gracious Prince, God hath placed you in His own throne of justice to deUver unto His people equal mea- » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 92. 21,3, 214, Life of Bishop Aylmer, " Strype's Annals, in. pt. i. pp. pp. 56—60, b2 244 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. sure of indifferent judgment, as He doeth unto you ; wherein you have hitherto so honourably carried yourself, as I doubt not but you shall be to all posterity a mirror of raagistrates, a pearl of princes, and a true pattern of princely virtue, to be foUowed of many, and attained of few. Whereof as all sorts of raen have most plentifully tasted, so I beseech you in the bowels of Jesus Christ to vouchsafe the favour to me, your most humble chaplain, God's poor minister, and your Ma jesty's faithful subject, that you will be pleased to hear me, and to read these ray letters, as yourself would be heard at His hand who is rauch raore above you than your princely Majesty is above rae. Your Highness is persuaded by my iU-willers (for it cannot proceed frora your own gracious na ture) that ray service is all in words, and nothing perforraed in deeds. I let pass ray words ; my deeds are these : While I was a private man in Lincolnshire and Leicestershire, 1 thank God there was none whom, either bj^ rigour of law, by gentle persuasion, or weight of argument, I brought not to the Church, and to the level of God's obedience and your Ma jesty's devotion. Since ray departure frora thence and my coming to the Sea of London (for so I may justly call it in re gard of the tempests that continually affiict it) things are much altered and fallen to ruin. I suppressed the private conventicles, which were very rife ; and the deforraed, or, as they terraed them, reformed churches, which were raany, and far out of order, I reduced them to conformity, agree able to the establishment of your Majesty's proceedings. In the country where I Uved I brought the greatest towns to unity ; I made the ringleaders and guides of those seditious sects build up that which their disobedience had destroyed ; I raade thera to gather where they had dispersed, and sow the seeds of obedience where they had trodden down the corn ; I have had ever such watch upon Paul's Cross, that in my time there came never any Puritan in that place. The ministers and preachers in London are brought to that pass, that at this day they be the most staid men that coramonly live in your Kingdom. To speak of punishment for disorders and ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 245 corrupt opinions, was it ever heard of that any of my prede cessors did either deprive, iraprison, or banish so raany as I have done ? Did ever any raan stand so rauch with them in disputation, or sustain by them and for them so great ma hce, so many slanders, yea, or so great dangers as I have done ? These be deeds, with your Majesty's favour, and no words. Is there any man in England whom they take to be so professed an eneray unto thera as they hold rae to be ? Whora ever have I preferred of that faction, either by rayself ! or by ray friends on that side ? 1 ara called a Papist, a tor- raentor of God's children, a Bonner and butcher, a clawback, ¦ a raan-pleaser ; and 1 ara reported to your Majesty to be a favourer of thera, a raUksop, and to fear such as be their friends above the reverence and fear that I owe unto you. No, no, raost gracious Sovereign ; I have learned to have but i one king, one faith, and one law, and that only will I fear, i And, for those which your Majesty thinketh do carry rae in their sleeve, I thank God the case standeth so with me, that of a good time they have had, and yet have, a contrary opinion of rae ; they know I am too inforceable, and not easily to bend or stoop to their unlawful requests. But if I did fear such as be of so great power, have I not great cause to do it, when other much raeaner than they shall carry your noble and princely nature so far from itself as what they re port that you beUeve, and what I answer in truth that you cannot credit ? If the raeaner sort can thus rauch prevail against us, what raay we fear of such as your Highness hath raade so great ? But if God would breed in your sacred breast such a princely inclination as that you would be pleased to hear us and them alike, their accusation and our defence, then your Majesty should see whora we would be afraid of, when we raight hold ourselves assured that we shall corae to our answer before such a Princess and so loving a raother as will in justice hear the parties before she pro nounce judgraent of either. This Rich, for whora I suffer this heavy displeasure of your Majesty, is he not my deadly . enemy ? doth he not doggedly bark against me wheresoever 246 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. he comes ? What should move me to bail him, if with any lawful regard I raight have justly detained hira prisoner any longer? But admit (vrith your Majesty's gracious favour) that I had erred ; is there any Judge under your Highness that walketh so uprightiy as at some time or other he may not be thought to trip or stumble ? ShaU all men taste of your mercy save I ? Have I not sustained these five years the importable burden of both the Sees of Can terbury* and London, behaving myself so in that charge as I dare justify my service before God and man ? If in aU this time I have stumbled but once (if it were so), shall all my former serrice be so soon forgotten, and this peccadillo written in marble ? Your Highness thinketh that the Bishop of London may do what he vrill, and see everything reformed as he listeth in the government of the Church ; wherein I beseech your Majesty to inform yourself better, and not to suppose my authority under you greater than it is, thereby to aggravate and make greater your indignation against rae. I can do nothing by your coraraission without two more, and in these odious matters every man is comraonly wont to shrink frora rae. And we Bishops, what can we do ? Only ex communicate them, and that they hold for an advantage to keep them from the Church. If we do imprison them, or fine thera, it is a preraunire, or an action of false iraprisonraent may be brought against us. If we do anything in the cora raission, or leave anything undone, who bears the burden but I only ? when other raen are at the doing of it, and have as great authority as myself. There is nothing grieveth rae more than to see you unquieted with these sinister reports, whereby your good blood is dried up that should -water your life in your old years, which I trust to see raany, and pray God that they may be many more than by me I am Uke to see. I take God to witness, I had rather spend ten ounces of ray own than one drop of yours should be dried up by any defect of mine. God grant your Highness may see men's faithful service with your own eyes, and not by others, who * In consequence of Archbishop Grindall's suspension. .ET. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 247 coramonly use such insinuations as they think you like to hear, to further such suits of theirs as they desire to obtain ; against whom and against all men 1 stand thus resolute, that I wiU always justify my doings, and for that I crave no raercy, but justice. Consider, I most hurably beseech you, what service I can be able to do you vrithout your gracious coun tenance ; how Uttle ray sentence shall be regarded ; how those that you will have bridled wiU insult, if you turn from rae your favour and countenance. Then turn rae out of ray place, take again your coraraission, let me lead a private life, con tinuaUy to pray for you ; seeing it is not ray good hap, with your good liking, pubUcly to serve you. And thus I beseech God, who directeth Princes' hearts ut rivos aquarum, ever : abundantly vrith His grace to bless and preserve your Ma- | jesty, and to frame your princely heart to read these my foUies vrithout offence. John London.* Lord Burghley's servant, Henry Maynard, whose suit he requests Hatton to support, was one of his Secreta ries. He was afterwards knighted, and his son was raised to the peerage : — LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, As I raeant by my speech to have recommended unto your favour this bearer, my servant Henry Mayuard, in a suit that he hath conceived, which he vrill declare to you, to have the sarae of her Majesty's grant, being no charge to her Highness' coffers or revenue ; so being tied here by ray ac customed adversary," the gout, in such sort as I durst not irri tate his further malice by journeying to the Court, I do, as you see by my writing, trouble you vrith ray earnest request unto you, that, if you shall not mislike his suit, you wiU the rather for my sake, and so much the more as indeed his ser vice under rae is speciaUy and only for causes appertaining to her Majesty, and in no part appertaining to myself, show * Additional MSS. 15891, f,76. 248 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. your favour to prefer his suit to her Majesty ; and in your so doing you shall bind both me in friendship, and him in ser vice, to be mindful to requite your goodness. From ray house at the Strand in Westminster, the 5th of May 1582. Your most assured, loving friend, W. Burghley.* Mr. Yelverton was probably Christopher Yelverton, of Northamptonshire, an eminent lawyer, afterwards Queen's Serjeant, Speaker of the House of Commons, and a Justice of the King's Bench : — SIR WALTER MILDMAY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Upon some things conferred of between you and rae yesterday, I did this morning speak vrith Mr. Yelverton, who at your next repair to this town will attend upon you. In the meantirae he doth assure rae that he is utterly guiltless of any of those raatters whereof her Majesty hath been in forraed against hira, and doubteth not fully to satisfy you when it shall like you to hear him, which my request to you is that you will vouchsafe to do ; for it will be grievous unto him that her Highness should retain any such opinion of hira, whereof he hath given no just cause. Touching the raatter I wrote of to you for him, I assure you it was alto gether without his knowledge or privity. I reraain of opi nion as I was, that there is not a fitter raan ; and, these ira pediraents being reraoved, I trust her Majesty will be his gracious Lady. And so, vrithout troubUng you any further, I leave aU to be ordered as you think best, and coraraend you to the Lord Alraighty. Frora London, the 12th of May 1582. Yours for ever raost assured to my power, Wa. Myldmay.'' The desire of Sir James Harvey, the Lord Mayor, to stand well with Hatton, and the Vice-Chamberlain's » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 89". " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 85", ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 249 jealousy that the City should apply to any other person at Court than himself, are shown by the foUowing letter : — SIR JAMES HARVEY, LORD MAYOR, TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May IT PLEASE YOUR Honour, It is to my great grief informed me that your Honour hath conceived, that where a letter was directed unto you, praying your favour according to your accustomed goodness to this City, before any suit made to any other of the most honourable Council, and that the same was stayed by me, whereupon have proceeded such solicitations of the matter as I hear have been offensive unto you : for my own part, I ara not privately so interested in the cause as that I could have any reasonable occasion to draw your displeasure upon rae ; and the letter that was written to sue for your favour was subscribed and sealed by rae only, which could not be vrithout intention to be a suitor unto you. The coraplaint was made to me by the Corapanies, and is a thing that concerneth not the general Corporation of the City, and Mayor and Aldermen, but the Mysteries, praying the aid of rae and ray brethren. Now in their own suit it was reason to hearken to theraselves ; and, being informed that it was their own advice among thera to stay the sending of that letter, I foUowed their own opinions in their own raatter, thinking it reasonable not to make any other suit for thera, nor in other raanner than I understood theraselves to desire. Which being so, as it was told rae that it was, I beseech your Honour to retain good opinion of me, as one greatly beholden unto you, and desirous in what I may to deserve your good favour. And so I comrait your Honour to the tuition of the Alraighty. From London, the Srd of June 1582. Your Ho nour's to comraand, James Harvey, Mayor.* * Additional MSS. 16891, f. 63. 250 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582, Mr. Swale, the person thus warmly recommended by Hatton to the head of his CoUege to be elected Proctor of the University of Cambridge, seems to have been the eminent civiUan before mentioned: — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO After my very hearty commendations. Understanding that one of the Proctors of the University, to be chosen to supply that place this next year, is to be nominated and appointed out of your House ; and being inforraed by sorae of my good friends, and partly by mine own knowledge, that Mr. Swale is the next that, both in seniority and by the statutes of your Col lege, ought to be elected before any other to exercise that office ; I have thought good to comraend him in that respect to your good favours : not for that I have any way cause to doubt that any of you, by occasion of faction or any other private regard, wiU be moved therein to offer him any wrong, or to keep him from his right ; but especiaUy for the good opinion which I have conceived myself of his great sufficiency, gravity, and good government, which I must justly say is such, and so weU to be accepted of aU those that vriU do him justice, as no man in your House, of his time, can deserve more commendation. In consideration whereof, I have the rather taken this course to intreat you to have due regard of his right in this behaU, that (without making any further moans to her Majesty to move you to that which otherwise you ought of your own good disposition vriUingly to yield unto) he may enjoy the place, according to the statutes of your CoUege ordained directly in that behalf ; wherein not doubting of your careful and friendly accomplishing, I bid you right heartily farewell. From the Court at Greenwich, the Gth of June 1582. Your very loving assured friend, Chr. Hatton. I am the rather bound to raove you earnestly in Mr. Swale's behalf, because he is^^owards me, and a man in truth in whom .et. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 251 I repose great confidence : I pray you, therefore, do him aU right vrith your good favours.' Sir Kobert Stapleton, whose disgraceful conduct wiU cause him to be again mentioned, married to his second wife OUve, daughter and coheiress of Sir Henry Shering ton, of Lacock in WUtshire, and widow of John Talbot, of Salwarp in Worcestershire, the " Mrs. T." of this letter from Sir Walter MUdmay : — SIR WALTER MILDMAY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have great cause, and so I do most heartUy thank you for the care I find you have of me and mine. And, for this matter of Sir Robert Stapleton's suit, it is true that he is a gentleman whom I have and do love and like of as well as of any in the North parties, whereof I trust he hath no cause to doubt; and therefore, seeing Mrs. T. is a woman very Ukely to marry again, I can vrish her rather to Ught in the hands of my good friend, such a one as I take him to be, hoping surely, that, the rather by his promise made unto you, he wiU be a constant mediator tO bring all these unnatural quarrels to a quiet end, which is the thing that I have desired from the beginning : and therefore any favour that it shaU please you to procure for his furtherance at her Majesty's hands shaU not discontent me ; so as to yourself, and if you think good to my Lord of Huntington also, he wiU again confirm that which he hath so faithfuUy promised touching my daughter and those causes. If it would please her Ma jesty to show herself likevrise desirous that a reasonable end might be made, I think the sarae would take the better suc cess ; and I and mine should be most bounden unto her Highness for so much favour in so just a matter. I am greatly beholding unto you for this most courteous and friendly dealing toward me, which, to my power, I will be » Autograph in the Lansdowne MSS. 36 art, 38, 252 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. always ready to requite. And so I coramend you ever to the raerciful Lord. Frora Hackney, the 13th of June 1582. Your most assured to my power, Wa. Mildmay.* DR. MATHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Sir, I left ray man to attend upon you from tirae to tirae, to desire you in ray behalf to travail vrith Mr. Vice-Chara berlain for ray despatch. I pray you let rae obtain the continuance of your extraordinary care, travail, and friend ship ; and let rae still use you herein, as you shall comraand rae wherein you list. I would be glad and am desirous to receive by the next a line or twain frora you ; blarae rae not if I be soraewhat importunate now and henceforth, it is not for haste, but for shame, the suit being superannuate already. Mr. Vice-Charaberlain I know can do what he will ; and ray request is to you, to raove his Honour to be as willing as he is able : I trust, if it would like you earnestly to follow him to the point, you should find his Honour as favourable in raine absence as in ray presence. I have ever received of him better deeds than words; and yet I vrish I could do but a quarter so well as he can speak. To be short and true, I ara his and yours ; but in degree, his at coraraandraent, and yours in friendship. If you will so advise me, I will Send you a biU drawn for Durhara, which it may please his Honour to present at opportunity. The while, till I hear from you, I betake you raost heartily to the grace of God. Christ-Church in Oxon, 15th of June 1582. Your assured loring friend, Toby Mathewe.** TO MR. EGERTON, HER MAJESTy's SOLICITOR. Sir, Understanding by ray servant, Adaras, of your most friendly pains which you have taken in the matter of con cealed lands now in question betwixt him and the Corapanies Additional MSS, 15891, f, 86. " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 76. ;et. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 253 of London, I could not forbear in these few lines to yield you that thankfulness, in all perfect good-will, which I find due to your raost kind and courteous deaUng. If I may in any respect requite it, I hope you shall well perceive I will not be ungrateful unto you for it ; and I pray you, as you have hitherto made me rauch beholding unto you, continue stiU your friendly endeavour therein, that, of this good beginning of your acceptable and good advice, the end raay be agreeable to the sarae in the accoraplishraent of equity and justice, which I doubt not shall be the sooner ob tained through the furtherance of your travail and favourable assistance. And so I bid you heartily farewell. Frora the Court at Greenvrich, the 19th of June 1582. Your very loving, assured friend, Chr. Hatton.* While in the Marshalsea, Churchyard sent Hatton what he calls " a card," apparently the mariner's compass drawn by some mathematician, who was perhaps the Poet's feUow prisoner : — THOMAS CHURCHYARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, My boldness is great, and ray hope in your goodness not sraall, which raakes rae the bolder to present this siraple work to your honourable favour, humbly desiring that it may be safely kept, though it be not the best liked ; and yet I could wish that the best here living saw it. I am requested by an honest gentleman to present you a card of his own dravring : if I may presume to entreat your favourable acceptation of it, you shall bind us both at once to honour and serve you for it. The party seemeth to bear you singular affection, and only craveth that you vrill vouchsafe him the goodness to know him. These respects, vrith the many good parts in him (especially for navigation), make me bold to endeavour rayself to pleasure him in pre- » From the Egerton Papers, p. 88, 254 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1682. senting unto you his serviceable labours; humbly praying your Honour to receive in good part his small gift which he sendeth you, and hereafter to know and accept of his offered good-will, according to the honourable fame which aU men give you for your courtesy. And so I beseech God to in crease His grace in your worthy person. From the Mar shalsea, the 10th of July 1582. Your Honour's humbly during life, T. Churchyarde,* The election of Mr. Swale to the Proctorship of the University of Cambridge was the subject of many let ters, part of which are printed in this work, and others are in the Lansdowne manuscripts in the British Mu seum : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO MR. DOCTOR NORGALL, MR. D. HARVEY, AND MR. D. HATCHER. AfTer my very hearty coraraendations. Understanding that the Master and Fellows of Caius College in Carabridge have, by the consent and good liking of the greatest part of thera, made choice of my servant Swale, according to the statutes of their College, and partly for his sufficiency and great for wardness in virtue and learning, as one of the meetest men among thera to supply the place of Proctorship in the Univer sity this next year ; and being credibly inforraed, that, not withstanding aU good order hath been observed in that elec tion, and nothing done therein which hath not been in all respects agreeable to the true raeaning of the statutes of that house, there have been sorae of the Fellows there, which, either for ill-will or other private regard, do oppose them selves against it, intending to bring the matter again into question, which seemeth in itself so plain and apparent as it needeth not further consideration ; I have therefore thought good, in case it shall be further urged and referred unto you, who are the Visitors appointed in this behalf, to » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 61". MT. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 255 commend the right of my servant in this case to your good and lawful favours ; desiring you that (as I would be loath for my own part that any man should be hindered or injured by his advancement otherwise than as the order of that College shall justly allow of), so that you will be likewise pleased, the rather for my sake, to afford hira indifference and justice, and not to suffer hira wrongfully to be troubled, or the late election to be frustrated or overthrown, if there appear suffi cient and good cause unto you to approve and confirm it ; which referring to your good considerations, I bid you right heartily fareweU. From the Court at Nonsuch, the 14th of July 1582. Your very loving assured friend, Chr. Hatton.* It appears that Ann Countess of Warwick (the daughter of Francis Earl of Bedford, and third wife of Ambrose Earl of Warwick, the brother of the Earl of Leicester,) had greatly interested herself for Dr. Mathew : — DR. mathew to the COUNTESS OF WARWICK. Right Honourable and my singular good Lady, What words may I use to give your good Ladyship sufficient thanks for your so careful and honourable furtherance of my suit ? But, what pen or tongue cannot express, that my faith ful and dutiful heart shall perform, as during my life I am most bounden. The while, presuming upon the continuance of your Ladyship's favour, I am so bold as to send you these inclosed, which are my Lord of Hunsdon's letters to Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, to signify unto him, that as her Majesty, long sithence, did answer him, as touching Dr. Bellaray, that she liked not to bestow the Deanery of Durham upon him, so he hath utterly surceased his suit, and is well content that my friends shaU, without any let of his Lordship's part, proceed in obtaining the sarae for rae ; which himself also, he " Autograph in the Lansdowne MSS, 36. 256 THE life and TIMES OF [1582. saith, would do, but that he hath already naraed Dr. Bellamy unto her Highness, and therefore cannot well deal for any other. Truly, Madam, I find, that if ray Lord of Hunsdon had been entreated by anybody to my behoof heretofore, he would have easily yielded me his consent, especially sithence he had received his answer against Dr. Bellamy. And I as sure your Ladyship his Honour in talk giveth me just cause to suspect lest I have been, and may be, raost abused where q, great while I best trusted. Wherefore it raay please your good Ladyship so to bestow ray Lord's letters, and your fa vourable speeches withal, as now no longer delay be raade, this only hindrance all this while pretended being thus re raoved. And thus hurably referring both ray suit to your vrisdom and experience, as also myself to your direction and comraandment, I betake your Ladyship to all the good bless ings of Almighty God. Christ-Church in Oxon, 23rd of July 1582, Your Ladyship's most hurable and most bounden, ToBYE Mathewe.* No other information has been found on the subject of the next letter than this marginal note : — " Mr. Knyvett bad slain a man of the Earl of Oxford's in fight." Thomas Knyvett, the person in question, was a Groom of the Privy Chamber ; and the interest which the Queen took in the matter was shown, in what would now be considered an unconstitutional manner, by Hatton's let ter to the Lord Chancellor. It will afterwards be seen that this affair led to a quarrel between the Earl of Oxford and Knyvett in the following year, in which another man was killed : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO LORD CHANCELLOR BROMLEY. My very good Lord, Mr. Knyvett hath inforraed her Majesty of his desire to have his cause of se defendendo deter rained by a privy sessions in this vacation-tirae. It seemeth ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 106. ^T. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 257 he hath found your Lordship not to like of that manner of proceeding, in which respect your Lordship hath refused to grant forth the comraission. Her Majesty, in that she think eth Mr. Knyvet's request to stand in ordinary course, mar- veUeth not a little that your Lordship should deny her servant the same that is usual, and that every other subject may ask. It hath pleased her, therefore, to comraand rae to signify unto you that she looked for justice, with favour at your hands, towards this gentleman. ' You know,' saith she, ' who he is, and where he serveth ; and therefore, in a cause so Uttle impor tant as this, you might have restrained the raaUce of his eneinies well enough.' Haply, she thinketh, they would have his trial at Newgate amongst coraraon thieves, or in the Bench iu Uke sort, of purpose to raake him suffer as much public reproach as they could lay on hira. In this, without defrauding the law, her Highness supposeth, and is persuaded, he inight be better dealt withal, and find ordinary favour, vrithout just offence of any. It raay, therefore, please your good Lordship to return by your letters the cause that moved you to stay the coranussion, and what way you can best devise for the help of the gentleman, to her Majesty's better satisfac tion. It is her pleasure to have your answer in these two points. Mr. Knyvet likewise requireth bonds, which he and Ms friends, as it seemeth, have acknowledged before your Lordship of sorae very great suras; he is earnest to have thera redeUvered, and hath alleged his reasons to your Lord ship therefore, wherein I have no doubt but you will deal vrith hira according to your goodness. My good Lord, it is very necessary you take care to please the Queen in this case, for, in truth, she taketh it unkindly at your hands that she should be strained to meddle and be seen in this matter. At our meeting I wUl tell you raore of her Highness' conceit ; and so God bless you for ever, and comraand my service, for it is due to your Lordship. Haste ; this 27th of July 1582. Your good Lordship's most bound poor friend, Chr. Hatton.* » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 65", S 258 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. The Lord Chancellor's reply was not discreditable to him : — sir THOMAS BROMLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I received this 28th of July your letters dated the 27th of the sarae ; by the which I do perceive that Mr. Knyvet hath inforraed her Majesty of his desire to have his cause of se defendendo determined by a privy sessions in this vacation-time ; and that he found rae not to like of this raanner of proceeding, and therefore that I refused to grant forth the coraraission. True it is that I misliked of his suit ; but, that I did expressly refuse to grant the commission, that is not so. Marry, not finding his suit in my opinion reasonable, nor fit for me upon his bare request, being the party, to yield unto vrithout further comraandment, I asked hira what counsel he had that so advised hira ; he answered me that Mr. Recorder of London gave him that counsel. I prayed lum, there fore, that he would cause Mr. Recorder to corae and con fer with rae ; and that which in justice and conveniency I raight do I would be ready to perforra. Since which time I neither heard of Mr. Recorder, nor of any other of his coun sel, nor of himself, touching his cause. It seeraeth further, that her Highness should be informed that Mr. Knyvet's request should be a matter of ordinary course, and therefore marvelleth that I should deny unto her servant that which is usual, and every other subject may ask. This suggestion to her Majesty riseth, as I think, of ignorance ; I wUl not say of untruth, though indeed the matter be not true. I never knew, nor I never heard, that any party supposed to be an offender might of ordinary course have a special coraraission at his proper suit ; neither is it reason it should be so, for that were to open a gap to let offenders pass through without due punishment : for this comraission being secretly awarded, haply to coraraissioners not indifferent, raay sit, touching the execution of their coraraission, without the notice or know- ;et. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 259 ledge of the adverse party ; without which it is impossible to produce the proofs against the offender, and for lack of proof he raust necessarily be acquitted. Indeed, in case some great or notable robbery, murder, or other offence be coramitted, at the suit of the parties that seek the punishraent thereof, then upon advertiseraent frora the Justices of Assize in the county where the fact is committed, or at the complaint of the Justices of the country, or by coramandraent from higher authority, sometiraes such comraissions be granted for the speedy punishraent of the offence. But, at the suit of the party who is supposed the offender, I have not known any such commission granted, neither did I think it fit to be granted, until I were further satisfied by his counsel, or were othervrise comraanded ; the rather for that I well knew I was greatly suspected by the adverse party and his friends of favour and friendship to Mr. Knyvet ; which whether I did bear and show unto hira before the Coroner's inquest gave up their verdict, or not, I leave to his ovm conscience and re port, and to the testimony of others, his friends, who were travaUers in his cause ; the regard and respect whereof, lest I should incur sorae further note, raade me the more advised and circumspect touching Mr. Knyvet's desire. Lastly, in my own opinion, I could not understand how his suit for a special comraission could in anywise have satisfied that which he sought for, to vrit, the clearing of hiraseU"; because he standeth subject to the appeal which the brother of hira that was slain raay bring at any tirae within the year and day after the fact, notwithstanding any trial that raight have ensued upon that special coraraission. If Mr. Knyvet were loath to be brought in pubUc to plead his pardon, which he raay have of course, touching the indictraent before the Coro ner that findeth it se defendendo, that sraall raatter I could have devised easily to have holpen, vrithout special commission. If he were afraid of any other indictment to have ensued by the procurement of his enemies, her Majesty's pardon, or else her warrant to her Attorney-General, would easily have cleared hira of all those troubles which raight have grown by s2 260 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. any such indictraent. And thus I have briefly touched unto you the causes that raoved rae to defer and respite Mr. Knyvet's suit. Touching the granting of any special cora raission, far be it frora rae that I should so rauch forget ray self as to deny any of her Majesty's servants that which is ordinary or of course for every coraraon Subject to ask : I should thereby leave ray duty to her Highness, forget that which belongeth to ray office, and be injurious to the party, which faults by the grace of God I will never willingly cora mit ; and in this case now in question I ara well assured I have not offended in anyvrise. It is happy that we serve and live under a Prince of that wisdom and bounty of nature as is not easily carried with such surmises and suggestions, othervrise the time were too miserable to serve in. For the clearing of the state of the gentleraan against aU that may seek his peril in this matter, I see no other way but to quit himself, and to expect whether the brother of the party slain will coraraence his appeal within the year and day ; which I think in respect of the verdict already given before the Coro ner, and the truth of the case, he never wiU. If he do not, then, to be out of all danger of raalicious practices of his enemies, her Majesty's pardon shall be needful, though the raatter of itself require it not. If the brother be disposed to sue his appeal, there is no device (to my understanding) to keep him frora it; if Mr. Knyvet's counsel know therein more than I do (as they easily may), I would gladly confer with some of thera, and be ready to do all the good for hira that conveniently I raay. Concerning Mr. Knyvet's bond true it is he required rae to deliver the sarae. I prayed hira to content hiraself till the whole cause were ended, and I would in the meantirae keep the bond frora enrolraent, as I still intend to do, whereby he should not fear any danger ; which answer raight well have contented him without trou bling of her Majesty. It had been sorae rashness in me to have delivered his bond, the cause not ended. And thus, heartily praying you to acquaint her Majesty with this my answer, whom I would be loath to offend in the smallest ^T. 42. J SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 261 point that raay be, I commit you to God. From Weld Hall in Essex, the 28th of July 1582. Your loving and assured friend in aU I can, T. Bromley, Canc* Former letters from Sir Christopher Hatton show the interest he took in the affairs of the University of Cam bridge, especially with relation to Dr. Swale; and it now appears that Lord Burghley found it necessary, as its ChanceUor, to interfere: — LORD burghley TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, After ray hearty manner I did yesterday, lacking lei sure, send to ray wife, then being at the Court, that she should do a message to you, being a request that you would forbear to deal in a cause whereof I made you privy concerning sorae disorder in Gonrill and Caius College in Carabridge ; but for that by her report of your answer (the conclusion whereof was that you would forbear, as I desired,) you did explicate to her, as she saith, being ignorant, the state of the case otherwise than I and the University take it to be, which I know is, by the inforraation of Swale the President, contrary to the manifest truth. I have thought good at this tirae briefly to inforra you, that as both Doctor Legge the Master, and this Swale, hath, for ray courtesy showed to thera (they both deserving correction), abused rae many ways, and spe cially have maintained covertly in the CoUege a faction against the true religion received, corrupting the youth there vrith corrupt opinions of Popery; and for that I doubt that Swale and his partners will (to colour their dissiraulation) inform you otherwise than truth, I do send you ray servant, Vincent Skinner, who is a member of that University, to show you briefly the state of the case, and to declare unto you the proofs thereof, and consequently the true judgments against these men, one by the Visitors and superintendents of the Col lege, the other by all the Heads of the University ; so as I am > Additional MSS. 15891. 262 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582. bound to oppugn these two men's crooked proceedings, and yet therein raean no way to proceed but according to the statutes of the University and College. And at this tirae I have raore cause to raislike them, for that they would never vouchsafe to corae to me, although they have been in the City; and Swale, who is, as I perceive, now your man, (though I think he was not when he was called before rae,) hath two or three tiraes posted to this city within these few days, and that twice since I spake with you at the Court ; whereby they seera to raistrust their cause, or else do presume to find some indirect favour against rae, who ara their principal Officer. Whereof I trust they shall be deceived, and specially at your hands, now that you are by rae thus informed, according to your friendly answer given rae at the Court. And so to end, I do send you the warrant for yourself signed, according to which I had subscribed your book ; and pray j'Ou to procure Mr. Secretary to seal it with the signet, and to return it to rae by this bearer. Frora ray house, 30th July 1582. Your assured loving friend, W. Burghley.* The foUowing short letter from the Earl of Leicester was accompanied by a buck, which Hatton was to pre sent to the Queen : — THE earl of LEICESTER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Mr. Captain, I ara most hurably bold to send to her sa cred Majesty a poor beast bred in this soil, because it was the first was killed, and yet not the greatest I raeant should have been killed ; but being weU killed, and the first, I sent hira now to her Highness. I beseech you. Sir, present him, if he come in good order, to her Majesty, whom I trust to see kill forty of his fellows in this place; which are, and shall be preserved for her Majesty's best pleasure as long as I live, with my continual prayer for her raost blessed preservation. I do mean very shortly to send again, and therefore to take » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 66. MT. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 263 leave of you now, with my raost hearty coraraendations. Fare you well. This 2nd of August 1582. Your assured friend, R. Leicester.* Sir Christopher Hatton's letter to the Lord Chan ceUor respecting Mr. Knyvet, in a former page,'' and his Lordship's reply, sufficiently explain the foUowing letters : — sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO LORD CHANCELLOR BROMLEY. My very GOOD Lord, I have showed unto her Majesty your honourable and grave letters in answer of those which by her Highness' direction I sent unto you of late touching Mr. Knyvet, which were in all respects so acceptable, and araply satisfying her expectations, as it pleased her very gra ciously to commend them ; allovring your judgraent for the stay and respite of the special comraission to be no less consi derate and agreeable to justice than this answer of yours im porting the same effect to be wise and full of all honour able and orderly dealing; wherein her Majesty, with her great good liking, taketh especial notice of your Lord ship's raost discreet and careful service, for the which she yieldeth you her raost princely thanks. When 1 had showed her Majesty your letters, she coraraanded rae to raake Mr. Knyvet privy to thera, who, finding thera writ ten with all honourable care and declaration of the due course of justice, resteth hkewise exceedingly well satisfied in all respects ; saving only in the error which I had com mitted in my former letters to your Lordship, wherein I termed and raistook the fact to be raanslaughter, which in very truth was found by the Coroner's inquest to be se defen dendo. In which case he was adrised by his learned Counsel to be an hurable suitor to her Highness for her gracious favour in requesting your Lordship by letter, or otherwise, to vouchsafe hira a special coraraission, whereby he raight in ordinary course plead the statute, and without any suit of > Additional MSS. 15891, f. 71". " Vide p. 256. 264 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. pardon or further trouble be forthwith delivered and relieved by virtue thereof. According to which direction he made her Highness privy to the state of his cause, and hurably be sought her princely goodness to signify her pleasure to this effect to your Lordship, by whose favour he raight the rather obtain the commission which he sued for: wherein if her Majesty have proceeded more roundly than the cause re quired on your Lordship's behalf, he is sorry for it, and humbly beseecheth you not to impute it to any complaint or want of duty in lumself, but to her Majesty's own direction and raost gracious care of the good success of his troubles ; in the which as he confesseth that your Lordship hath dealt very honourably with hira in affording hira the corafort of your good favour frora tirae to tirae, so doth he protest, and for my own part I may boldly affirm as rauch unto you, that he never uttered any word, either by hiraseU or any other, to irritate her Majesty's displeasure in any respect against your Lordship, but thinketh hiraself so greatly bound unto you, as, he saith, he raust and will raake known the goodness you have showed hira unto her Majesty, and endeavour in all faithful service and good-vriU to deserve it. And so, most eamestly craring that anything passed in this action raay not dirainish your Lordship's good opinion of the gentleraan, who, in truth, resteth clear frora any such suspicion of ill-deserv ing, I comrait your Lordship to the grace of God. Frora the Court at Nonsuch, the 2nd of August 1582. Your good Lordship's most bound assured poor friend, Chr. Hatton.* The writer of the next letter was Anne, wife of Philip Howard Earl of Arundell, whose father, Thomas Duke of Norfolk, had particularly recommended 'him to culti vate Hatton's friendship.'' The Countess of Arundell was the sister and coheiress of George Lord Dacre of Gillesland. ' Additional MSS. 16891, f. 67. " Vide page 9, ante. AiT, 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 265 TO sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, Having at this time so convenient a raessenger, and never wanting at any time cause to reraember how rauch I have been beholding unto you, I was loath either to orait the opportunity of the one, or to show rayself unthankful for the other ; and therefore, since I found that writing was the best raean to satisfy rae in either, 1 de sired to recommend ray letters to this bearer, and myself by thera to your good opinion ; which, as 1 have often said, and now must needs repeat, is one of the greatest comforts I have, and the greater, because I rest assured that the constancy of your friendship, and the goodness of your nature, is such as I shall never lose it vrithout desert ; and I know myself so well, as, by the Grace of God, I never mean wilUngly in the least respect to deserve the contrary. I am loath to trouble you with long letters, and the less careful to enlarge the good-vrill 1 owe you, because, as I hope, it is sufficiently known unto you ; and therefore vrill here conclude, vrishing you all good hap. From ArundeU Castle, the 20th of August 1582. Your raost assuredly ever, A. Arundell.* LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Whereas her Majesty, as I understand by your letter, would be advertised frora me of the circumstances and rea sonableness of a suit of a certain number of her poor tenants in Huntingdonshire being copyholders, who, seeking to have purchased their several poor tenements frora her Majesty, upon the exchange passed to Sir Henry Darcy, wherein her Highness had a beneficial bargain ; so it is, that, though the greatest nuraber of these tenants held their teneraents under twenty shilUngs by year, as some at seven pence, sorae at twelve pence, fourteen pence, twenty pence, and so at very sraall values under ten shilUngs, yet, their sraall rents being cast up altogether, there arose in one haralet a sum of seven- * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 63. 266 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [loo*. teen pounds' rent by year, and another of twenty-seven pounds, and the third to twenty-eight pounds ; whereby, hav ing regard to those of three entire values certified by the auditor, without knowing how the sarae did grow of such small parcels, the same tenements in one total sum were rated to be holden of her Majesty in capite, which othervrise, if the parcels had been expressed and severally purchased, should have been only socage, for that there is never reservation of any tenure in capite upon any lands but where the parcel purchased is of the value of ten pounds and upwards. But now, whereas these poor silly souls sought to purchase their several tenancies by purchases alone to every of them, they took theraselves to be abused, having paid their raoney, and yet to be charged with a tenure in capite, a thing unknown to thera ; whereas they were as good, or rather better, to give up all their teneraents freely to her Majesty, than for so small values to be charged upon every Ucence of aUenation, and upon every death of the tenant, with so rauch as raay extend at every tirae to ten pounds of fifty years' pur chase, yea, to raake aU the rest of their lands subject to Uke charge ; which is a thing to be pitied, and against aU good meaning and conscience, as I take it. And therefore I doubt not but her Majesty will be pleased to relieve them of this their burthen by changing their tenures into socage, whereby her Majesty shall not lose anything which she had before ; for none of all those tenements were ever otherwise holden but by base tenure in socage, neither vriU any man take them at that burthen of free gift. And so I leave to trouble you, although the poor tenants trouble me daily vrith their con tinual pitiful complaints, as being deceived in their opinions in laying out their money to have purchased their quietness, where, by this accident, they are with their own made subject to a charge unreasonable. From my house at Theobald's, this 1st of Septeraber 1582. Your assured loving friend, W. Burghley.* » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 61". ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 267 The " Peerages " do not give the exact date of the death of the young nobleman upon whose decease the Queen wrote the annexed consolatory letter to his father, the Earl of Shrewsbury; but a letter from the Earl of Leicester" on the same subject, written on the 5th of September 1582, shows it had taken place shortly before that day : — BY THE QUEEN. Right trusty and right weU-beloved Cousin and Counsellor, we greet you weU. We had thought, iraraediately upon un derstanding of the death of the Lord Talbot your son, to have sent you our letters of corafort, but that we were loath that they should have been the first raessengers unto you of so unpleasant matter as the loss of a son of so great hope and towardness, that inight have served to have been a comfortable staff unto you in your old years, and a profitable pillar unto this our estate in tirae to corae, whereof he gave as great hope as any one of his calUng within this our Realra ; which we know, in respect of the love you bear us, cannot but greatly increase your grief. But herein, V^'^e, as his Prince and Sovereign, and you as a loving and natural father, for that we both be interested in the loss, (though for several respects,) are to lay aside our particular causes of grief, and to reraeraber that God, who hath been the worker thereof, and doeth all things for the best, is not to be controlled. Besides, if we do duly look into the raatter in true course of Christi anity, we shall then see that the loss hath wrought so great a gain to the gentleraan whom we now lack, as we have rather cause to rejoice than lament; for if the iraperfections of this decUning age we Uve in be truly weighed, and the sundry miseries that we are daily subject unto be duly looked into, we shaU then find more cause to judge them unhappy that live, than to bewaU those as unfortunate that are dead. But, ^ Lodge's Illustrations, n. 236. 268 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. for that the weakness of frail flesh cannot so rest upon that corafort which the happy estate of his change hath wrought but that nature will have her force. We cannot therefore but put you in mind how well God in His singular goodness hath dealt vrith you, in that He left you behind other sons of great hope, who through the good education that you have carefully given them, and the good gifts of nature they are plentifully endowed withal, are like to prove no less comfortable unto you than serviceable unto us. And, therefore, for your comfort you are to remeraber, that, of four sons that He hath given you, He hath taken only one to Hiraself. These reasons, which we have thought on and used with good fruit as raeans to lessen our own grief, we have thought raeet to irapart thera urito you, and do hope they shall work no less effect in you, whose case we tender as rauch as our own, having raade as great trial of your care and fidelity towards us as ever Prince hath raade of servant. And, therefore, we do assure ourself that in this discorafort there is no earthly thing can yield you raore comfort than the assurance of our gracious favour to wards you; whereof you may make full account to receive the same frora us in as full measure as a well-deserring servant and subject may in true gratuity look for at a gracious and thankful Prince's hands. Given under our signet.* Walsingham seems to have neglected no opportunity of recommending that acts of courtesy should be shewn to the Earl of Shrewsbury, while the Queen of Scots was in his custody : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I send you herewithal a letter directed to the Earl of Shrewsbury frora her Majesty, containing such points as were prescribed by your letter. I pray you help to excuse such defects as are fallen out in penning of the sarae, which raay work, without your good and friendly endeavour therein, » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 88". ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 269 sorae dislike in her Majesty. I could wish that this letter were sent by an express raessenger. The Earl is a great per sonage, and eraployed in service of greatest trust, wherein he hath both honourably and faithfully acquitted hiraself, and therefore deserveth some extraordinary regard to be had of him. In such a time of discomfort, such an unwonted kind of favour doth work a singular contentment in one of my Lord's birth and desert. Now, having delivered my opinion unto you, I refer the use thereof to your good consideration, and so comrait you to God. At Barn Elras, the 6th of Sep tember 1582. Yours most assured, Fra. Walsingham.* The " hearty noble couple, " from whose house Leices ter wrote the foUowing letter, were Henry first Lord Norris of Eycot, and his wife, Margery, daughter and coheiress of John Lord Williams of Thame. It appears that they expected to have been honoured with a visit from the Queen : — THE EARL OF LEICESTER TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Captain, Having so convenient a messenger I thought good to salute you, and vrithal to let you know I found a very hard joumey yesterday after I departed from you. It was ten of the clock at night ere I came here, and a raore foul and ragged way I never travelled in ray life. The best was, at my arrival I met with a piece of cold entertain ment at the Lady's hands of the house here ; and so had you done too, if you had been in my place ; for she was well in formed ere I came that I and you were the chief hinderers of her Majesty's coming hither, which they took more unkindly than there was cause indeed. But I was fain to stand to it that I was one of the dissuaders, and would not for anything, for the little proof I had of this day's journey, that her Ma- » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 94. 270 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. jesty had been in it; being, indeed, the very sarae day her Highness should have corae hither, whieh I reraerabered not till this question grew. Well, I did, I trust, satisfy ray Lady, albeit she saith she cannot be quiet till you have part of her little storaach too. Trust rae, if it had not been so late, I think I should have sought me another lodging, my welcome awhile was so ill; and almost no reason could persuade but that it was some device to keep her Highness from her own gracious disposition to come hither. But I dealt plainly with her, that I knew she would have been sorry afterwards to have had her Majesty come at this time of the year to this place. I assure you, you should find it winter already. Thus rauch I thought good to tell you, that, when my Lady coraes thither, you may satisfy her, as I hope I have done ; but her Majesty raust especially help soraewhat, or else have we raore than half lost this lady. To help to raake araends, I offered her my lodging there, if her Majesty stayed at Oatlands. They had put the house here in very good order to receive her Ma jesty, and a hearty noble couple are they as ever I saw to wards her Highness. I rest here this Sabbath-day to make peace for us both ; what remains you shall do at their next charge upon you. God grant I find her Majesty no worse than I left her, and you as well to do as myself. From Rycott, the llth of Septeraber 1582. Your old assured friend, Ro'. Leicester.* The Earl of Sussex was long afflicted with a painful disease, and died at Bermondsey, in Southwark, on the 9th of June 1683. His Countess, who so affectingly describes his sufferings, was his second wife, Frances, daughter of Sir William, and sister of Sir Henry Sidney, K. G., and the foundress of Sidney-Sussex College, Cam bridge; — ^ Additional MSS. 15891, f. 68". .et. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 271 FRANCES COUNTESS OF SUSSEX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I heartily thank you for your friendly letter, wherein you do as weU beraoan ray Lord's painful sickness as comfort my grieved mind. I would I saw cause to write to you that either the consultation of the physicians about his estate, or their medicines appUed to his feeble body, did procure him any ease ; but, to be plain with you, as with one that I presurae loveth ray Lord rauch and vrisheth his well-doing, with heart's grief I raust briefly advertise you that his strength generally is decayed, his pain greatly increased, and his physic hath offered hira rather tor raent than reraedy ; so as he is at this present determined for a few days to forbear medicines, and to see what good office nature is able to work for his ease. I suppose no man be raore grieved than my sick Lord ; nevertheless he armeth his mind in that resolute manner, that with all humility he thanketh God for his visitation, and with all patience he en dureth the painful torments of his disease. God, I humbly beseech Him to send him shortly to recover, and me some oc casion to requite the great courtesy that you have now show ed me. And so I commend rae heartily unto you. From NewhaU, the 16th of September 1582. Your loving friend, Fra. Sussex.* A marginal note states that the following letter, to which there is no signature, was written by " the old Countess of Bedford," meaning Bridget, daughter' of John Lord Hussey, and widow of Sir Eichard Morison. She was the second wife of Francis second Earl of Bedford and died without issue by him in January 1600. The interest she manifests about the Lord Deputy of Ire land, Arthur Lord Grey of Wilton, is explained by his » Additional MSS. 15891, f, 77", 272 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. having married her daughter, Jane Sybilla Morison, widow of her step-son, Edward Lord KusseU, the son and heir-apparent of the Earl of Bedford, by his first wife Margaret, daughter of Sir John St. John of Bletshoe; — ANNE COUNTESS OF BEDFORD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Cousin, I have by many experiences approved that such is the nature of envy as it ceaseth not by aU endeavours to darken the worthy actions and services of those that have dutifully and faithfully with their great perils and exceeding toil performed all good offices in their callings, and in those affairs wherein they were eraployed for their Prince and Country. And therefore, though my conscience persuadeth rae that ray Lord Grey hath by his travails in Ireland done as well, and governed those parts as painfully, carefully, and justly as any raan that ever exercised that place before hira ; yet, I fear rae there hath not wanted sorae such as have ex tenuated his Lordship's good services : for this cause I could not but earnestly recoraraend unto you the preservation of his Lordship's weU-deserved honour and credit with her Ma jesty against such as have, or may seek to irapair the same. I am loath often to trouble any of my best friends (in which number I reckon yourself) ; but, when I have cause, I make full account they will not be slack to further such reasonable requests as I make unto thera : and both the party, (who par ticularly is very dear unto me,) and the matter, assureth rae of your best favour herein towards the one and the other ; and though I be not ignorant of your special affection to his Lordship, many ways witnessed by your friendship, neverthe less I might not be satisfied unless I had said soraewhat for hira : neither could I bethink or raake choice of any to whora to write, that for both our sakes would be raore wilUng to yield furtherance to all his Lordship's actions than yourself. And so I pray God to increase in you all true honour and happiness. 1st October 1582. Your assured friend.* » Additional MSS. 15891, f . 97. ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 273 No clue exists to the name of the writer, nor to the subject of the foUowing letter : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have briefly set down, as you raay see in this paper herein inclosed, the state of the note which I gave you intelli gence of at ray last being in Court ; wherein, considering the great conscience and reason that the case carrieth with it, in all appearance there raay easily sorae good be obtained in my poor opinion. But if it should happen otherwise, and that the success should not.faU out to be so fortunate, either in this or in any thing else that I should give you notice of, as I would wish for, yet I hope that of your wonted noble mind and great vrisdom you vrill not make it ray fault, nor raeasure ray good raeaning and faithful heart by any unhappy event, rauch less by any undeserved gall that fortune raay raingle with your honourable actions, whom I know to be far more wise to judge, and better able to compass, than I ara or ever shall be ; assuring you, that if either weU wishing, or a poor raan's earnest devout prayer raight do you serrice, your noble heart (that hath so often wrought ray good) should never fail of that which it raost desireth. Whom I corarait to God's pro ridence. 3rd October 1582. Your Honour's raost bound.' The name of Theodore Beza, one of the most cele brated of the Beformers of Germany, is weU known. When the following letter to Hatton, requesting aid from England, was written, Beza was Chief of the College at Geneva, founded by Calvin. Theodore Beza. Gratiam et Pacem a Domino. GuoD ipsa necessitas, tentare nos cogit, minirae taraen audereraus, nisi nobis ad te illustrissirae Doraine aditum " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 97". 274 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. patefaceret iUa singularis tua, sermonibus omnium celebrata, humanitas; qua non tuse tantum gentis horaines sed etiam peregrines, et procul natos comiter excipere atque adeo labo- rantes sublevare consueristi ; facile igitur ut spero excusa- tionem apud te, hsec audatia nostra inveniet. Quod autem, cogente suraraa necessitate petimus partira ex ipso hujus reipublicse legato nisi raolestura est cognoscere, te veUra ; par tira etiam, iUustri tuae amplitudini brevibus exponara. Ve teres Sabaudicie doraus, cum hae civitate, intra ipsius di- tionera sitse, iniraicitias quales nimirum Philippus cum Atheniensibus et reUquis Graecise civitatibus, tantisper ex ercuit dum illarum libertatem opprimeret, juvenis hie prin ceps, quorundam conciliis usus, violatis pactis quae pater ipsius nobiscum adhibito jurejurando, sanciverat, renovavit, nobis proditione priraum multiplici, tentatis, raox etiara aperta vi aetate superiori, irapetitis, proditiones dominus adrai- rabili prorsus ratione patefecit, et sapientissirai raagistratus raanu rindicavit. Vira illatam, patientia fregiraus ; civitatera communire contenti et praesidium intra urbera continere tan tisper dum copias justas, partim ex Helvetiis quorura ille taraen partera sibi conciUarat, partira ex GaUicis ecclesiis colUgereraus : Ecce vero, cum jam jam, ad irruptionem, una cum sociis Bernensibus faciendam parati essemus, factura est Helveticarum septem civitatum interventu, ut data utrim- que fide, futurura est (quod unura seraper cupiriraus) omnes controversiae jure, non vi, coram Helvetiorum concessu, deci- dantur arraa deponerentur. Et hie quidera est, presens nos- trarura status quo nihil sane optabilius contingere nobis po tuit, si raodo convenire de sessuris minirae suspectis judici bus inter nos possit ; qua de re hoc ipso terapore apud Ther- mopilas, Helveticas disceptatiir. Sed dura, quod sit hostium ingenium, quod sit verum illorum consilium, consideraraus Tridentini videUcet conciUabuU executionera in his regioni bus a ciritatis Genevensis hae deinceps quatuor EvangeU- carum Helvetiae civitatum oppressione, Sabaudicarum licet vix spetiera preferentiura, controversiarura, prae- textu quid aliud, nisi longe quara ' tates » Sic. ^t. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 275 possimus expectare. Ne dum. Ut quicquam sermi possi mus ex ista juridicae cognitionis simulatione, quam ab hoste necessitas extorsit poUiceri : ad hoc malum accedit et aliud, quod videUcet ita jam sit exhaustura hujus reipublicas asra- riura quae pubUcum longe, maxima ex parte, proventum, con sueverat ecclesise impendere ut nisi aUunde fulciatur coactura sit iUara necessitas maximo cura pluriraarura ecclesiarura detriraento curara iUam si non totam abjicere (absit enira illud) taraen non minima ex parte, abrumpere, quod sese nimirum tutari et tantis in res illas, sumptibus, sufficere non possit. Haec sunt Ulustrissirae mi Domine, quse nos cogunt, tam pro cul subsidium aUquod ab his petere, quorum pietatem et cari tatem sciraus nunquam afflictis piis desuisse. A vobis in quam Anglis quibus cura nobis peculiaris quaedara veteris hospitu necessitudo intercedit, petitione nostra ut spe ramus, licet in verecunda tamen propter periculi saltem magnitudinera facile excusationis locum inventura. Bene vale iUustrissimo rai Domine. Dominus Jesus Deus et Servator iUe noster exaudit suorum gemitibus, rabiera Sa- tana3 coerceat, suas ecclesias adversus exteros et doraesticos omnes hostes quam diutissime tueatur. Genevse, decirao Octobris 1582. AmpUtudini tuae addictissimus, Theodorus Beza. Post. — Oro te mi domine, ut quod aliena raanu ad te scri- bam, tremulae meae vacciUationi tribuas.* The annexed mysterious letter from Sir Thomas Heneage to Hatton may, with the assistance of two mar ginal notes, — the one stating that by " water " Sir Walter Ealeigh was indicated, and the other, that the Queen sometimes called Hatton her "bell-wether," and "pecora campi," — be fully explained. It appears that Hatton, jealous of being superseded in the Queen's favour by Ealeigh, had sent her a letter expressing his fears on the ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 113", T 2 276 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582, subject, accompanied by three " tokens," namely, a di minutive bucket, (typical ofhis rival,) a bodkin, and a book. These were committed to Heneage to deliver to the Queen, who found her going into the park to kill a doe. Expecting that Ealeigh would soon approach, Heneage immediately presented the tokens and letter. On seeing the bucket she perfectly understood its import, and ex claimed "There never was such another!" Elizabeth then tried to place the bodkin in her hair, but failing, gave it back, with the letter unread, to Heneage. After walking a little distance, the Queen asked for the letter, which she perused "with blushing cheeks," and said many things, as if doubtful "whether she should be angry or well-pleased;" but she at last expressed "her settled opinion of the fidelity and fastness of his affection, and her determination always to give him good cause not to doubt her favour." Heneage was then commanded to inform Hatton that she was so iU pleased with his letter, that she had little desire to look at his tokens ; that Princes should be like Gods, and suffer no element so to abound as to breed confusion, meaning that Ealeigh's influence would have no undue effect; that ^'pecora campi was so dear to her that she had bounded her banks so sure as no water or floods could overflow them," i. p. that she loved him too firmly for Ealeigh to super sede him in her regard : and to prove that he need not fear " drowning," she sent him a dove, " the bird that, together with the rainbow, brought the good tidings and the covenant that there should be no more destruction by water." She moreover bids him remember how dear her "sheep " was to her, and sends Mr. Killigrew speci aUy to carry this token and Heneage's letter to him, with directions to bring her word how he did : — ^t. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 277 SIR THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your knowledge of my love shall suffice, I trust, to satisfy you of my best endeavour to do that which may best content you. I received your letters, with your token toher Majesty, before ten of the clock this morning, which I carried \ up iraraediately to her Highness, then ready to ride abroad to \ kill a doe in the parrock of the great park ; and desiring to furnish her Majesty with the bucket, because I thought (as it happened) water should be so nigh her as soon as she carae out of her drawing chamber, I presented her withal to gether with the letter you vyrote, which she took in her hand, and smiUng said ' there was never such another.' And seek ing to put the bodkin in her head, where it could not well abide, she gave it me again, and the letter withal ; which when she came into the standing in the parrock she took of me and read, and with blushing cheeks uttered many speeches (which I refer tillT see you), the most of thera tending to the dis covery of a doubtful raind, whether she should be angry or well pleased ; in the end showing upon conference her settled opinion of the fidelity and fastness of your affection, and her determination ever to give you good cause nothing to doubt her favour. That which I was willed to write unto you is this : that she Uked your preamble so ill, as she had little list to look on the bucket or the book ; and that if Princes were Uke Gods, (as they should be,) they would suffer no element so to abound as to breed confusion. And that pecora campi was so dear unto her that she had bounded her banks so sure as no water nor fioods could be able ever to overthrow them. And, for better assurance unto you that you should fear no drowning, she hath sent you a bird, that (together vrith the rainbow) brought the good tidings and the covenant that there should be no more destruction by water. And further she wUled rae to send you word, with her coraraendations, , that you should reraeraber she was a Shepherd, and then you I might think how dear her Sheep was unto her. This was all ! that I was wiUed to write, which she comraanded rae with her 278 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. token to deUver to Mr. Killigrew, whom she meant to send to bring her word how you did. Since you went, her Majesty hath had very sharp disposition, as it appeared to Sir Thomas Leighton and my Lady Tallboys. Yesterday all the after noon Stanhope was drawn in tb be with her in private, and the Ladies shut out of the Privy chamber. To conclude, water hath been more welcorae than were fit for so cold a season. But so her Majesty find no hurt by it, I care the less, for I trust it shall make neither me nor my friend wet- shod : with which hope I commend me whoUy to your taking pity of Jacques' long and late journey. Frora the Court, has tily, this 25th of October 1582. Your own so bound ever, Thomas Heneage.* Dr. Mathew, and his suit about the Deanery of Dur ham, again appear in November of this year : — DOCTOR MATHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Mr. Cox, For your direct and loving letter in answer to mine I ara far in your debt. But, under the reforraation of his Honour, I think it wiU not appear by any note of my hand that ever I meant to withdraw ray suit for Durham. Only it may seera how great lack I should sustain by depend ence of the suit tUl Michaelraas was past, whereby the former years' fruits must grow rather to the Residentiaries of that Church than to the next Dean, and so he be the less able a good while after to keep that hospitaUty which would be ex pected. Howbeit, since a man cannot have as he would, I would as I can. It may please you to peruse my note again, if it be kept. I dare assure you it will be found none other in effect than I have now declared, for it were hard I should write that I never thought. But now that Mr. Vice- Chamberlain resteth already, by your good persuasion, satis fied in the point, and signifieth unto rae byyou the full con tinuance with increase of his honourable disposition to ray preferraent unto that place before all other, with a careful * Additional MSS, 16891, f, 97". MT. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 279 regard to be mindful of so poor man, I beseech you, Sir, do me this favour to return his Honour, with ray bounden duty, most humble thanks, and re-assure hira in your best and truest manner you can possible, that as my good success hath and doeth depend upon his favour in the furtherance thereof, so shall I never omit any occasion to do his Honour all duty and service. To yourself, for the pain you take therein to do me this pleasure, I shall be raore and more beholden, and accordingly bounden to requite your friendship. And so, waiting a good hour, not of death yet, but of despatch at last, I most heartily recommend you, as my very self, to the grace of God. Sarum, 2 Novembris 1582. Your assured loring friend, Tobie Mathew.* On the 7th of November 1582, Lord Burghley lost his son-in-law, Mr. WiUiam Wentworth, eldest son of Lord Wentworth, who had married Elizabeth Cecil, Queen Elizabeth's god-daughter;'' and it is to this event that Sir Francis Walsingham alludes in the fol lowing letter. Burghley's other son-in-law, the Earl of Oxford, had for some time been in disgrace; and this was thought a favourable opportunity to move the Queen to restore him to her favour : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, At my arrival at ray poor cottage, I met vrith this woeful letter, and because I cannot perform his request of excuse touching his lady, nor repair to Hertford, by reason of my absence frora Court, I have thought good to lay the burden upon you. It would be sorae corafort to his Lady, if it raight please you so to work with her Majesty as his other son-in-law, that hath long dwelt in her Majesty's dis pleasure, might be restored to her Highness' good favour. I leave this to your best consideration. Besides my particular ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 26". * Murdin's State Papers, pp. 746, 765, 756. 280 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. grief for the loss of that virtuous young gentleman, I am sorry, for her Majesty and the Realra's sake, that so towardly a member should be taken away. 7th November 1582. Your raost assured friend, Fra. Walsingham.* The foUowing are Hatton's letter of consolation to Lord Burghley on Mr. Wentworth's death, and his Lord ship's reply : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO LORD BURGHLEY. My SINGULAR GOOD LoRD, Her Majesty standeth so rauch moved with your sorrowful letters, as she findeth herself more fit to accompany you in your grief than to corafort you in this your irrecoverable loss. Your Lordship so well and hoUly instructed in God's fear, and so weU exercised with the mutable accidents of this wretched world, will caU reason to your reUef, with thankfulness that God the Creator of us all hath called this His virtuous and zealous creature to the par ticipation of His heavenly inheritance. We should lack of duty towards our Redeemer in resisting His will, and show a kind of envy in laraenting his raost glorious exchange out of a frail and sinful life to an everlasting mansion and Heaven of joys. My good Lord, cast off this woe ; let it not touch your heart, in which the wisdora of this world and state hath found her seat for raany years, to God's glory, the Realm's safety, and your raortal renown. Her Majesty sendeth youi good noble friend, Mr. Minors, to you, who vrill raore largely irapart her pleasure unto you; and so, with ray hurable prayers to God for your long Ufe and comfortable being, I most humbly take my leave. In haste, this 8th day of No vember 1582. Your good Lordship's raost bound poor friend, Chr, Hatton.'' lord burghley to sir christopher hatton. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I have great cause to thank you for your letter, full of good counsel and godly adrice, "Additional MSS. 15891. " Autograph in the Lansdowne MS. 36, art. 7. MT. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 281 which God give me grace to follow, knowing it necessary for me to obey His vrill in all things ; but yet a hard lesson for flesh to learn, and herein my case differeth from all others. For though I know I ought to thank you, yet, contrai-ywise to all other causes that require thanks, which are given with joy frora the heart, in this I cannot but sprinkle ray thanks with tears and sobbings ; and yet frora my heart. I will not defend my passions, but beseech God to be my comfort, as in some part I feel thereof, by the comfortable messages sent to me and mine by His principal minister, my Sovereign sweet Lady the Queen's Majesty, whom I pray God to preserve from all grief of mind and body, whereby her poor people may long enjoy her, as a mother and a nurse of general peace, both worldly and heavenly, by the free teaching of God's will out of His holy word. And so abruptly I end, without end of quietness. And truly, Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I do not lament so much the loss of a son-in-law, (which was very good,) but of a virtuous gentleman, in whom I took so great delight as now my grief is the more increased. From my poor house at Theobalds, the 9th of November 1582. Yours and yours, Wm. Burghley.* The two foUowing letters do not require any re marks : — WRITER unknown, TO MR. SAMUEL COX. If you were as careful to perforra as you are ready to proraise, you had long ere this tirae tasted of our sweet and pleasant air ; and your poor friends here had enjoyed your corapany, which they have so often wished for. Seeing it will not please you to corae upon the motion of your own desire, do rae the favour, I pray you, to corae at my entieaty ; and so shaU you make me the more beholding unto you, in respect that you have done me this pleasure, to take this pains rather to satisfy my contentment than your own hking, especially in a time when your coming can yield you no other delight than the only sight and hearty entertainment that » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 26", 282 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. your faithful true friend can give you, whose corafort shall be greatly increased by your presence. Let rae put you in mind, therefore, as I have done often, to be careful of your promise, and endeavour somewhat, as you may, to answer ray expec tation, and to satisfy the debt which you owe rae in respect of the love I bear you ; othervrise you shaU make me chal lenge the coraraendation of courtesy and good-will before you, which neither my desert can in truth attain unto, nor your gentleness and vrisdom suffer without apparent note of injury. If you will make me worthy of this favour, then, to increase my debt, let me intreat you to bring your brother vrith you. So shall I acknowledge rayself doubly beholding unto you, first for your own coraing, and then for his cora pany, unto whora I wish all happiness, as I do to you the fortunate supply of all your desires. Frora the Court at Windsor, the 20th of Noveraber 1582. Your assured friend.* SIR THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My dear and most honourable Knight, Your letters declaring your noble kindness and reraembrance of me, together with the notice of her Majesty's but once thinking graciously of so poor a raan as rayself, doth bring especial corafort unto me, that otherwise, in this unthankful and for getful age, should be very little displeased to be both forgot ten and contemned, which the high and great minds of the world so much scorn and hate. Yet this sarae base conterapt and vrithdrawn Ufe is found full oft to be no unsafe shadow frora very great displeasures, which the pride and disdain that accorapanieth praise, and the business of much action and greatness of place, doth bring unto men. And sure. Sir, this earthly raind of ours, entangled with pleasures which all flesh delights in, and entrapped with great hopes of honour and praise which the best wits are caught with, can seldora have leisure to look into itself, rauch less up to Heaven, whither till he come, none can be happy. Then, to miss our desires, to fail in our expectations, to be forgotten of our » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 98". ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 283 friends, to be left of the world, and so to be carried home to look up to God, what loss is in this reckoning ? And if it be, as it is said, that the way to Heaven is rather upon crosses than carpets, what cross can be so light as this, (both vrithout shame or pain,) not to be cared for, specially when we see that God, of His unspeakable goodness, is most ready to take thera to His favour and care that the world hath cast off, yea, and that care not for themselves ? But whither run I out of Seneca's school, where I leam, ' to speak well is easy, to do well is hard, but to be well is happy,' which God grant you long on earth vrith honour, and at last in Heaven with glory. From CopthaU, 26th November 1582. Your own ever bound, &c. T. Heneage.* Were it not the plan of this work to give the whole contents of Sir Christopher Hatton's " Letter Book," the fact that the foUowing memorable remonstrance of Mary Queen of Scots has been often published, as well in the original French as translations, together with its great length, might have made it doubtful whether it should be now reprinted, even though this is a contemporary ti-anslation, and differs from all the others. But no one, who peruses this beautiful letter, could wish it excluded from any coUection in which it once found a place. Its touching eloquence; its solemn admonitions; its pathetic description of the feelings of an imprisoned Queen de barred from her rights, and of the yearnings of a mother for her only son ; its imperative demand for justice; its bold, if not convincing, assertion of inno cence, and its burning reflections upon her oppressor, impart to this document an interest which it is as im possible to describe as to exaggerate •} — " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 29. vii. f. 54. An abstract was printed " The original letter is preserved by Camden, in his "Annals of Queen in the Cottonian MSS. Caligula C. Elizabeth," and it is given at length 284 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. MARY queen of SCOTS TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. Madam, Upon the intelligence I have received of the late conspiracies executed in Scotland upon my poor son, and being occasioned to fear the consequence thereof by mine own example, it behoveth me to employ that small part of ray Ufe and power that I have reraaining, in disburthening my heart, before I die, of my just and lamentable complaints ; whereof my desire is, that this ray letter raay remain unto you, as long as you live after my death, as a perpetual wit ness and imprinted seal in your conscience, as well for my discharge to all posterity, as to the shame and confusion of all thera that by your privity have so cruelly and unworthily intreated me unto this day, and brought me to that ex tremity where now I am. But because their purposes, prac tices, actions, and proceedings, how detestable soever they were, did always prevail with you against ray most just defences and sincere behariour; and because the power which you have in your own hands hath carried away cre dit amongst men, I will have recourse to the living God, our only Judge, who hath equally and immediately esta bUshed us under Him over His people to govern them. I wiU call upon Him in this extremity of ray raost urgent afflictions to render to you and me, as He will do in the Last Day, the portion of our raerits and deserts, the one as well as the other. And remeraber, Madara, that no raasks, nor paintings, nor policies of this world will help us before Hira ; though raine enemies under you raay for a season cover their subtle and raahcious inventions and godless sleights from the eyes of men, and peradventure frora yours. In His narae, therefore, and as before Hira sitting as Judge betwixt us both, I will call unto your reraembrance, first, how by the agents, spies, and secret messengers sent under in Adam Blackv^'ood's " Martyre de tion, in Miss Strickland's "Letters of Marie Stuart, Reyne d'Escosse." It Queen Mary," and in some other is in Jebb and Whitaker, and of viforks. course in Princc Labanoff's collec- .ET. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 285 your narae into Scotland whilst I was tiiere, ray Subjects were corrupted, practised withal, and stirred up to rebellion against me to seek the destruction of my person ; and, to be short, to do, enterprise, and execute all that was done in that country during the troubles: whereof I will raake no particular recital more than of that which I drew out by the confession of one of them that was most advanced afterwards in respect of that his good service, and by vrit nesses brought face to face unto hira, whom if I had at that time executed, as in justice I should have done, he had not afterwards by means of his old intelUgences renewed the seU-sarae practices against my son, neither had he been a mediator unto you for my traitorous and rebeUious Subjects for aid and support to be yielded thera from hence, as they had ever since my imprisonment here ; without which sup port I think the said traitors could not have prevailed then, nor afterwards have made their part good so long as they did. During ray imprisonment at Lochleven, Throck morton, that dead is, counseUed me in your name to sign this release, which he told me should be offered rae, assur ing rae that it would not be good. And since that time there is no place in all Christendom where it hath been so reputed and taken, but only here, where the authors of it have been assisted with open force. In conscience. Madam, would you acknowledge such like Uberty and power in your Subjects? And yet, notwithstandrag, my autbority hath been by my Subjects cast upon my son at these years when he was not able to execute it; and since, when I would have established him lawfully in it, being of age to help himself for his own good, it was upon a sudden plucked out of his hands, and given to two or three traitors that have aheady taken away the effect of it, and will in fine take away the narae and title, as they have done from me, if he gainsay them never so little; yea, and his hfe too, if God be not watchful to preserve him. And as soon as I had escaped out of Lochleven, and was ready to give ray rebels battle, I sent unto you by an express gentleman a 286 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. diaraond which before you had sent me for a token, and to assure me that you would aid rae against ray rebels ; and, that raore is, in case I would withdraw rayself frora thence, you would corae to the borders to_ assist me in person: and this was confirmed unto me by divers other raessengers. This proraise coming frora your ovni mouth, and often re peated, (though I had been oftentimes abused by your Ministers,) caused rae to put such trust in the effect thereof as that, when my carap was broken, I came straight to cast myself into your arms, if I might have come unto you as well as my rebels did. But, as I purposed to repair unto you, I was taken by the way, and deUvered up to a guard, and shut up in divers castles, and, in fine, brought past all shame into that captivity wherein I stand at this day, languishing with the sufferance of a thousand deaths. I know you will object against me the raatter that passed between the Duke of Norfolk, that dead is, and me. But I vrill stand in it and make it good, that there was nothing done therein to your prejudice, nor against the good estate of this Realra. And the treaty was first allowed of by the advice and seals, yet extant, of the chiefest that were then of your Council, assuring us that they would procure your favour and good liking to it. How durst such personages enterprise to have made you consent to the taking away of your life, honour, and crown ? for so you make serablance, to all Arabassadors and others that talk with you of rae, that you are persuaded. In the raean season, (ray rebels perceiving that their outrageous headiness carried them fur ther than they purposed, and the truth of those slanders that they spread of rae appearing to the world by that conference whereunto I submitted myself voluntarily in this country to discharge myself pubUcly in the full assembly of your deputies and raine,) behold the chiefest araong them, being now reclaimed and sorry for their former error, pur sued by your forces, and besieged in the castle of Edin burgh, with others that held with me ; and one of the chiefest amongst them imprisoned ; another, less guilty than .ET. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 287 any, most cruelly hanged ; after that I had twice caused them to disarm themselves at your request, upon assurance of accord and agreement, which God knoweth whether ray enemies ever meant. I resolved a long tirae by experience to try if patience would amend the rigour and iU entreaty which had been used towards me, especially the space of ten years, conforming rayself exactly to the order that was prescribed me for ray captivity in this house, as well in respect of the nuraber and quality of ray servants which I keep, having disraissed the other, as for my diet and neces sary exercise for my health. I have lived hitherto more peaceably and quietly than any one of much baser quality than I am, and more bound than by such entreaty I ought to be, forbearing to make request to have any inteUigence vrith my son and Country, and only because I would minister no occasion of suspicion or mistrust unto you ; a raatter that by no right or reason could be denied rae, especially against my son, who against reason and nature was by all means possible persuaded against rae, to the end that by our division we might be weakened. But you will say that I was hcensed to visit him above three years ago: his captirity at that time, under the tyranny of Morton, was the cause of it, as his liberty since was of your re fusal to give rae leave to visit hira in Uke sort all this year past. I did oftentimes make motions for an esta blishment of good amity betwixt us, and a sure intelli gence betwixt these two Realms for the time to come. At Chatsworth, about eleven years since, there were certain Commissioners sent unto me for that purpose. The raat ter was dealt in with yourself by the Arabassadors of France and mine. I myself, the last winter, offered by Beale as large conditions as possibly I could. And what is come of it? — My good meaning despised; the sincerity of my behaviour neglected and misreported; the state of ray business thwarted by delays, surraises, and such other sleights ; and, to be short, worse and more unworthy usage from day to day, whatsoever I could do to deserve the 288 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582, contrary: my too long unprofitable and- hurtful patience having brought me to this point, that mine enemies, through their wonted custom to do me iU, may now by right of pre scription use me, not as prisoner, (as in reason I ought not to be,) but as a slave, whose Ufe and death, without all respect either of God's lavvs or of man's, dependeth" upon their only tyrants. I cannot suffer it any longer, Madara, but raust needs, being in way of death, discover the causes of ray death ; or if I Uve, as God shall give me any longer respite, assay under your protection to extinguish by what means soever the cruelty, slanderous reports, and traitorous purposes of my foresaid eneraies, to the end I raay purchase rayself sorae Uttle better rest for the sraall tirae I have to live. And therefore, first of all, to clear the pretended occasions of aU differents that are betvrixt us, rip up and unfold, I beseech you, if you please, whatsoever hath been reported unto you of my behaviour towards you, cause the depositions of the strangers taken in Ireland to be. perused, let the examinations of the Jesuits lately executed be laid open before you, give all men liberty that will to charge me openly, and suffer me likevrise to answer for myself. If I be found guilty, let rae suffer for it ; which I shall more patiently abide when I know the occasion. If I be guiltless, cloak it not any longer ; and suffer me not to be so eril recompensed any more, to your great burthen both before God and raan. The vilest raalefactors that are in your prisons, and born under your obedience, are brought to their trial; and their accusers, and raatters wherewith they are charged, always brought before thera. And why cannot I, in like order, be proceeded with ; being a Sove reign Queen, nearest of your blood, and your lawful heir ? I think that this last quality hath been hitherto the prin cipal cause of mine enemies, and of all the slanderous speeches that have been cast out of me, to the end to set us at variance and to cover their unjust pretences withal. But alas, they have now sraall reason and less need to torment rae any longer in this respect ; for I protest unto ^T. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 289 you upon my honour, that, at this day, I look for no other Kingdom but the Kingdom of my God, which I see pre pared for me, for the better end of all my afflictions and adversities by-past. It shall behove you to discharge your conscience towards ray son for that in this behalf shall belong to hira after ray death ; and in the raean season not to suffer the continual practices and secret drifts, which our eneraies in this Reahn daily go about for the advance ment of their pretensions, to prevail to his prejudice, labour ing on the other side with our traitorous Subjects in Scot land by aU the raeans they can to hasten his ruin. Where of I require no better proof than the charge given by your late Ministers and Deputies sent into Scotland, and that they have treated and seditiou.sly practised there, vrithout your privity as I will beUeve, but with good and earnest solicitation of the Earl my good neighbour of York. And to this purpose, Madara, by what law can it be maintained and made good, that I, a mother, should utterly be forbid den, not only to help ray son in this so extreme necessity wherein he is, but also to be made acquainted vrith his state ? Who can be raore dutifully and sincerely careful for hira than I ? Who can be raore near him than I ? At the -least, if by sending to him to provide for his safety, as the Earl of Shrewsbury gave me to understand of late frora you, it had pleased you to have received therein ray advice, you might vrith better occasion, rae thinketh, and with greater bond of ray part, have dealt in the raatter. But consider what you have given rae occasion to think, when, upon such a sudden forgetting of the offence that you pretend against my son, even then, when I prayed you that we might send to him together, you despatched a raessenger to hira where he was prisoner, not only not raaking rae privy to it, but also restraining me at the same time from all Uberty, to the end I raight in no sort have any news of him. But if their meaning which persuaded you thus suddenly to visit my son, was for the preservation of the quiet state of that Country, they needed not to have been so careful to have kept it secret U 290 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582, from me, as though it had been a matter wherein I would not have concurred with hira ; and they have caused you to lose the thanks that I would in that behalf have given you. And, to speak raore plainly unto you, I pray you, use no raore such raeans nor persons. For although I make this ac count of Sir George Carey, in respect of the place whence he coraeth, that he vrill not engage his honour in any vil lainous act, yet had he an assistant, a sworn partisan of the Earl of Huntingdon, by whose iU-offices so wicked an account could not but bring forth answerable effect. So that this only shaU suffice rae, that you would not suffer my son to re ceive any hurt out of this Country, (which was all that I ever required of you heretofore, especially at such time as an army was sent to the frontiers to stay justice that was executed upon that detestable Morton,) nor that any of your Subjects either directly or indirectly do meddle with the affairs of Scotland without my privity, to whora only the authority of those raatters belongeth, or vrithout the assistance of some one from the French King, my good brother, whom, as our principal confederate, I desire to make partaker of all this cause, notwithstanding the small credit that happily he hath with the traitors that at this present have ray son in prison amongst thera. In the raean season, I teU you plainly that I esteem and account this last conspiracy and innovation as mere treason against the life of my son, the good estate of his affairs and of his Country ; and that, as long as he shall re main in this estate, (whereof you are privy,) I vrill never repute and take any word, writing, or any other act that cometh frora hira or passeth under his name, to proceed from his free and voluntary disposition, but only frora the foresaid conspirators, who, with the hazard of his life, raake their profit of him to serve their own turns. But, Madam, besides all this Uberty of speech, which I foresee may haply displease you in some part, although it be nothing but a truth; you will take, I am sure, raore strange that I corae to iraportune you with a request rauch raore iraportant, but yet very easy for you to grant, and this it is : that whereas I could not ^T. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 291 hitherunto, by accomraodating rayself patiently so long a time to the rigorous entertainment of this captivity, and car rying myself raost sincerely in all things, even to the least, that raight any ways concern you, purchase myself any assur ance of your good favour towards me, nor give you any of my sincere affection towards you, whereby I am out of all hope to be anything better used the rest of the small time I have to live; it would therefore please you for the honour of the painful passion of our Saviour and Redeemer, Jesus Christ, to give rae leave to withdraw rayself out of this Kingdora into sorae place of rest, where I may seek some corafort for my poor body so rauch torraented with continual grief, and with liberty of ray conscience prepare rayself to God who daily calleth for it. BeUeve rae. Madam, (as the physicians also which you sent rae the last suraraer be of Uke opinion,) I am not like to Uve long, so that you can have no just ground of any jealousy or distrust on ray part, and yet, notvrithstanding, take of rae such assurances, and condi tions so just and reasonable, as you shall please, which you may enforce rae always to keep by reason of the great ability and power you have, though I would not break thera for any thing in the world. You have sufficient experience of the keeping of ray simple promises, though sometiraes pre judicial to me, as in this behalf I showed you about two years since. It may please you to remember what I wrote unto you at that time, how that you could by no means, save only by gentleness and by a mild course, bind my heart firmly unto you, though you would confine my poor languishing body for ever between two waUs ; considering that those of my quality and nature cannot be forced by any rigour. Your wrongful prisons, void of aU rightful ground, have already de stroyed ray body, which you cannot but shortly see brought to an end in case you continue it there but a little longer, and raine eneraies shall not have rauch tirae to satisfy their cruelties upon ,me. I have nothing but the soul left, which cannot be captivate by any power you have. Give it leave, therefore, freely to breathe a little after -her safety, which she TI 2 292 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582 only seeketh at this day raore than all worldly honours. Me thinketh it should be no great satisfaction and advantage unto you to have raine eneraies tread ray life under their feet, and to stifle rae before your eyes ; whereas, if in this ex tremity, though too late, you have delivered rae out of their hands, you should raake rae greatly beholding to you, and all that belong unto rae, and especially ray son, whora peradven ture by this raeans you might raake assured to you. I will not cease to raake this request unto you continually until you have granted it rae. And, therefore, I pray you that I may understand your pleasure herein ; haring for your better satisfaction attended this two years' space until this day, and forborne to refresh the same, whereunto the miserable estate of my health presseth rae raore than you can conceive. In the mean season provide, I beseech you, that my entertain raent here may be amended, which I can no longer bear ; and put me not oft" to the discretion of any other but to your own, to whom alone, as I wrote of late unto you, I vrill hence forward take myself beholding, and impute the good or evil that I shall receive in this Country. Do rae this favour, that I raay have your pleasure in writing, or the Arabas sador of France for rae ; for to trust to that that the Earl of Shrewsbury, or any other, shall say or write to rae in your behalf, I find by experience it will be no assurance for me : the least occasion in the world that they can devise will be sufficient to alter the whole between this night and to-morrow in the raorning. Moreover and besides, when I wrote last to your Council, you willed rae that I should not refer myself to them, but to you only. And, therefore, to extend their credit and authority only to do me hurt, it were no reason ; as it fell out in this ray last restraint, where, against your raeaning, I was too unworthily used. Which thing causeth rae to doubt lest that sorae of raine eneraies in your Council have an eye to beware and take heed that other of your Council be not partakers of my just com plaints, seeing haply that some of their corapanions like not of their wicked atterapts against ray life, or, in case that they .ET. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 293 should corae to the knowledge of thera, they would oppose theraselves both for your honour and for their duty towards you. Two things, in fine, I ara principally to require of you : the first, that, as I am ready to depart out of this world, I may have with rae for my corafort sorae honourable church man daily, to put me in raind of the way that I am to raake an end of, and to instruct rae to finish it according to my religion, wherein I ara resolutely bent both to live and to die. This is the last duty, that cannot be denied to the veriest caitiff that goeth upon the earth. It is a liberty that you give to all Ambassadors of foreign nations, as in Uke sort all Princes catholic do give to yours, — exercise of their religion ; — and I myself never forced my own Subjects to do anything contrary to their religion, although 1 had Sovereign authority over them. And if I should in this extreraity be deprived of this liberty, — you cannot justly do it, (and what should it profit you to deny it me ?) — I hope that God will excuse me, if, being oppressed in this sort by you, I render him that duty in heart which is only left me. But you shaU give a very ill example to other Princes of Christendom to use the Uke rigour towards their Subjects as you use towards me, being a Sovereign Princess and the next of your blood, as I ara and vrill be as long as I live, in despite of aU mine enemies. I will not be troublesorae unto you at this present for the increase of my household, which I shall not have so great need of during ray tirae I have to live here. I only pray you that I raay have two charaber- raaidens to help rae in ray sickness, assuring you that I could not be without thera if I were the poorest creature that goeth upon the earth. I beseech you grant rae so much even for God's sake, and that mine enemies may know that they have not so rauch credit about you against rae as to wreak their vengeance and cruelty in a matter of so small consequence, and depending upon a siraple office of humanity. I corae now to that wherewith the Earl of Shrewsbury did charge rae, to wit, that against ray promise made to Beale, and vvithout your privity, there hath been some dealing be- 294 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582- twixt my son and me to surrender to him my title of the Crown of Scotland, having bound rayself not to proceed therein without your advice and by one of ray servants, who was to be directed by one of yours, in whose corapany he was to go. These be the very words, if I be not deceived, of the said Earl. Touching this raatter, I will tell you, Madara, that Beale had never any siraple or absolute proraise of rae, but only certain conditions of raotions, which I ara not in anyvrise to be bound unto unless the conditions be first per forraed which I joined with thera. To which conditions I am so far from having received any satisfaction, that contrarywise I never had any answer to them, neither yet any mention of them from you. And to this effect I reraeraber very well, that when the said Earl of Shrewsbury, since Easter last, would have had me to confirm that that I said to Beale, I answered him plainly, that it was only upon condition that the said conditions should be granted rae, and thoroughly per forraed. They are yet both aUve to witness the truth of the matter, in case they will deliver the truth. Since that time, seeing I could receive no answer, and contrarywise that mine enemies did by delays and surmises continue, raore licenti ously than ever they did before, these practices, built from the time that Beale was with me, to traverse my good raean ing in Scotland, as by effects hath well appeared — that by these means the gate lay still open to the destruction of my son and me ; I took your silence for a denial, and discharged myself by express letters both to yourself and to your Coun cil of all that that had passed betwixt me and Beale. I ac quainted you with that that the King ray brother, and the Queen ray raother-in-law, wrote unto rae with their own hands touching this raatter, and plainly requested your ad vice, which is yet to come : by direction whereof, in truth, I raeant to have proceeded, if you had thought good to have let me known it in time ; and would have suffered me to have sent to my son, assisting rae with those motions which I had acquainted you withal for the establishing of a good amity and perfect intelligence in tirae to corae between these two ^T. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 295 Kingdoras. But to bind rayself barely to follow your advice before I knew what it would be, and to subrait ray rainister for the voyage to the direction of yours, especially within my own Country, I was never so simple as once to think of it. Now I will refer to your consideration, in case you have been acquainted with the false play that my enemies on this side have played in Scotland to bring their purposes to that pass they are at, whether of us two went the soundest way to work ? Let God be judge betwixt them and me, and turn from this Island the just punishraent for their deserts. Look over once again the advertisements that my traitorous Subjects of Scotiand may haply have sent you, you shall not find amongst them, — ^which I will raaintain before all Princes christian, — that there hath passed anything from me sounding to your prejudice or against the quiet estate of this Kingdora, which I affect as greatly as any Counsellor or Subject you have, having greater interest in it than any of thera. There was speech to gratify ray son vrith the title and narae of King, and to assure hira in that title, and the rebels of free pardon of their forraer offences, and to set all things in good quiet and peace for the time to corae, without any alteration or change of anything. And was this to take away the Crown frora ray son ? I think raine eneraies would not have him es tabhshed in it, and therefore are very well content that he should hold it by the unlawful violence of certain traitors, ancient eneraies to our whole race. And was this to seek to punish the forraer offences of the said traitors, which my clemency did always surraount? But an ill conscience can never be at rest, carrying always about with it fear and trouble. Was the seeking and procureraent of a ge neral reconciliation betvrixt our Subjects by a raerciful for getting of aU forraer things, a means and purpose to alter the quiet estate of the whole Country ? What prejudice had this been unto you ? Tell me, then, and let rae plainly understand, if you please, wherein you will have me answer upon my honour. Oh, Madarae, will you suffer yourself to be so rauch blinded with the cunning sleights of raine 296 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. enemies as to estabUsh after you, and 'peradventure against yourself, their unjust pretensions to this Crown ? Wil you suffer them vrittingly and willingly to ruinate and cruelly seek the destruction of thera that are so near you both in heart and blood? Can it ever be any honour to you, or profit, that by their raeans ray son and I should be separate so long the one frora the other, and we both from you ? Lay hold upon the old earnests and pledges of your good nature; bind your own unto you: give me this contentment before I die, that I may see sound good will and araity betvrixt us ; that, when ray soul shall depart from this body, it be not constrained to pour forth sighs and sobs to God for the wrong that you have suffered to be done us here on earth ; but contrarywise, departing in peace and concord vrith you out of this captivity, it may go to Him, whom I pray to inspire you aright with due compassion of my foresaid most just and more than reasonable coraplaints and grievances. At Sheffield, this 28th of Noveraber,^ 1 582. Your very disconsolate nearest relation and cousin, Marie R.*- Walsingham seems to have been more exposed to mis representation than any of his colleagues, possibly be cause it was well known that the Queen always disliked him: — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, In men's absence from Court envy oftentiraes doth work most malicious effects ; and therefore I am to pray you, as ray honourable good friend, to procure that I may enjoy the ordinary course of justice, not to be conderaned un heard. I trust there will be no fault found with ray absence, for that I see no use for the present of ray service. And, if '^ The date of this letter in the places, it is dated on the twenty- original is the eishth of November eighth of that month. 1582 ; but in Hatton's " Letter Book," and in Blackwood, and other " Additional MSS. 15891 f. 9, ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 297 there were, I hope as it hath not been hitherto, so shall it never be found that I shall prefer ray particular before the pubUc. This day the Earl of Leicester took ray poor house (where he dined) in his way to London ; where, as I gathered by him, he is to be occupied about the provision of New- year's gifts. He desireth, that, if there be any fault found with his absence in this present nakedness of your Court, you will excuse him. And so. Sir, praying you to have us both in your protection, I end. At Bam Elras, the 22nd of De ceraber 1582. Your assured friend to coraraand, Fra. Walsingham.* Sir Thomas Heneage's next letter relates to a similar proceeding, and contains the same allusions as those in his letter of the 25th of October. Still jealous of Ea leigh, Hatton intimated his feelings this time by a jewel or token, in the form of a " fish prison," instead of a " bucket;" on receiving which, with his letter, the Queen again expressed her preference of him to his rival, by the same silly conceits about " water," " fish," " flesh," and " sheep," as on the former occasion : — SIR THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, There is no office I raore willingly execute than to satisfy your desire, or. to testify unto you the service of ray best good-vrill. The fine fish prison, together with your let ter this bearer brought rae, I presented iraraediately to the delightful hands of her sacred Majesty, who read it, well pleased to see you a Uttle raised frora your sour huraour ; and hath willed rae to write unto you that the water, and the creatures therein, do content her nothing so well as you ween, her food haring been ever raore of flesh than of fish, and her opinion steadfast that fiesh is raore wholesorae ; and further, that if you think not pecora campi be raore cared for of her ^ Additional MSS, 15891, f. 37. 298 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. both abroad and at home, and raore contenting to her than any waterish creatures, such a beast is well worthy of being put in the pound. Besides, but for stirring choler in you, that for the raost part carrieth men too far, her Highness told me she would have returned to you your token; but worn it is vrith best acceptance. And to conclude : to please you and not to play with you, by her looks and words, which be no charms of guile, but the charters of truth, I am fully persuaded you are so sure of her blessed favour as raay cora fort your life, content your heart, and conclude you to be raost happy. In which estate God long hold you till He take you to Hiraself. Frora the Court, 29th of December 1582. Your own, whilst I am anything, T. Heneage.* Several undated and not very important letters occur in the "Letter Book," among those of this period; and, it being impossible to assign them to their exact places, they will be added to the correspondence of this year. As all the writers and the subjects of their letters, where material, have been before mentioned, no illustrations are necessary. DR. MATHEW TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, What furtherance I have found by your especial favour in my suit for the Deanery of Durhara, I shall never forget while I live, but ever acknowledge with all the thankfulness and service I may possibly show. Howbeit, as I have divers tiraes and divers ways been sounded so deeply, as some could reach to ray shaUow bottora, what assistance therein I have found at your hands ; so, the more curious they were to understand thereof, the more was I still fain and forced to suppress how singularly I have been bounden to your Honour, and thereupon constrained in sort (not without grief of raind and danger of your evil opinion) to withdraw rayself, both further than I would and longer » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 30, ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 299 than was meet, from presenting to your Honour my humble due thanks for your secret and assured favour. But such is your experience in this place, and your wisdom such in causes of weight, as, all circumstances considered, I trust you win make an honourable and favourable construction both of raine absence and of my silence : and give me leave withal to beseech your Honour, as well to continue her Ma jesty's resolution upon me, as also to further ray more speedy despatch, to my more credit here and ray less loss at Durhara; whence I ara credibly inforraed that raany things there (besides the governraent of the Church) go daily to rack; the raansion-houses decayed, the woods wasted, the garae spoiled, and the grounds unlet, but not uneaten, and as much havoc raade as raay be of aU that raight be benefi cial unto me. To this if the season be added, which now raore and raore hasteth on, as weU for carriages as for other prorisions necessary to be raade for the whole year ensuing, it raay partly raove her Majesty to the raore tender conside ration of the poor estate of her hurable servant, leaving be hind him all the Uving he hath, and departing so far off, as it were, into another world ; and although it may seera to savour of presuraption both to crave the benefit and to assign the time, yet verily. Sir, I am nothing so iraportune with your Honour to be gone, as many good men of that country and Church been earnest with me to be there, 'who suppose the delay rather to grow upon sorae slackness in rayself, than of any slowness in my good friends and honour able intercessors : among whom as I have to reckon you, Sir, for one of the chiefest of all in many respects ; so, might it please you to expedite the matter, as I know you may, I should uot only be double bounden unto you, both for ray happy success in the end and for ray good speed the while, but accordingly be both directed and commanded by your Honour, whom I thus humbly recoraraend to the grace of God. Your Honour's at comraandraent, hurable and bounden, Tobie Mathew." •Additional MSS 15891, f. 91". 300 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. DR. MATHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Sir, Although, either by your absence frora the Court or lack of leisure, I receive no news frora you of ray biU signed, yet, knowing how rauch you have steaded me therein from tirae to tirae, I cannot but reraeraber you with letter thanks untU I may see you at the Court, which I hope to do the end of the next week ; for by that tirae I hope to be delivered of an irapediraent I am letted withal, as this bearer raay better tell you than this ink and paper will well bear. The while, I pray you deliver these enclosed, and furnish out their defects with the supply of your accustoraed friendly words. And so, for this tirae, I raost heartily betake you to the grace of God. Your ever assured friend, Tobie Mathew." LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have read your letters of the 17th, by which you de clare her Majesty's gracious conceiving of the good service of her servant, Mr. Middleraore, to be such as she vouchsafeth hira the Searcher's office void by the death of Gray ; and to that end she willed you so to advertise rae, and therewith to let rae understand, that herein having (as your words are) partly encroached upon me to do her servant good, I shall find her Majesty, graciously willing to pleasure any man of mine to whora I intended the same. For answer to thus rauch, I know ray duty is to obey anything that her Majesty shaU coraraand, as well in any other thing as in this ; specially con sidering the disposition of this Office dependeth upon the Office which I hold but at her pleasure, and thereof I confess rayself unworthy for aU respects but for good-will, wherein I raay as a gnat corapare with a carael. True it is, that as ray predecessor disposed of this to a man of his own, so I had a raeaning to have done the like upon one that serveth under me, but not principally for rayself; and yet, now her Majesty " Additional MSS. 15891. ^T. 42.] SIR CHRISTOPHER H.\TTON. 301 knovring this my intention, minding it otherwise, I shall with draw ray own mind therein, and conform myself to her Ma jesty's pleasure, neither regarding the relief of ray servant that hath Uved long in expectation, nor yet any sraall scrupul ous point of ray own estiraation, not doubting of any raeaning in her Majesty hereby to diminish my poor credit. And, so to conclude, I will presently, as once already I have done, give strait charge to all the inferior Officers to have good regard to this charge. And for Middlemore's placing, at ray coraing to the Court, (which shaU be very shortly,) I will do that which shaU serve to the execution of her Majesty's coraraandraent; and so have I told Mr. Middleraore, the bringer hereof. Praying you. Sir, to interpret ray writing to the best sense to content her Majesty, whora to please I know it ray bounden duty, and that siraply, even both for God's cause, (whose iraage to me she is,) as also for her own particular goodness showed largeUer to me than I can deserve : and yet without hypocrisy, I dare say, there is no servant, from her Porter's lodge to her Chamber door, hath more care in conscience and in deeds to serve her than I. You see ray cogitations are soraewhat stirred, to enlarge thus rauch to you ray good friend. Your assured loving friend, W. Burghley.* THOMAS CARTWRIGHT TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Your Honour's love to the doctrine of the Gospel, with hatred of Foreign power and Popery, whereof I have conceived opinion by report of sorae persons of right good credit, (your sincere proceeding wherein I beseech God raay make you truly and perfectly honourable,) hath put my pen in my hand to write unto you for the obtaining of some of that grace of which you have so great store with her Majesty, to ray es pecial relief in a cause, the equity whereof I leave to your Honour's judgraent after it shall please you to inform yourself of the same. For, seeing aU Godly truth is so near of kin one to the other as no sisterly bond is to be compared therewith, » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 90". 302 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1582. the door of your harbour being open to the one, I trust shall not be shut up against the other. Having laid hereupon the principal ground of ray encourageraent, there carae to my mind for my further confirraation therein, that, if it be of honourable report to do good to raany, it is rauch more that your goodness should light upon those that are trodden under neath the foot : which is so rauch the more acceptable to God, as He hath more especially coraraanded the care of those than of any other ; and so rauch the more welcome unto men, as every one hath a nearer sense and greater gladness of his change from a troublesome estate unto a quiet, than from a quiet unto a raore coraraodious. My trouble, if it like your Honour, is not only the restraint of my liberty these six years, but especially, as that which lieth rauch heavier upon rae, the suspicion of disloyalty whereof I stand accused to her Majesty. The matter is this : First, I do vrith raost hurable thanks, chiefly unto the Lord our God, and then to her Ma jesty, which is His good hand towards us, acknowledge the estiraable treasure of the doctrine of the Gospel that shineth araongst us. Then, I cannot deny but that I have written sorae things which run into the evil speeches of divers other wise weU-disposed ; the cause whereof is the claraorous and unconscionable reports of certain which love themselves too much; who have learned too well this point of husbandry, to sow their seed of slanderous speeches thick and threefold, to the end that some at the least raay take. For I ara charged with things which not only I did never write, but which never entered so much as into my thought. As, to give the attempt of the overthrow of all good government iu' the coraraon wealth; to raislike of Magistrates, and especially of Monarchs; to Uke of equality of all Estates, and of a headless ruUng of the unruly raultitude. In the Church, to persuade the sarae disorder of setting no difference between the people and their governors ; in their governors to leave no degrees ; to give to the Ministers in their several charges an absolute power of doing what thera liketh best, without controulment of either civil or ecclesiastical authority ; and, for the present estate of ^T. 42,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 303 our Church, that I carry such an opinion of it as in the rais- Uke thereof I dissuade the Ministers frora their charges, and the people from hearing the word and receiving the sacra ments at their hands, unless it might be in such sort as I my seK would have it. All wluch judgments as I utterly detest, so for the maintenance of them there shall not be found, without open and violent wresting, so rauch as one sentence in any of ray books that have been pubhshed : whereas to the contrary there are divers sentences of that clearness that none can deny but he wiU say that it is not Ught at noon-day. If haply your Honour will ask after proof, it cannot be raore certainly had than of my books written in this behalf. If that raay seera too long, let the trial be by the Ecclesiastical Discipline* written in Latin, which as it handleth the sarae matter, so, by a preface set before it, I have testifled my agree ment therevrith. If yet a shorter way be sought, the prefaces to my several books, containing the sura of the raatter in de raand, vrill answer of ray dutiful meaning in these causes. If any other more reasonable way may be advised of, I will there unto most vrilUngly submit myself. Only my humble suit is, that I be not conderaned in silence, but there may be a time of trial, as there hath been of accusation. Her Majesty hath an ear open to her poorest Subjects : I am one of that num ber ; in humble submission with the poorest, in affectioned good-wUl towards her long reign and heaped feUcity with the richest, as that which I have daily most hurably commended unto the Lord from the first tirae that ever I had any feeUng knowledge of the Gospel until this present. Others have audience at her Majesty's hands when their goods are but touched; ray narae, which is a rauch raore precious posses sion, is rent asunder : their causes concern but theraselves ; mine reach unto many and divers persons : theirs is in earthly matters ; mine is in heavenly. Being, therefore, in dutiful al- ''" A full and plain Declaration of wright," 4to., 1574. A Reply to Ecclesiastical Discipline out of the this work, by Dr. Bridges, was pub- Word of God, and of the declining lished in 1584 ; and a Defence of it, of the Church of England from the in answer to the Reply, in 1588. same ; with a Preface by Cart- 304 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1582. legiance equal, and in a raatter which I coraplain myself of above others, my hurable suit is, that in indifferent hearing and inforraation of the cause I raay not be inferior unto thera all. I desire nothing raore than that the cause itself, so far as it shall be proved good, might so appear unto her Majesty. My next desire is, that, if I must needs remain in her High ness' suspicion, (the grievous sorrow whereof I shall not lay down but with my life,) yet that it may be according to that which I have written, and not according to that which I am reported of ; so shall I be sure to be eased of the slanderous surmise of my disloyalty to her Majesty's estate and to the Comraonwealth, likewise of ray love to Puritanisra and Church confusion ; the contrary of both which I do most ear nestly protest, with this offer, that if either be proved against me, I will refuse no extreraity to be practised upon rae. This is ray humble suit ; wherein whatsoever your Honour shall bring to pass, for that you shall not have rae alone, but num bers of others favouring the truth, bound unto you. And thus I humbly coraraend your Honour to the Lord's gracious keeping, whora I beseech daily to increase in you all godliness and honour to His glory. Your Honour's hurably to com raand, Thomas Cartwright.* THOMAS CHURCHYARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Though I am over-bold so often to write, yet having ill hap by God's visitations, and hoping your honourable favour will excuse this ray hardiness, I have presumed, as you see, to trouble you with these few lines. I trust now my long suit will shortly be answered to my desire, and I beheve assuredly that order was taken for ray release before I fell sick ; but, as I have ever seen and found, some takes the wood from the fire when I seek raost to be warmed; and yet all these hinderers of hap cannot take away the love which I bear unto ray dear friends, nor appal no part of my honest mind. I know it is miserable to crave, servitude to => Additional MSS. 15891, f, 22. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 305 receive, and beggarly to want ; which three afflictions my betters are visited with, and my inferiors cannot avoid : but yet I would it raight have pleased God that I had never known them. My late imprisonment is cause presently both of my necessity and gout ; God forgive them that clipped my feathers, and hindered my health, when I raight have flown where I had listed. To come home for mercy, and have ira prisonraent presented to rae ; to serve truly, and to be coldly considered ; to Ue sick, and not risited, is a strange destiny ; but yet rauch raore sti-ange to live long in liberty, and no one raan Uving to help rae. Thus do I, poor abandoned wretched creature, bear the insupportable burthen of all sorrowful imaginations, as God HimseK knoweth best, who send me health and increase your Honour. Thomas Churchyard.* The " Company " mentioned in a letter from Norton to Sir Christopher Hatton, was clearly the Stationers' Company, whose privileges a printer called Bynneman, " his servant," had infringed : — MR. THOMAS NORTON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour, your servant Henry Byn neman, being charged by coraplaints of sorae of his Cora pany for obtaining her Majesty's pririlege for printing of certain books, hath in his defence exhibited her Majesty's letters patents under the Great Seal of England, to which it becometh every good Subject to yield due reverence and obe dience. And, for my own part, I would be loath not to be found an obsequious acknowledger of her prerogative and authority. He hath yet, upon charitable motions, for relief of poor raen of that Company, yielded some good part of his right ; and the rather, that your Honour may have cause to think him an honest man and worthy of your favour. This being true, and he desirous that you may know that for your " Additional MSS. 15891. 306 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1588. Honour whom he serveth he would do what becometh an honest man, I ara bold to signify it unto you, that yOu may find yourself in your honourable disposition to have the more cause to continue to him your accustomed goodness in de fence of that right whereunto her Majesty by your media tion hath entitled hira, and which he so reasonably offereth to use. And thus, humbly commending you to the grace of God, I forbear any more to trouble your Honour. At Lon don, the 5th of January 1582 [1583]. Your Honour's humble at comraandraent, Tho. Norton.* All that Camden says of the affair of which Sir John Norris gives so full an account in the following report to the Queen, is that, when the Duke of Anjou " had spent in the Netherlands a great mass of money supplied out of England, and that with no success, and found that there were bestowed on him bare and idle titles only, and that the government and managing of matters rested in the Estates' hands, he attempted, with a rash design, to force Antwerp and other Cities, but all in vain, and not without loss of his own men ; and shortly after left the Netherlands with dishonour : " ^ — TO THE QUEEN. Most Gracious Sovereign, It may please your most ex:ceUent Majesty to understand that on Saturday night last past, being the sixth of this present, the burghers of this tovm of Antwerp being in some jealousy of the French, who were lodged in the town in great numbers, increased their watch to the double number they were ordinarily accustomed, causing every household to hang out lights into the streets, and withal in the evening gave warning at the Court to such gentlemen as were lodged in the town to repair to their lodgings by nine of the clock. The Duke took not this » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 42. " Annals, b. iii. p. 13. ^t. 48.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 307 deaUng in good pBf t, but seemed much discontented that any jealousy shoulld be conceived of those of his train ; and the next moming about nine of the clock, repairing to the Castle, had conference with the Prince touching that matter, which was executed in as good sort as might be, and the occasion thereof imputed to sorae light dealings and indiscreet speeches lately let fall by sorae of the French ; and, that all might be appeased, proclamation was presently raade that all those of the French which belonged to the army should forthwith repair to the troops ^t Burgherhault, whither the Duke deterrained to go after dinner to take a view of the whole forces between one and two of the qlock, accorapanied with the raost of the gentlemen of his Court. His Highness passing through the gate that leadeth to Burgherhault, sud denly those of his train which carae after began to seize the gate, and fell to some blows vrith the ,burghers which that day guarded the port ; having caused eight ensigns of the French to be in a readiness and to come forward, who also entered the gate, and had advanced theraselves vrithin the town as far as St. Jaques Church and near to the Great Bourse. The alarm being given throughout the town, the Burghers iraraediately took arras, and so weU acquitted theraselves, that in some what less than three quarters of an hour the gate was re covered, and the French caused to retire with the loss pf eight or nine hundred at the least, besides Messieurs De Fervaques, Chamount, De Fargie, L'Averne, Beau pre. La Ferte, La Rassehere, and sorae. others, whose naraes I have not learned, which, being dismounted from their hprses, were brought into the town by the -Burghers, and reraain junder guard in several houses. The Marshal Bi^f^ was the night before gone out of the town to set all tbings in order against the Duke's coraing to Burgherhault; the Duke of Mont pensier accorapanied his Highness,rand so did the Count De a VaU. The Count De la Marshe, not thinking of any such matter, was playing at tennis, and from thence con ducted by the Burghers safely to his lodging. In this tumult hath been slain men of narae : the Count Chasteaureux' X 2 308 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1583. son ; the Count St. Aignon and his son ; Monsieur De Tyan, governor of Alost ; a son of the Marshal Biron's ; SecevaUe ; Biragues; and many others of good account. The Duke went straight to Berckham to a castle one raile frora Ant werp, where he yet reraaineth ; from whence this day he sent letters to the Prince excusing the attempt-of the soldiers, being driven thereunto, as he saith, by the great raisery and extreraity they had long endured ; offering to eraploy hiraself, and such raeans he had, to the benefit and defence of their country if they should think good to accept thereof. The raessenger, being a Maister d'hostell to his Highness, vrith a Colonel of the town, are returned back again with answer, the effect whereof I cannot yet understand. About the same time of this atterapt in Antwerp, the French possessed theraselves of Dermound, Dixmuyde, Dunkirk, and Vilvor- den; and, atterapting to do the like at Bruges, it is said the Burghers of the town have cut all the French in pieces. Letters were iramediately sent from the Prince and the States here to others their towns of garrison, adrising them "to stand upon their sure guard for the better preventing of any French practice against them. There was slain of the Burghers in this tumult between forty and fifty persons, and sorae few hurt ; and of the French better than a thousand ; as it is judged, besides three or four score hurt, which have been found alive under the dead bodies when they were carried to their burial. This being as rauch as I can presently advertize your Majesty touching this late accident, it may please you to give me leave to end with my most hurable and hearty prayers to Alraighty God to defend and keep your most exceUent Majesty against the practices of your enemies, to bless your estate, and to grant you a long and prosperous reign amongst us. From Antwerp, the Qth of January 1582 [1583]. Your Majesty's most dutiful subject, J. Norris.* * Additional MSS. 16891, f. 48. MT. 43.] sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 309 Another proof of Hatton's amiable disposition is afforded by the foUowing letter : — TO THE EARL OF DERBY AND THE BISHOP OF CHESTER. My very good Lords, Whereas the Lady Egerton of Ridley standeth bounden for her appearance before your Lordships to answer such matter as she is charged with touch ing her disposition in religion, I am credibly given to un derstand, that albeit she hath not hitherto conformed her self to her Majesty's proceedings, upon a certain preciseness of conscience incident to divers of her sex, without reason or measure oftentimes ; yet in other respects she hath always showed herself very dutiful and of a good behaviour, so far forth as she continually entertaineth a chaplain in her house, who usuaUy says the service both for her household and neighbours according to her Majesty's laws. I am further inforraed the gentlewoman is very aged, and in very weak disposition of health, troubled oftentimes vrith sundry infirr mities, the which of late are much increased upon her; in consideration whereof I think her case rather to be pitied, and that haply it may fall to better purpose to seek to reduce her by a mild and gentle course, than to endanger her health by imprisonment or other of the said proceedings against her. I am therefore to recoraraend her to your Lordships' favour able considerations, and to desire you (if in your wisdoras it raay be thought convenient) to be pleased to give her a further time of toleration until Michaelraas next, in hope that, by such convenient means as in that space raay be wrought, she raay be easily brought to better conforraity. AVherein what course it shall please your Lordships to take together with the grant of this her humble request (wherein I am eamestly pressed by special friends), I shall think ray self much beholden to your Lordships for it, and be ready to requite the same in what I raay, as it shall please your Lord ships to use me. And so, vrishing to you, my Lords, most happy fortune, I take my leave. From the Court at Wind- 310 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. sor, the 10th of January 1582 [1583]. Your Lordships' poor friend, fhost assured, Chr. Hatton.* La Motte Fenelon and MaQniriville were sent to Scotland by the King of Franee in 1582, to endeavour to deUver the young King out of tbe hands of the Earl of Gowi'ie and the other conspirators, and to confirm Tiiin in the French interests. The article proposed by La Motte is mentioned by Camden : — THi; 06** O^ AN ARTICLE PROPOiyNDED THE 20tH OF JANUARY 1582 [1583] iht la motte, translated INTO ENGLISH. To congratulate greatly with hira on their parts, in that the Queen of Scots,' Dowager of France, his mother, which is sister-in-law and daughter-in-law to their most Christian Ma jesties, after many obstacles and difficulties presented, hath, with a good and motherly affection, most wiUingly declared that she will that her said son be called by the title of King in her life-time, and associate with her in this Crown ; a thing which maketh far more lawful, and out of all contradiction, and well approved of all other Christian Princes, the happy reign of the said most noble King her son : which is a matter that ought to be published throughout this Realra, according to the forra of the declaration, to the intent to reraove the partialities and divisions that raight be in the same.*" La Motte's and his Colleague's proceedings in Scotland are thus described in a letter to Sir Christopher Hatton by Mr. Davison, who was sent on a mission to the King of Scots in December 1582, with the object of counter acting the French Ambassadors : — • Peck's Desiderata Curiosa, p. 130. i" Additional MSS. 15891, f. 100. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 311 MR. DAVISON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I shaU not need to excuse unto your Honour ray silence used towards you since my coraing hither, because your own good-nature, and experience of the honest devotion I bear you, wiU not, I ara sure, irapute it to my want or for getfulness of my duty towards you. It shall be enough that the sufficiency and diligence of ray good friend Mr. Bowes, who I know faileth not to visit your Honour often vrith his letters, and ray own rawness yet in raatters of this State, do therein purge and excuse rae. Now, presuming your Honour is there particularly acquainted with that I have written hitherto since La Motte's entry and mine, I will in these only discharge some piece of my duty with such matters as hath happened since our last to Mr. Secretary. Upon Man- ninviUe's arrival and receipt of some letters from him. La Motte began to speak more frankly than before, and the very next morning deUvered in a new article in writing, containing a congratulation vrith this King touching his mother's con sent that his Highness should be caUed by the title of King in her Ufetime, and associate with her in the Government, &c. ; a thing to be published according to the form of the de claration (which yet is not come to our sight) for avoiding of the inconveniences might othervrise happen, &c. The copy of which article I herevrith send your Honour, that by their own acts you may the better aim at their scope and intent. Yesterday he followed the King on hunting, and on the fields had large conference with him of many things, where, press ing the King to deal plainly and frankly vrith hira touching his private estate and Uberty, he let fall many speeches both of his Council and Guard ; showing him that he understood this Guard and the coraraanders thereof were entertained at the Queen's our Sovereign's charge, which being, as he said, a thing perilous and of rare exaraple araong Princes, made hira the raore suspicious that his Highness was not in that free condition and liberty which becarae his estate of a King ; offering him, if he had any raislike thereof, and would 312 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. deal plainly with him, there should be remedy enough found for his relief. Which the King answered in like terras as he had before, that there was no cause to suspect either his Council or his Guard (being of his own choice and approba tion) of any indirect dealing against the freedora either of his person or government ; assuring hira he was abused in his inforraation thereof, as also in that point concerning her Ma jesty, which he excused to have grown only of sorae par ticular dealing between his treasurer and Mr. Bowes, of whora (without her Majesty's privity) Gowry upon a sudden necessity had borrowed sorae little raatter, for which he had given his own particular bond, and reraained his debtor; which being afterward eraployed in his Highness' service, he had taken order with Govpry to see Mr. Bowes answered, so as the charge was his own, and not her Majesty's. Many other things to like purpose passed between them, in all which La Motte, plucking down his vizard by degrees, raakes sufficiently appear to such as are anything clearly- sighted the concurrency of their negotiations here with the doings in Flanders, though that poor Country hath at this tirae played the first part in this coraraon tragedy ; which I pray God that her Majesty, and others whom it specially concerns, raay give that heed and regard unto that apper taineth. Manninville, landing at Leith on Sunday night, carae yesterday to this town. His train is to the nuraber of twenty-two or twenty-three persons ; amongst which is one Dorraes, a gentleraan reported to be of the house of Lor raine, and of the French King's charaber, (a gallant at all sports to entertain this young King withal,) who, whilst Man ninville attends his business here, being sent, as his men give out, to remain Arabassador resident for his Majesty, is ap pointed to raake a progress into every part of the Country; but the scope of that journey well enough foreseen will, I think, be otherwise met withal than he looks for. They have brought with thera a massing priest ; which, known in the town, hath greatly moved the comraon people, whose fury it will be hard for him to escape if he be taken abroad : which ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 313 the King understanding, hath forewarned La Motte and the other to look unto it, as a thing very hard for hiraself other wise to provide for ; whereupon they have all this day kept close their doors, standing on their guards with as rauch fear as discontentedness. There is sorae order given for La Motte's dispatch, but his departure is yet uncertain. Gowry is come this evening to this tovm ; the rest of the Lords written for at La Motte's request have excused theraselves. The Lord Harris died here on Sunday last very suddenly of an apo plexy (as sorae think), which he had fallen into once or tvrice before. To-raorrow afternoon is Manninville appointed his au dience ; his charge, as La Motte pretends unto us, is none other than his own, which appears ill enough, if he raay have tirae and means to execute it. What I shall further learn of these things I wUl not long conceal from your Honour, whom in this meantime I beseech the Almighty long to preserve, with rauch increase of honour and health. At Edinburgh, the 22nd of January 1582 [1583]. Your Honour's raost hurable at commandraent, W. Davison.* It appears that Davison had urged some private suit in a postscript to the preceding letter, but it was not copied into the "Letter Book;" on which subject he also wrote to Hatton's secretary : — MR. DAVISON TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Mr. Cox, I pray you let my business excuse at this time the shortness of these to yourseK, whom I would not leave unvisited with a line or two, having some occasion to write to ray honourable good friend Mr. Vice-Chamberlain. For pubhc things I refer you to his ; and herein will only put you in mind of my particular, which I trust you are no less mind ful to comraend and further to his Honour, than I ara willing to be thankful for any courtesy you shall do rae. I have, in a postscript to his Honour, touched it somewhat generally, which you raay help and supply with such particulars as you think agreeable to the raatter, and answerable to our friend- > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 100. 314 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. ship. The sura and place (I raean the Duchy) last resolved on I pray raay be foUowed ; other direction you need not, that can better skiU thereof than rayself, on whose care and friendly travaU reposing myself in this behalf I do heartily commend you for this time to the grace of God. Edinburgh, 22nd January 1582 [1583]. Your own assured, W. Davison.* The three following letters relate to one of the most disgraceful transactions of Elizabeth's reign. Sir Eobert Stapleton, of WighUl, in Yorkshire, the representative of an ancient and affluent family, and who is described by a contemporary " as a man well spoken; properly seen in languages; a comely and good personage; had scarce an equal, and, next to Sir Philip Sidney, no superior in Eng land," basely conspired with an innkeeper, called Sysson, and his wife, to extort money from Dr. Sandys, Archbishop of York, by accusing him of adultery. The circum stance is thus related by Strype: — "In May 1581, while the Archbishop lodged at Doncaster, on his jour ney, one Sysson, the host, caused his wife to go by night into the Archbishop's bed to him, and he, presently after, followed, with his dagger in his hand, into the chamber, which he put to the Archbishop's breast, with Alexander his man, and Maud, that had been the Archbishop's servant, saying, ' God's precious life, I will mark a whore and a thief.' Stapleton then made his appearance, and after requiring 800/., the Archbishop agreed to give 600/. and a lease of some lands to hush the matter up ; but afterwards, when they proceeded to demand more lands, manors, and benefits, the Archbishop refused to go any further, but resolved to send the whole ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 47". ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 315 case, with all their horrible dealings, to Burghley, and through him to the Queen." Proceedings being instituted against Stapleton and his accomplices, he was heavily fined and committed to prison; and he continued in confinement until the fol lowing year : — LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, My servant shaU show you why I must write so evil and so little. Sir Robert Stapleton required to come to me, and so the Examiners thought good ; afore whom charging hira with Sysson's confession, he protested against Sysson as against a bankrupt and a beggar. Yea, he could tell of the late intent to have had a preacher treacherously used; he rested upon Maude and MaUory as gentleraen. But now, coraing to me, he yieldeth to his offence, and asked God mercy ; and thus far he yieldeth, that Sysson first, and after ward also his wife, opened to him the device to have the Bishop entrapped, she pretending that the Bishop had raoved her to eril: the same was also imparted to MaUory and Maude. And Sir Robert, haring conceived displeasure against the Bishop, confesseth he yielded hereto, as thereby to have the Bishop under his girdle. He denied not to have had £200 of Sysson by way of loan, which, he saith, Maude procured to be repaid to Sysson, which he now thinketh was the £200 that Maude had last of the Bishop. To conclude: he peni tently asketh God raercy for exercising his mahce in this sort ; but yet he termeth his offence but a sufferance of the practices begun by Sysson and his vrife to proceed as it did. He desir eth pardon of her Majesty, offering his IKe in service to redeera it ; he also desireth that he raay be used so as Mrs. Talbot* may continue her affection, by whom, he saith, he is to have £1200 by year for thirteen years. I have quieted hira, that there is no cause to doubt of his fleeing ; and truly his tears do raove rae to have corapassion of hira, being rayself well sa- ' Vide a former Letter. 316 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1588. tisfied with the purgation of the Bishop. His further exa rainations do stay ; he confesseth the corabination at York with all the parties to agree upon one compounded tale. Sysson saith, his speeches of looking in at the keyhole were false, and of the Bishop kissing of his wife. Yours assur edly, W. Burghley.* TO LORD BURGHLEY. My SINGULAR GOOD LoRD, Her Majesty yieldeth her most kind and gracious thanks unto you for your grave and wise handling of this great cause ; only she resteth not satis fied that Sir Robert Stapleton is not more straitly looked unto than hitherto he hath been. Her good pleasure is, that your Lordship send for the Master of the Rolls, and give him most earnest charge, upon peril of her Highness' uttermost displeasure, to intend to his safe keeping; the rather because her Majesty pretendeth to know more than hitherto she will be pleased to speak of. There will no favour be found as yet in the accoraraodating of his cause with Mrs. Talbot, but through your goodness hereafter haply soraewhat may be wrought; but surely he cannot escape without public note and severe punishraent, for such is her Majesty's censure raoved for justice sake both for the man and raatter. My Lord of Leicester wiU be at London the morrow, when I think the Queen wiU direct him to speak with you. Thus, with all hurable duty, I pray God for your health, and cora raend ray service unto you. Haste, at Richmond, this 24th of February 1582 [1583]. Your good Lordship's raost bound, Chr. Hatton.*" to lord burghley. My very good Lord, I thank God frora ray heart that your travail in this great cause hath brought forth so blessed effects. Innocency is delivered, and truth hath prevailed, to God's glory, and the due commendation of your wisdom and goodness. Her Majesty rejoiceth exceedingly in it, and » Additional MSS, 15891, f , 104. ^ Autograph in the State Paper Office, .^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 317 yieldeth her raost gracious thanks to your Lordship for your so great and wise proceeding in it. My Lord of Leicester hath her Majesty's directions to signify thus rauch of her pleasure, with further raatter unto your Lordship, as I sup pose. And, for present answer to these your last letters, (con sidering this and her Majesty's business in receiving La Motte, and after in the sermon, in which ray duty of attend ance is of necessity,) I cannot deliver as I dutifully would ; but, so soon as is possible, your Lordship shall receive her Majesty's further pleasure. I pray God restore your health, and bless your Lordship with a long and happy life. The 24th of February 1582 [1583]. Your good Lordship's raost bound, Chr. Hatton.* Lord Burghley's answer to Hatton's letters respecting the Archbishop of York is preserved : — LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, For answer to your two letters of this day, I pray you in ray behalf to render ray recognition to her Majesty of ray corafortable acceptance of her gracious and favourable allowance of my careful proceeding to the discussing of the truth in the Archbishop's cause, which was very cunningly covered, and made alraost desperate to have been disclosed: but, in the end, God, the father of truth, left the adversaries in fear to be otherwise convinced by the contrarieties of their own answers ; for so indeed it has faUen out by discrepance in their own answers, that, if none of thera had confessed their offences, the coraparing of their contrarieties would have conderaned them in any ordinary place of judgment. But now. Sir, considering that truth hath the rictory, her Ma jesty's honour is advanced by her princely care taken to have her Prelate protected ; and the Bishop himself, a churchman and preacher of raercy, foUowing the example of Christ his » Autograph in the Lansdowne MS. 32, art, 22 ; and partly printed in Strype's Annals, vol, in, pt. i. p. 148. 318 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. Master, that forgave all offences without revenge. I vrish that sorae such course raight be taken by her Majesty in cleraency, as truth raay enjoy the rictory, her Majesty dilate her honour, and the Bishop that hath suffered the wrong raay give an exaraple for the place he holdeth, rather of reraission than of revenge. And how all these things might be done vrith out the utter ruin of Sir Robert Stapleton, a raan of good service in his country, and never to my -.understanding touched with any dishonest action, I leave to be further con sidered by her Majesty's vrisdom, whereunto I hurably sub mit this project of mine as becoraeth rae, forbearing further to trouble you at this tirae, in respect of ray present feeble ness not able rayself to write unto you ; for which cause I have been bold to use the hand of one at ray coraraandraent, derived as it were by propagation out. of raine own, making hira now ray scribe, whora I wish hereafter to do her Majesty some service, as a remerabrancer of raine, when both my hands shall be under the earth. Frora ray bed in my house at Westrainster, the 28th of February 1583. W. Burghley." Davison wrote several letters to Hatton detailing his proceedings in Scotland, where, notwithstanding his request to be recalled, he continued until about Septem ber 1584 :— MR. DAVISON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may PLEASE YOUR HoNouR, I have by every post df late looked for ray revocation, finding no great cause of ray particular stay here, to the increase of her Majesty's charge, and sorae incomraodity to rayself ; but, because your Honour hath yet rather given me hope than assurance thereof, I raust beseech you that in your next I raay fully understand her Majesty's good pleasure in that behalf. Mr, Bowes's experience and acquaintance with the affairs of this State enableth him sufficiently alone to go through with any ser- » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 51.'' ^t, 48.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 319 vice is to be done here, without any great want of language for any negotiation between us and Manninville ; whose stay we hope wiU not be long here if things frame not all the sooner to his full contentment, which will appear shortly after the coming of the rest of the Lords looked for this week. In the raean tirae the people here have rauch to do to contain theraselves from hastening his departure by some rude entreaty, which they have been willing to offer hira ere this, and had surely done it, had not the raasters and sorae discreet Burgesses hitherto stayed thera, so great is the prejudice they have of his traffic here to the hurt of religion and disquiet of their State ; and now forbear only in ex pectation of his despatch upon the coming of these Lords, according to the promise made unto thera byisuch as were intercessors to the King for them in that behaK: and y^t it seeraeth that himself is deterrained to ride out here, if he may, till he hear further out of France. By our common letter your Honour shall understand aU these things more particularly; as also of our apprehension of one William Holte, a Jesuit, entertained secretly here by the Lord Seton, and appointed to a voyage into France and from thence to Rome, who, being ready to take passage with the first fair vrind, we caused to be apprehended at Leith. About him we fouud divers ciphers and some two or three letters, whereof (the originals being delivered to the King) we send you here with the copies : divers other letters he had and should have received here, but where he hath bestowed thera we cannot yet learn. By these we send your Honour you raay pick out English enough touching the doings and employments of hiraself and others of that crew, but in his exaraination we cannot yet draw him to any further particularities. In general only he confesseth to Mr, Bowes and myself, that he think eth there is some purpose in hand by the Pope and divers Princes Cathohcs for a war against England, and that they have a party strong at horae ; that the pretext will be re ligion, and liberty of the Queen of Scots ; that they hold the enterprize easy, considering their own preparations and 320 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. the factions at home ; that the Pope hath gathered a great mass of raoney, and coUecteth daily, as he heareth, to the same use ; that the Eang of Spain, as appeareth by the letter deciphered, is also to furnish a part; but of the time, the instruments to be used, and other particularities, he can say nothing, as he pretendeth. This day ray Lord of Dunferm- ling and others (who have been with us to the sarae end once or twice already) are appointed to be with us again, with sorae special articles of his more formal and precise exaraination, of the proceeding wherein your Honour shall hear raore by the next. Manninville doth storra at his apprehension and detaining with us, and hath been earnest with the King to reraove him out of our hands ; both he, Seton, and the rest of that part, fearing lest their doings by this means may come to light. Alexander Seton, Prior of Pluskett,* and third son to the Lord, author of one of these letters, is sent for, and to be examined thereupon before his Majesty and the Council, who is able to discover raore than I think they shall easily get from hira. With this Holte we took two others; the one a Scottishraan, his servant, whom we have delivered over to the Colonel Stuart ; the other an Englishman lately come hither, whora, after his first appre hension, we used as a stale to entrap the other, wherein he served us to great purpose. His name is Roger Alraond, one that was taken about two years past at Dover, and exarained before your Honour at the Court, and afterwards sent down to ray Lord of Huntingdon to York, and hath, as he saith, been an instruraent to decipher and discover divers of that party ; howsoever it be, his doings in this deserveth favour. Thus, referring your Honour's raore particular satisfaction to our general letters, and that you shall else receive frora Mr. Bowes, I do raost humbly take ray leave. At Edinburgh, the 4th of March 1582 [1583]. Your Honour's most humble at coraraandraent, W. Davison.* a Additional MSS. 16891, f. 49. Pluscardine : he was afterwards High Alexander Seton, younger son of Chancellor of Scotland, and Earl of George fifth Lord Seton, was Prior of Dunfermling. iBT, 43,| SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 321 The Earl of Oxford had, as has been before said, in curred the Queen's serious displeasure ; and he now ap pears to have been involved in a fray with Mr, Knyvet, in which a man was slain. It does seem extraordinary, as Burghley naturally thought, that his intercession for his son-in-law should be unsuccessful : — LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, My lack of health and strength serveth rae not to write as rauch as 1 have cause ; but yet raany urgent necessities constrain rae to write soraewhat for ease of my mind, which I pray you to interpret after your friendly manner. I perceived yesterday by my Lord of Leicester that you had very friendly delivered speeches to her Majesty tending to bring some good end to these trouble some raatters betvrixt ray Lord of Oxford and Mr. Thomas JCnyvet; for the which your doings I do heartily thank you, and beseech you to continue your former good raeaning, though the event expected and desired hath not followed. And now perceiving by my Lord of Leicester sorae increase of her Ma jesty's offence towards ray Lord of Oxford, and finding by Mr. Thoraas Knyvet that he only being called and deraanded of her Majesty what he would say herein, he did, as served his turn, declare to her Majesty that his men were eril used by my Lord of Oxford's raen, and naraely that one of his men was kiUed by a man of my Lord of Oxford's, and no redress had, I cannot but think that her Majesty had just occasion given by such an inforraation to be offended towards ray Lord of Oxford, or his raan, and did therefore, like a Prince of jus tice and God's minister, command the matter to be examined, which was done yesterday at great length by my Lord of Leicester, to his trouble and ray grief; and I doubt not but my Lord of Leicester will honourably declare to her Majesty how my Lord of Oxford resteth untouched, or at least un- blotted, in any kind of raatter objected by Mr. Knyvet, T 322 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. whom we heard at great length, and his men also. But be cause Mr. Knyvet's raan, caUed Long Tora, that once served and was raaintained by ray Lord of Oxford, a bad fellow to serve any honest raan, carae to his death, I am bold to send to you the inquisition before the Coroner of London, with the verdict of the jury and the depositions of the ocular wit nesses ; by all which, and by a new acquittal at Newgate, Gastrell, the party named my Lord of Oxford's raan, and yet was not then his raan, nor yet is, though Mr. Knyvet report him so to be, was and standeth acquitted of the death of the said Long Thoraas ; so as, where her Majesty had just cause to conceive soraewhat hardly of ray Lord of Oxford, I doubt not but when her Majesty shall be inforraed by my Lord of Leicester of the truth which he hath seen and not disproved, her Majesty vrill dirainish her offensive opinion : and I trust also, after you shall have read these writings, which I will on ray credit avow to be true, you will be of the sarae raind, and, as opportunity may serve, will also move her Majesty in this case to think otherwise hereof than the informer meant to induce her to think. As to the rest of the brabbles and frays, ray Lord of Leicester can also declare upon what sraall occasions of repute and light carriages of tales, whereof my Lord of Oxford is nowise touched, these brabbles are risen. And for the quarrel of one Roper, of the Guards, against Gastrell, my Lord of Oxford's raan, it is confessed that Roper challenged Gastrell that he had complained of him ; whereas in truth yourself knoweth it was my Lord of Oxford that did complain to you of Roper and of one Hall, so as Roper was therein too busy. And hereupon he wrote a long epistle to GastreU to challenge him to fight, and so also Costock made the like challenge, whereby appeareth that these frays grow by challenges raade to my Lord of Oxford's men : and yet it raust be inforraed that ray Lord of Oxford's men do offer these frays. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, these things are hardly carried, and these advantages are easily gotten, where sorae may say what they will against my Lord of Oxford, and have presence to utter their humours ; and MI. 43,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 323 my Lord of Oxford is neither heard, nor hath presence either to complain or defend himself: and so long as he shall be subject to the disgrace of her Majesty (frora which God deliver him), I see it apparently, that, how innocent soever he shall be, the advantages will fall out for his adversaries ; and so I hear they do prognosticate. It hath been also informed her Majesty that he hath had fifteen or sixteen pages in a livery going before him in Cheapside ; but, if these tongues that uttered this were so rauch lessened by raeasure in their mouths as they have enlarged in their nuraber, they would never be touched hereafter with raaking any verbal lie. In deed I would he had less than he hath, and yet in all his house are, nor were at any time, but four : one of them waite th upon his wife, ray daughter ; another in ray house, upon his daughter Bess ; a third is a kind of a tumbUng-boy ; and the fourth is the son of a brother of Sir John Cutts, lately put to him. By this false, large, lying report, if her Majesty would cause it to be tried, she should find upon what roots these blasphemous branches do grow. But I subrait all these things to God's vrill, who knoweth best why it pleaseth Him to afflict my Lord of Oxford in this sort, who hath, I con fess, forgotten his duty to God, and yet I hope he raay be made a good servant to her Majesty, if it please her of her clemency to remit her displeasure ; for his faU in her Court, which is now twice yeared, and he punished as far or farther than any Uke crirae hath been, first by her Majesty, and then by the drab's friend in revenge to the peril of his life. And K his own punishraent past, and Ms hurable seeking of for giveness, cannot recover her Majesty's favour, yet some, yea many, may think that the intercession of rae and ray poor wKe, so long and iraportunately continued, might have ob tained sorae spark of favour of her Majesty ; but hereof I wiU in novrise complain of too much hardness, but to myself. I would I could not, in amaritudine animee, lament my wife's oppressing of her heart for the opinion she imprinteth therein of her misfortune, a matter not to be expressed without mistaking : and therefore both I and she are deter- Y 2 324 THE LIPE AND TIMES OF [1688. rained to suffer and laraent our raisfortune, that, when our son-in-law was in prosperity, he was cause of our adversity by his unkind usage of us and ours ; and now that he is ruined and in adversity, we only are made partakers thereof, and by no means, no, not by bitter tears of ray wife, can obtain a spark of favour for hira, that hath satisfied his offence with punishraent, and seeketh mercy by submission; but contrariwise, whilst we seek for favour, all crosses are laid against hira, and by untruths sought to be kept in disgrace. But, good Mr. Vice-Charaberlain, pardon rae herein, for my heart too full to stay ray pen, and yet I will end, because I vrill no further trouble you with ray troubles, which are or dained of God for rayself; and so I will patiently take them and lap them up to carry with rae to the grave, where, when I shall be, I am sure they shall not follow rae. When I began to write, I neither raeant nor thought I could have scribbled thus much ; but the raatter hath rainistered me the cause, for I take no pleasure therein. God preserve her Ma jesty, and grant her only to understand the true hearts of my poor wife and rae, and then I doubt not the sequel of her gracious favours in far greater raatters than we have required. We have not many years to live, perchance not raany days, and the fewer I ara sure to find lack of her favours, of whom we seek to deserve well by our daily services. From my house in Westrainster, this 12th of March 1582 [1583]. Yours assuredly, as you see, very bold, W. Burghley.* Albertus Alasco, free Baron of Lasco, Palatine of Saradia in Poland, arrived at Harwich, and proceeded on the SOth of April to Winchester House, in South wark, where he mostly resided while in England.*" Cam den says he was " a learned man, of a good feature of body, a very long beard, and very comely and decent apparel, who, being graciously welcomed by the Queen, and entertained by the nobility with great honour and ' Additional MSS 91, f. 60. >> Stow's Annals. .ET. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 325 feastings, and by the University of Oxford with learned delights and sundry pageants, after four months' abode here, withdrew himself secretly, being run far in debt," LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Upon ray Lord of Leicester's speeches vrith me this day of some things, I have thought raeet to write to you ray raind thereof, only to rerait the use of them to your own considera tion. I perceive that a Count of Polonia, naraed the Palatine Laschi, is either arrived, or shortly will, at Harwich to corae to her Majesty ; and K he be the very Count Palatine of that House of Laschi, he is a personage of great estiraation, such as few are subjects to any Monarch in Christendom, few in the Empire of the greatest exceeding him in sove reignty and power : and he is also one that, as I find by late observations since this King Stephanus' reign, hath carried great authority ; and before his time, in the interreign, none that had greater than he, but only the great Palatine of Lineland. This I write unto you, vrishing that her Majesty might please to comraand some nobleman in Essex, as my Lord Rich or Lord Darcy, with the attendance of sorae gentleraen, to conduct hira to the City, where it were good he had sorae lodging on the water-side, as Baynard's Castle, whereunto my Lord of Leicester doth assent ; but you raay say actum ago, for this and raore is foreseen; yet. Sir, I pray you mislike not a poor remerabrancer. Another matter is, that I find by my Lord of Leicester that her Majesty hath a disposition to leave her own stately palaces, and to vouchsafe to survey my poor house after Easter ; which, I am sure, if it had sense as the Master hath, would stoop down vrith so rauch pride to be possessed of her Majesty, as here after it would scantly know the Master. I confess it is ray comfort to have anything that may like her Majesty, but in very truth I know there is nothing worthy of her steps but only the goodwill of the owner, who will yield both soil, house, and aU appurtenants to be serviceable to her Majesty. Ahd lastly, my grief is, that neither my health and strengrth. 326 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1588. nor my vrife's presence, can serve to supply the wants that vrill be there, but they raust be all covered vrith the serenity of her Majesty's countenance. A last raatter whereof my Lord spake was a divers answer to my expectation for my Lord of Oxford, whose infortunes increase ray wife's griefs and raine more than I will mention, because I see not the way to remedy them, othervrise than by continuing in the beaten heavy ways of forced patience. And now I end my scribbling with my hearty coramendations. Frora my house in Westminster, the ISth of March 1582 [1583]. Yours as sured at coraraandraent, W. Burghley.* Hatton's reply to Lord Burghley's letter shows that there was some uncertainty at Court respecting the Palatine's rank : — TO LORD BURGHLEY. I MOST hurably thank your Lordship for your honourable advertiseraent touching the coraing in of this great Person age. Her Majesty deferreth all her direction for order to receive him, until she be raore fully inforraed both of his quaUty and occasion of access. She seeraeth to doubt that he departeth from his Prince as a raan in displeasure, because in one sentence of his letter to her Majesty he calleth her the refuge of the disconsolate and afflicted, &c. Worthe, my raan, that brought these letters, is not here, neither do I know where to find hira, so as I know not how to learn what information I might give the Queen in this matter ; only I must stay until the return of ray Lord of Leicester, and then I hope her Majesty will resolve. Her Majesty accepteth in most gracious and good kind part the offer of your Lordship's house, unto the which, (although yet she will give us no order to lay in her provisions,) I assuredly think she will come in the Easter week ; but as I learn the more certainty, so wUl I readily advertise your good Lordship. My Lord of Oxford's " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 62. ^T. 43,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 327 cause standeth but in slow course of proceeding to his satisfaction ; but yet, for my own part, I have some better hope than heretofore, wherein as a preservative you must all use patience for a while. His Lordship wrote to rae a very wise letter in this case of his, the report whereof her Majesty took in reasonable good gracious part. By the next raessen ger I will briefiy write .... the answer. I pray God bless your Lordship vritli aU His heavenly graces. Haste, frora the Court at Richraond, this 19th of March 1582 [1583]. Your good Lordship's raost bounden Chr. Hatton.* In 1583, PhUip Sidney married Frances, the only child of Sir Francis Walsingham ; and it appears from Walsingham's letter to Hatton, that the Queen had opposed the match : — sir FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, As I think rayself infinitely bound unto you for your honourable and friendly defence of the intended match be tween ray daughter and Mr. Sidney, so do I find it strange that her Majesty should be offended withaL It is either to proceed of the raatter or of the manner. For the matter, I hope, when her Majesty shall weigh the due circumstances of place, person, and quality, there can grow no just cause of offence. If the manner be misliked for that her Majesty is not made acquainted vrithal, I am no person of that state but that it raay be thought a presuraption for rae to trouble her Majesty with a private marriage between a free gentle man of equal caUing with my daughter. I had well hoped that ray painful and faithful serrice done unto her Majesty had raerited that grace and favour at her hands as that she would have countenanced this match vrith her gracious and princely good-Uking thereof, that thereby the world might have been a witness of her goodness towards rae. As I thought it always unfit for rae to acquaint her Majesty with " Additional MSS. 16891, 328 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. a matter of so base a subject as this poor raatch, so did I never seek to have the matter concealed from her Majesty, seeing no reason why there should grow any offence thereby. I pray you. Sir, therefore, if she enter into any further speech of the raatter, let her understand that you learn gene rally that the raatch is held for concluded, and withal to let her know how just cause I shall have to find rayself ag grieved if her Majesty shall show her raislike thereof. And so, coraraitting the cause to your friendly and considerate holding, I leave you to the protection of the Alraighty, At Barn Elras, the 19th of March 1582 [1583], Your raost as suredly to coraraand, Fra. Walsingham. Postscript.- — -I will give order that ray cousin Sidney shall be forewarned of the matter, who, as I suppose, will not be at the Court before the next week. If her Majesty's raislike should continue, then would I be glad, if I raight take know ledge thereof, to express ray grief unto her by letter, for that I ara forced, in respect of the indisposition of my body, to be absent until the end of this next week, whereof I made her Majesty privy.* Dr. Mathew was, it seems, deputed to convey the Archbishop of York's thanks to Hatton, for having so zealously defended him against Sir Eobert Stapleton's accusation ; but the candidate for the Deanery of Dur ham did not fail to press his own suit on the same occa sion. DR. MATHEW TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable Sir, Now that your greatest busi nesses of this terra are well over-blown, I beseech your Ho nour give rae leave araong other to present you raine humble thanks in ray Lord Archbishop's behalf, who as he was and shall be rauch bounden to the rest, so to none raore than to yourself; speciaUy for that excellent oration of yours (for it " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 101. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 329 was no less) in his purgation and punishment of his accusers, to the glory of God, the honour of her Majesty, the credit of our calling, the furtherance of the Gospel, the confusion of our adversaries, the corafort of all true professors, and per petual testiraony of your zeal to religion, j ustice, and inno cency. If he should be unthankful, or we unraindful, of that day's word or work of yours, yet God shall both regard you and reward you for it. I presume thus far to be bold to write, for that your Honour vouchsafed to irapart with me of the inatter when it stood raost suspicious, which now Truth, the daughter of Tirae, hath discovered to be but slanderous. Whereof, suspicion I raean, and slander touching our farae or infaray, such is the condition, as, although we raay be glad when it is dead, yet raight we rejoice raore if it had never been born. But how happy a man (of a man raost unhappy) had he been, had he never been drawn into the danger of this discredit. Howbeit, sithence God the author of all good things, and the sufferer of all wicked practices, would needs perrait that so it should be for causes best known unto Hira aud least unto us, araidst so raany raishaps, what happiness had he to light upon so gracious a Prince as is our Sovereign, so sacred a Senate as is that board, so plain, so dear, so honour able a friend and advocate as was your Honour. Truly, Sir, I can hardly hold raine idle pen frora further enlarging in this behalf your goodness towards hira, and his debt to you. But what speak I of his debt, being, if that raay be, rayself rauch further indebted to your Honour ? which yet I ara forced now to increase against good raanner, but raore against ray vrill, for that ray competitor, after he hath fled the field, doth begin to give a fresh assault, as by this bearer it raay appear unto your Honour. Wherefore I humbly beseech you. Sir, to work my dispatch ; the rather, for that the more delay is made, the raore danger is raine, the more trouble yours. So shaU you raore favour, raore bind me to do you all honour, duty, and service, besides my daily prayers for your prosper ous estate. From the Savoy, the llth of May 1583. Your Honour's raost bounden, Tobie Mathew.* ' Additional MSS. 16891, f. 106. 330 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. Camden* says, as soon as the French Ambassadors left Scotland, " the King off'ered all kindness to the Queen of England by Colonel William Stuart and John ColvUle, and asked her counsel and advice for com pounding the commotions and contracting of marriage :" THE SCOTTISH AMBASSADORS TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, It hath been always our great raishap, since our arrival in this Country, to find your Honour ever occupied when we havejthought to deliver unto you his Highness' letters, with the credit committed unto us in the same. This day it was our purpose to have given ourselves wholly to have attended on your leisure ; but, being called to dinner by my Lord of Leicester, certain of the Lords of her Highness' Council being met there, detained us with them aU this afternoon, ad rising and conferring with us upon the heads given in by us in writing on Thursday last: where, having given us sorae feeling of our answer by a plot and project thereof, where vrith it was their pleasures to let us be acquainted, we found it so far disagreeable to his Majesty's expectation of our suc cess, and to the towardliness of good hope which we have al ways had since our coming, that, if they should be given us as they are projected, it should not be without great prejudice and apparent alteration of the good course which his Majesty, by the earnest travails of faithful and good instruments in both the Realms, hath with no smaU difficulty been persuaded to like of and follow as his best. The only corafort which arraeth us against this wound resteth in her Majesty's better disposition towards his Highness, with sorae more ainiable kind of deaUng than this giveth us appearance of: which, if her Highness' other occupations raight give her leisure, we would be very glad to move unto her ourselves this afternoon, praying your Honour very heartily that we may' have her audience, and therewith to yield us at this tirae your wonted ' Annals, A, D, 1683, ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 331 favour and good disposition, which you have ever professed, to the furtherance of the vrished effects of these good over tures, which we have partly already, and do mean to move more plainly to her Majesty ; the good success whereof, as it wiU give Ukelihood of an unspeakable benefit to the prosper ous estate of both the Realms, so is it very difficile to conjec ture what may fall out upon the contrary. But, praying, God to inspire her Majesty and her grave Councillors othervrise for the better preservation of the coraraon benefit and tranquil lity of both Kingdoras, we take our leaves, committing your Honour to God's good protection. From London, the 12th of May 1583. Your Honour's assured faithful friends, Wm. Stuart. John Colvill.* Mr. Herle, who informs Hatton that the Count Pala tine had visited the library of Dr. Dee, the celebrated mathematician and astrologer, at Mortlake, and re ports the Count's answer to some communications made to him, was frequently employed in the public service, and was, on several occasions, an Agent for conducting business abroad. The Count, like Dr. Dee, was a professor of the magic art ; and Dee accompanied him to Poland, where their proceedings excited so much attention, that the Queen ordered Dee to return to England : — MR. WILLIAM HERLE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, May it please you to understand, that yesternight, upon my return to Winchester House, I found the Count Palatine Laschy absent, who, in the morning before, was privately gone to Mr. Dee's to recreate himself with the sight of his library, so as it was past ten of the clock before he came back to his house. And 1 being careful this day how to break vrith him discreetly for the under- > Additional MSS, 15891, f, . 332 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. standing what course he would hold in his journeys, Mr. Athye came opportunely with a raessage frora her Majesty about the sarae; touching the which, he is deterrained to raorrow to advertise ray Lord of Leicester of his whole in tention, taking her Majesty's gracious care had of hira in very good part ; but withal he knows of no Parliament, he saith, to be holden shortly in Poland, neither concerns it hira much in business or duty whether any be holden or no be fore his own pretended return ; which I thought ray part to certify your Honour of, reserving soraewhat to irapart with you herein by mouth at my next attendance on you. In the raean tirae, I do very hurably pray your Honour to join with you Mr. Secretary, and some other of the Council, (if you think good,) for the stay of the outlawry in Oxfordshire that will otherwise l^ pronounced on Tuesday next against my kinsman John Herle : his fact not great, but the harm and stain much, if your Honour of especial goodness do not vouchsafe to assist hira at this pinch. You shall find the raan to have valuable parts in hira, which he shall eraploy from henceforth in service of her Majesty, and in all thank ful duty to acknowledge his preservation to proceed from your only raean ; and me your Honour shall bind (in regard I have of the party and of ray narae) as for a benefit raerely bestowed upon myself. I would have waited on you to-day, but that I was constrained to take physic ; but by this bearer, ray servant, I recommend the cause and rayself to your hon ourable consideration and dispatch, for it requireth speed, as your wisdom seeth, meaning to send one down in post with the letter procured touching the premises. Herewith finish ing, I crave most truly pardon for this bold presumption of mine, grounded upon the favour I hope you bear me : and so the Alraighty God have you ever in his tuition. From ray lodging, the 20th of May 1583. Your Honour's ever to coramand, W. Herle.* * Additional MSS. 16891, f. 109, ^t, 43,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 333 Towards the end of May, the Queen, attended by the Marchioness of Winchester, the Ladies Cobham, and Stafford, the Earls of Leicester and Warwick, the Lord Admirals, Lords Howard and Hunsdon, Sir Christopher Hatton, and a large retinue, visited the Lord Treasurer at Theobald's, and remained there five days. Lord Burghley has left, in his own hand, a description of the arrangement of the lodgings of his guests, whence it appears that the Queen's apartments were at the north west end of the gaUery; and that the gentlewomen of the bedchamber, Mrs, Blanch Parry, and Hatton, pro bably from his office as Vice-Chamberlain, occupied rooms near to her.* Sir Thomas Heneage's description of Holdenby agrees with that of Lord Burghley some years before, and raises a high opinion of its magnificence : — sir THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Being neither Momus nor Aristippus, but a poor true i friend of yours, having seen your fair house with great desire, I send you word hereby with best contentment. For my own opinion, Holdenby is altogether even the best house that hath been built in this age ; and it raore showeth the good judgment and honour of the builder than all the charge that hath been bestowed upon stones by the greatest persons and the best purses that hath been in my time. Shortly, if the praise of a house consist in the seat, beauty, and use, both within and without, (howsoever it may be cavilled vrith,) Holdenby shall hold the pre-eminence of all the modem houses I have known or heard of in England. This is all I will say of it ; saring, your out-houses make rae reraember my noble old raaster the Earl of ArundeU, that raade his gar- " Nichols' Progresses, vol. ii. p. 403. 334 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583 ments most beautiful and rich where the common sort least looked for it. There is nothing better pleaseth rae than your park, which you dispraised; your green and base court, that you derised : and your garden, which is raost rare ; but aU the steps of descent must be of stone, which it lacketh. The honourable entertainraent it hath pleased you I should receive here, with excessive cheer, (fit for the best raan of England,) together vrith the diligent attendance of your good servants, deserveth raore than my thanks, but can receive no raore but ray love, and that have you as great an interest in as any raan alive, and withal my prayers to the Lord of all that with God's best blessings, her Majesty's best favour, your friends' most joy, and your own most honour and comfort, you may be longest owner of this earthly noble house, and after possess perpetually the most happy habitation in heaven. From your Holdenby, very late this 5th of July 1583. Your own raore and more bound unto you, T. Heneage.* sir THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, This second of August I have received your letters of the 23rd of July, wherein I flnd your most honourable and kind remembrance of your poor true friend, that, when he seeth you not, desireth nothing more than to hear from you. As for your best built house of Holdenby, which I particu larly affect, not for the partial love I bear to the owner, whom I will ever honour and hold dear, but for the many just causes I find to Uke it, I will say, as I think, that for a gentleman's dwelling of raost honour and estimation it is the best and most considerate built house that yet mine eyes have ever seen. The Lord Jesus, whose the earth is and the ful ness thereof, make you long to enjoy it with most honour and comfort. For the news you sent rae of Scotland, I hum bly thank you ; though in very troth I take thera to be the heralds of our greatest harms without timely prevention. The raanner of Sir Robert Stapleton's behaviour and sub- • Additional MSS. 16891, f. lOg"-, JEU. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 335 mission at York, as it was even now sent unto me, I send you here inclosed, which for my own poor opinion I see no cause to like of : of this matter and of that country, when we raeet, I shaU teU you ray mind. The whilst, and ever, I will love and honour you, as I have cause ; and having no more leisure to write unto you, through the hasty departure of this bearer who is a stremger unto me, I do commend myself all humbly unto you. From Hatfield, where the only princely game of red deer is tiiat ever I saw, this 2nd of August 1583. Your own so bound for ever, Tho. Heneage.* On the 4th of August Sir Christopher Hatton wrote to Sir WiUiam More, of Loseley HaU, in Surrey, that " in ten or twelve days the Queen intended to go to Loseley for four or five days, and desired that every thing might be got in order, and the house kept clean and sweet.'"" FROM THE LORDS OF THE COUNCIL TO THE SHERIFF OF OXFORDSHIRE. After our hearty coraraendations. These are to give you to understand that her Majesty, having partly by her own hear ing, and partly by report of others of credit, considered of a cause of long tirae depending in controversy and suit between John Croker, Esq., plaintiff, the son and heir of Sir Gerard Croker, deceased, and Richard Lee, Esq., defendant, late husband of the Lady Croker, late wife of the said Sir Gerard, concerning certain leases of divers manors, parks, rectories, tithes, lands, and hereditaments in Hocknorton in the county of Oxford ; and finding the said cause somewhat doubtful without some further proceeding, to be resolved directly, for any of the said parties ; hath thought good to have the profits thereof growing to be sequestered from both the said parties untU the end of Michaelraas terra next, and therewith also mindeth and hopeth to have the same controversy deterrained before that time, either by way of arbitraraent of friends, or ' Additional MSS. 16891, f. 1 12". " Nichols' Progresses, n. 412. 336 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1583. otherwise by some ordinary course of the law. And for this purpose her Majesty hath straitly coramanded us by her own speech to take order in her name that the profits of all the said lands, teneraents, tithes, rectories, and heredita ments should be sequestered. And therefore, in her Majesty's narae, and by her express comraandraent, we do will and require you, and by these presents do authorize you, being her Majesty's High Sheriff in the County of Oxford, to re pair to the foresaid raanors, lands, rectories, tithes, teneraents, and hereditaments so held on lease by the said Sir Gerard in Hocknorton aforesaid, and there to enquire by all good means what persons do hold and possess any such houses, manors, parks, parsonages, tithes or teneraents, or any other hereditaraents in Hocknorton, which the said Sir Gerard Croker held by leases, and which after his death the Lady Croker his wife held during her widowhood, which after her death the said Richard Lee hath also held and possessed or takes the profits thereof, and to charge all raanner of persons that do now hold, occupy, or possess any part thereof to pay unto you as by way of sequestration all manner of rates that shall be due or payable by them betwixt the feasts of Mi chaelmas and All Saints next, and the same to retain with yourself. And if any persons be charged with the payment of any tithe which heretofore was answerable to the said Sir Gerard, that you first cause a valuation to be raade thereof, and then to charge them to retain the sarae in their ovra bands, without rendering the sarae either to the plaintiff or defendant, or to any other clairaing any title to thera, so as every one be answerable to render the sarae, or the just value thereof, to such as hereafter by law or order it shall be deter rained to be restored. And if any of the said persons so answerable for any tithe shall appear to you to be of dis abiUty hereafter to answer the sarae, or the value thereof, you shall then order the same to be sequestered from their possession, and to be put into the custody of such other able and indifferent persons as shall be now able to answer for the sarae ; and of your doings you shall raake certificate unto us ^t. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 337 as soon as you can convenientiy execute the premises. And if any person, being not the tenant and occupier, have since Midsummer last taken any such tithes from the occupiers of the grounds, you shall vievv the sarae and raake thereof a just value, and in her Majesty's narae charge the parties to be answerable for the sarae. And because there are rents to be paid for the said lands, leased to such as have the reversion thereof, our raeaning is, that you shall enquire to whora any such rents are due, and thereupon to give order that tenants and occupiers shall pay so much as the rents shaU amount unto ; and, if need be, you shall make sale of so much of the tithes as shaU be requisite to pay the rents. And if any per son shaU charge for payment of any debt wherewith the said leases are charged, you shall advertise us thereof, whereby you may have our direction how to pay the same as the case shall require. Furtherraore, if there shaU appear to you that there be any houses or grounds, parcel of the premises, not granted out for any rent, you shall corarait the sarae to the custody of such fit persons as wiU answer a yearly rent to the raost advantage. And also you shaU deraand and receive of the tenants which have any in their hands already not paid, and the same also you shaU safely keep in your hands. And •whereas we are informed of sorae suits depending betwixt sorae tenants of Richard Lee and some belonging to John Croker, for which there is to be sorae inquisition at a sessions now shortly to be holden, you shall also cause a stay to be raade of any proceedings at the said sessions ; and generally you shall on your part, and therewith also you shall in her Majesty's narae, move the Justices of Peace that care be had for conservation of her Majesty's peace betwixt the said parties, their servants and tenants. So fare you well. From the Court at Oatlands, the 16th of August 1583. Your lov ing friend.* It appears from Archbishop Sandys' letter to Hatton, that he was greatly dissatisfied with the termination of > Additional MSS. 16891, f. II3. 338 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1683, the affair with Sir Eobert Stapleton and his confederates ; and that, though they had made a " submission," yet that it was doQe in terms which tended more to theif justification than his own innocence : — • Archbishop sandys to sir Christopher hatton. Sir, I had in riiind to have imparted unto you, ere this, the disordered and scornful submission made here at York by the insolent Knight arid his godless confederates ; but I forbear so to do, for fear lest I should be over-troublesome unto you. Yet now this bringer, my son, passing by Londori to Oxford, who was auritus testis, I have coraraanded hira to attend upon you, and to declare unto you how the raatter was here used, if it shall please you to hear him. The subraission was made in such sort as tended only to my condemnation and their justification ; but I doubt not that this their disordered doing vrill be looked into, if it be but in respect of the common cause. My state and condition here standeth hard ; but I will fiy to my good God for help, coraforting rayseK that the Queen's Majesty is ray hiost gracious Sovereign, and vriU not suffer my eneraies to triuraph over rae. And how rauch I am bound unto you for the greatest favour I have received at ybur hands, I can better reraember than requite ; yet will I never be found unthankful. And so I comraend you to the good direction of God's Holy Spirit. From Bishopsthorp, the 17th of August 1583. Yours in Christ, ever to use, E. Eboricensis.* In August Sir Francis Walsingham was sent by the Queen to the King of Scots, "out of her kind care lest he should," says Camden, " by corrupt counsels, in the very flexibility of his age, be alienated from the amity of England, to the damage of both Kingdoms." On his arrival at Newcastle he made a report of what he had heard, apparently to Lord Burghley : — ¦^ Additional MSS. 16891, f. 113. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 339 My very good Lord, The letter you sent rae, directed unto Colonel Stuart, is written to singular good purpose ; but I fear he hath raade shipwreck both of conscience and honesty. He guideth altogether the King his Master, (as it is now reported,) and therefore there is sraall hope of his re covery when misrulers becorae guiders. As I pass through these parts, I learn that the ill-affected are altogether inclined to that King, being now resolved that his Mother cannot live long. They defend his proceedings, and wish no good friend ship between the two Crowns, which I fear will fall out ac cording to their desire. Mar, as your Lordship will find by the last from Mr. Bowes, showeth himseK to be a very con stant gentleman ; and the deputies for the Church, that have been lately with the King, have taken a wise and a Christian resolution. If such Ministers as are eraployed were well backed by her Majesty, there might be raore good done than I can now hope after ; and yet am I persuaded that this dis sembling King, both vrith God and man, will not long stand, though, before his ruin, he some trouble unto her Majesty. I hope, within a few days now, to give your Lord ship some taste what is to be looked for in that Realm. And so, in the raean time, I most hurably take my leave. At Newcastle, the 26th of August 1583. Your Lordship's to command, F. Walsingham.* On the 24th of August the Vice-Chamberlain wrote again to Sir WilUam More, stating that " the Queen in tended to dine at Woking on the 27th, and to go to bed at his house; that he should have everything made sweet and meet to receive her; remove his family, and have everything ready ; that the Sheriff need not attend, but that he, Mr. Lyfield, and some other gentlemen should meet her at Guildfijrd.'"' The annexed letter was ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 117 ^ ^ Nichols' Progresses, ti, 412. z 2 340 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. probably written a few days after Walsingham had left the Court for Scotland, and possibly before the letter just inserted : — sir FRANCIS walsingham TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, You have rightly conceived her Majesty's raeaning, for that it agreeth with the charge she gave rae herseK. It raay please you to let her Majesty understand, that, within an hour after I departed frora her, I despatched letters unto Mr. Bowes to the effect she coraraanded, which I pray God raay arrive at a good season. This last night I was troubled with an extrerae pain in ray right side, which did bereave me of ray sleep ; it continueth with rae still, and therefore I raean to use both Gifford's and Hector's adrice. I find the pain accorapanied with an unaccustoraed faintness, and a dis position altogether subject to raelancholy. I hope I shall enjoy raore ease in another world than I do in this. And so, forbearing further to trouble you, I comrait you to the pro tection of the Alraighty, [August] 1583. Yours raost as suredly to coraraand, Fra. Walsingham.* By Statute of the 27th Hen. VIII. c. 6, the owners of parks were bound to keep brood mares ; and in the 33rd Hen. VIIL an Act was passed that all Peers and other owners of lands should be obliged to keep a certain num ber of horses of a prescribed height; and it was enacted that every other person whose wife wore any French hood, or velvet bonnet, or any ornaments of gold or jewellery on their dress, should maintain one stone trotting horse, upon pain of forfeiting ten pounds. The exportation of horses was prohibited by several statutes : — FROM THE LORDS OF THE COUNCIL. After our right hearty commendations. Whereas, by virtue of the Queen's Majesty's comraission to us and others » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 110. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 841 directed, we deputed you to rate as well yourselves as all other persons within the County of that ought to keep horses or geldings for service, according as their livings be indeed in yearly value, which is the law provided for this case, and not to be abused by a pretence of such values as are accustoraably taxed in the tiraes of assessments for subsidies, which how far under the full they may be is raost manifest, whereof we do not at this tirae make any certain account, which rates you have also set down and certified hither, al though in sorae parts not so full as was required and ex pected of you ; yet, to the intent her Majesty raay be truly inforraed how that rate, so by your last letter certified, is ob served, and how sufficiently the raares and horses set down therein are appointed and furnished, as by sorae forraer in structions you are directed, if present occasion of serrice at any tirae should so reqiure, it hath pleased her Majesty at this tirae to wiU us to signify unto you (which we do by these pre sents), that her Highness' pleasure and strait coraraandraent is, that upon the 20th day of Septeraber next you do cause a general rauster to be raade at of all the lances and light horseraen vrithin the County of , according to the last rate you certified hither. And for that it raay hap pen that sorae persons lastly by you certified and rated to have horses or geldings be since that tirae departed out of this Ufe, or otherwise reraoved and not resident in the Country, whereby there may be want of the said horses or geldings at this your muster, we will and require you that you have due considera tion hereof beforehand ; and, in place of thera that are dead, to devise how the heirs and vrives of the parties deceased, or any other possessing the lands of the deceased, may be rate- ably by you assessed to supply the want, and in her Majesty's name to signify to them how far forth you shall think it con venient to charge thera ; and therevrith to give thera coramand raent to send such horses or geldings, vrith able raen, to the rausters, and of your doings herein to certify us. And if any persons be reraoved frora their dwelUng to some other habita tion unto any Shire near unto you, we will that by your letr 342 THE LIFE AND TIMES OP [1583. ters you shall certify the Comraissioners of that County how far forth that sarae person was charged, and to will them to warn the party to appear afore thera at their rausters with the furniture requisite. And so also, if any other Coraraissioners shall certify you of the like, you shall suramon the party to do his duty therein. And if any person heretofore rated and certified, or any person now to be newly rated by you for supply of such as are deceased, shall raake default, we wiU that you coraraand the sarae parties in her Majesty's narae, on pain of one hundred pounds and further punishraent, that the sarae persons appear before us the seventh of October next. FinaUy, if it shall seera to you that by the largeness of the Shire it will be difficult to have all persons appear at one place and at one day, we leave to your consideration that you appoint several places for the said rausters, so as ne vertheless the day by us fixed be straitly kept ; and to that end you raay diride yourselves, so as at every place there raay be a convenient number of you to be present to view and to take the same rausters, except sorae of us that are in comrais sion shall give you knowledge, ..... days before, that we will be there present at the same musters. We require you, also, to have in remembrance to certify us the number of parks and enclosures within that County, and how many horses and raares for breed are kept in every of thera according to the statute, and, according to our former instructions, to give order for the raanner of the irapress of horses and staUions upon coraraons, so as, against the next spring, all persons chargeable to provide stallions for that purpose may have thera against that time in a readiness, as by the laws is pre scribed : and if there be any newly come to inhabit the County, being able by their possessions to find horse or geld ing, whereof at the tirae of the forraer rausters there was no raention raade, that you by your discretion consider thereof, and raake sorae reasonable rate for horses or geldings, and to charge thera to show and prefer the sarae at these next mus ters ; and if they shall refuse, then to advertise your opinions, and to coraraand such recusants to appear afore us the 7th of ^T, 43,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 343 October next. And so we bid you heartily farewell. Your very loving friends.* At last Dr. Mathew succeeded in obtaining the Deanery pf Durham; and his letter of thanks to Sir Christopher Hatton was probably written about Au gust, as he was installed on the 31st of that month ; — DR. MATHEW TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable Sir, Having such present impedi ment as I conveniently raay not travel to yield her Majesty and your Honour my manifold and most hurable thanks for ray dispatch to Durhara, (according to my bounden duty and just desire,) I presume upon your accustomed good favour to do that by writing which by word I cannot yet ; that is, to acknowledge how much I know myself in that bill of mine indebted double and treble to your Honour, as without whose plain importunity (for so I am informed) it could not pass to signing, so raany sundry turns and thwarts it suffered. But it coraeth soon enough now, and well enough too, for that it cometh vrith her Majesty's gracious Uking and good con tentraent, which I am to hold at an higher price than all the profits and proraotions of this world. I beseech God I raay so there bestow ray tirae a.nd behave myself as I may dis charge ray duty in glorifying of Him, in serving of her, in profiting of that people, and in verifying sorae part of those good speeches it hath ever pleased your Honour to bestow upon me ; which I hope in Christ I shall endeavour to do to the utterraost of ray small power, as well in conversation and hospitality as in doctrine and government. And so, with an unfeigned profession of my thankfulness to your Honour, together vrith my readiness at your comraandment, I humbly betake you for this tirae and for ever to the grace of Almighty God. Your Honour'? humble and bounden, Tobie Mathew.** ^ Additional MSS, 15891, f. 114. "> Additional MSS, 15891, f. 110. 344 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. A remarkable fact in the life of the Earl of Sussex is brought to light by the following letters from his widow to Hatton and to the Queen, written in September ¦ 1583,* namely, that some malicious persons had, in his last iUness, alienated his affections from his wife : — THE COUNTESS OF SUSSEX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Knowing the great good-will that it pleased you to profess unto ray dear Lord deceased, together with the great courtesies and honourable speeches which you have often vouchsafed me; and now finding myself in an unfortunate estate, trodden down on all sides by cunning adversaries, and most wrongfully disgraced as undutiful to her Majesty ; for that I know right well your aptness to do good to everybody, and of what value your friendship is amongst all others where you proraise and profess, I have thought good to cora mit myself and my whole credit to your defence and protec tion. And albeit I neither have nor ever ara likely to be able to deserve that favour and goodness which I now require of you, yet assure yourself that, if God spare rae life, I will be raost thankful for it, both to you and yours, to the utraost reach of my small power. In the mean time let this be a sufficient testimony and reward of your rirtue, that they who know no cause nor desert had rather put theraselves in their estimation into your hands, than into theirs of whom they have rauch deserved. I have herein inclosed a letter to her Majesty for the clearing of ray undutifulness, the which I pray you read, to the end you raay be the better acquainted with ray cause ; and at your best opportunity I earnestly de sire you, with ray true and hurable duty, to deliver it, with your best assurance of ray vowed faith and loyalty to her Highness ; and, if it please you any further to know the par ticularities of ray unhappy estate, this bearer, my dear friend, and one that rauch honoureth you, shall let you understand * Vide a former page. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 34.5 it at large. Thus, only intreating your protection as far as ti-uth and justice shaU bear, for which I will never be proved unthankful or ungratefully-minded tov/^ards you, I coramit you to the raerciful goodness of God Alraighty. Frora ray desolate close at Berraondsey, the 18th of Septeraber 1583. Your poor friend to be raade raost bound to you, F. Sussex.* TO THE queen. Most gracious and most merciful Queen, I raost humbly beseech your Majesty to view these few lines, written vrith many tears, and even in the bitterness of ray soul, vrith that pitiful regard wherewith God hath viewed your Majesty at aU times and in aU cases. And albeit I am now beaten down with many afflictions and calamities hardly to be borne of flesh and blood, yet is there no grief that pierceth rae so deeply as that by sinister suggestion I should be defaraed to be undutiful to your most excellent Majesty, and injurious to the honour of my dear Lord lately deceased. For the first, I appeal to God himself, the searcher of hearts, and revenger of all disloyalties : for the second, I appeal to none but unto my most gracious Queen, whether I have not from time to time been more careful of his health, honour, and well-doing than of mine own soul and safety; refusing all friends and friendships in this world for so dear a Lord, whom I followed in health and sickness, m wealth and woe, with raore care than becoraed a true Christian to owe unto any worldly creature. The which if it be true, (as I trust your Majesty in ray right and your justice doth acknowledge it is,) marvel not, most dread Sovereign, if the rigilant raalice of those who have long coraplotted ray ruin, who espied their time, when ray Lord through anguish and torraents was brought to his utmost weakness, to break the perfect band and love of twenty-eight years' continuance, have also, by cunning sleights devised, and by slanderous speeches, instilled into your Majesty's ears the want of that duty, the which I pray God may sooner fail by » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 112, 346 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583, lack of life than want of loyalty. And thus, most noble Prin cess, am I trodden dovm by ray inferiors, not only in worldly maintenance, which 1 nothing esteem (haring far more, by God's goodness, than I deserve), but also ara touched in the chiefest point of honour, and the highest degree of duty, which bringeth on every side such a sea of sorrows as, were It not for the fear of God's revenge, I could, vrith all my heart, redeera thera with the sacrifice of ray life. Wherefore, raost gracious Lady, even for the pity which ever hath been en grafted in your Princely heart, I raost hurably beseech you, see not your Majesty's poor servant trodden down by the raa licious speeches and unconscionable extreraities of those who take the advantage of my Lord's painful weakness to work my disgrace, nor increase ray just and perpetual griefs with your heavy displeasure ; praying God that I raay rather presently die while I write these lines, than that I raay live wittingly to deserve j'our Majesty's just dislike. In the raeantirae, I will not cease to pray to the Almighty for your Majesty's life, health, and prosperity. From the poor careful close of Ber raondsey. Your Majesty's poor, but true faithful servant, to die at your feet, F. Sussex.* The rigour of the Queen's displeasure towards the Countess of Derby seems to have been at last some what softened : — countess of derby to sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My dear and noble good Friend, Having, by raeans of your honourable favour, obtained that grace as to present myself to the view of her Majesty at what time her Highness reraoved frora her house of Sion to Oatlands, ray humble suit is now, you would happily find that good leisure and oppor tunity as to let it be known unto her Majesty that thereby I received that hope of her gracious farther good-liking, which since hath not only kept life in me, but also embolden me more and raore to prostrate rayself as a loyal and faithful Sub- " Additional MSS. 16891. ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 347 ject unto my so good and gracious a Princess. Wherefore, that I may at length desist and leave off, (though ever most bound unto your noble courtesies,) my request at this instant once again is, that by means of your happy raotion I may come to the kissing of her Highness' hand, which would yield me that corafort as no earthly thing the like. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, let rae not seera tedious (though so in deed) unto you ; for were it that I possessed all things, yet in this her Majesty's disgrace I esteera rayseK as possessing nothing, insorauch as I take her Highness unto rae as life with her gracious favour, but as death with her heavy displea sure. Thus, holding you as ray surest hold, and raost honour able good friend, frora whom raust proceed ray chiefest good, I humbly take ray leave. Frora ClerkenweU, the 26th of September 1583. Your assured and most bounden poor friend, Margaret Derby.* It may be inferred from the Countess of Sussex's next letter to Sir Christopher Hatton, that she had been involved in a lawsuit with her husband's execu tors, and that her proceedings were disapproved of by the Queen, whose displeasure her former letters show she had incurred : — the countess of SUSSEX TO SIR CHBISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, I understand by my dear friend Mr. Dean of the Arches, how rauch I ara bounden unto you, and how bonourably you have satisfied mine ex;pectation and the true opinion that the world conceiveth of you. And although I confess there is no reason to trouble you in this action any farther, yet wiU I not cease by all good ways and means to seek and crave her Majesty's favour, even with as much duty aud humihty as the poorest creature that ever lay at her Highness' feet. And if her Majesty did indeed know how far undutifulness was ever frora ray heart, or how little I > Additional MSS. 15891. 348 THE life and times of [1583. suspected her Highness' heavy displeasure, knovring mine own innocency, or how far ray thoughts are frora law and trouble, if I raight find any indifferency and courtesy in my Lord's executors, truly her merciful heart would never have refused my letters written with so many tears, nor mine humble duty so unfeignedly tendered ; which albeit her Ma jesty hath done, yet will I not orait eftsoons to do the part of a true servant and humble subject : the which I beseech you most heartily, upon every good occasion, to signify unto her Highness ; of whose grace if I only ara born to fail, with out my desert to ray knowledge, I can do no more but pray unto God that it be His holy pleasure to shorten ray unhappy days, wrapped and overwhelraed with raany sorrows, but es pecially vrith the heavy indignation of ray Prince, whom I beseech God long to prosper to His goodvrill and pleasure. And so, eftsoons thanking you of your great goodness,' I comrait you to the raercy of the Alraighty. This 10th of October 1583. Your friend raost bound, F. Sussex.* In what manner Bishop Aylmer gave off'ence to Lei cester has not been discovered ; but the foUowing letter shows his habitual subserviency : — bishop aylmer to the earl of LEICESTER. My singular good Lord, It grieveth rae not a little that this raischance should happen between you and rae, consider ing that I ever raeant to stay rayself upon your good and honourable favour in all manner of office and duty belonging to such a personage. I have always found you my very good Lord tiU this unhappy paroxysra so shook the forraer sound state of your honourable friendship that I inight haK despair of the fuU recovering thereof, but that I have ever observed in you such a raild, courteous, and araiable nature, that you never kept as grave in raarble, but written in sand, the greatest displeasure that ever you conceived against any man. * Additional MSS. 16891, f. 17. MT. 43.] sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 349 I fear not, therefore, ray good Lord, in this strait that 1 am in, to appeal from tiiis Lord of Leicester, whora either ray oversight, or other raistaking and raisreport of raessengers, or both, have incensed vvith displeasure, unto raine old Lord of Leicester, who in his virtue of raildness and of softness (which the Apostle so coramendeth) hath carried away the praise from all raen. Admit, I pray your Lordship, this poor appeal of mine, seeing it is but to yourself who in former time have bound raany unto you with the golden chain of love, rather than carried or driven any with the boisterous tera- pests of terror, wherein, ray good Lord, is hidden this danger, as oft is said, quem metuunt oderunt, &c. You hate ingrati tude, I cannot blarae you ; for I assure you, if I found it in rayself, I would not spare to hate myself; for qui ingratum dicit, omnia dicit. Let not (ray good Lord) the Bishop of London in his old age (when, though he is not the happiest, yet ought to be the wisest) lose that good Earl whom he so comfortably enjoyed in his younger years. I hope these two arguraents vriU forcibly raove you to reconciUation. The good and kind nature of our God, who loved us His eneraies, and daily forgiveth us our offences, vrithout any reliques of reraerabrance or desire of revenge. Our gracious Queen, when she was highly displeased with rae for Mr. Rich, yet the beams of her grace, soon upon my humble writing to her Majesty, as it were dispersed the clouds of her indignation. Oh, my Lord! vriU God forgive and her Majesty forget, and my Lord of Leicester retain and keep that which is not worth the keeping, I mean the remerabrance of offences ? I believe you wUl not ; Iknow you cannot; andl assure you in this profession you may not. To end : if it may please your Lordship to appoint me any time, I wiU attend upon you, if I raay better satisfy you, whora God bless now and ever with His gracious goodness. 2nd November 1583. Your Lordship's to comraand assuredly, John London.* * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 118. 350 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. TO JOHN DUTTON OF DUTTON, ESQ. Sir, The retum of ray cousin and servant, your son Peter Dutton, after his long and dangerous travel abroad, hath been cause of exceeding corafort unto rae, both for the good affec tion which I bear him, and for the virtuous disposition which I have always noted in him ; the which being now much con firraed in hira both by judgraent and staidness of behaviour, I cannot but earnestly recoraraend hira to your goodness upon occasion of this present repair unto you, and heartily entreat you to receive hira with the regard of good and fatherly af fection, which I trust you will judge hira very well worthy of, both in respect of his dutiful disposition towards you, and also for raany other good parts which justly crave the con tinuance of your good favour towards hira. Her Majesty doth very graciously accept of the gentleraan's travel, liking also very well of his return, with assurance that he vriU prove a raan raeet to be hereafter eraployed in service to the benefit of his Country. In which respect, Sir, I raust entreat you to raake rauch of hira, and to encourage him to hold in that good course which he hath akeady begun, to the great con tentment of his friends ; whose expectation I doubt not he will perform honestly in every point to his own credit and commendation, and in time do rauch honour and reputation to the House he coraeth of. I have always thought myseK beholden unto you in that it pleased you (upon very good vrill, I take it,) to bestow him in ray service ; for which your kindness I very heartily thank you. And even so I do assure you that he shall not want my best friendship and favour wherein I may do him good, or any way further the toward ness of virtue which I find in hira to due perfection. After he hath been with you a while, and discharged some part of his duty by presence towards you, in case I may per ceive any desire in him to follow the life of a courtier yet for a tirae, he shall have ray best furtherance for his prefer raent, doubt you not, as occasion shall be offered ; accounting that whatsoever I shall do for hira I shall do for one of my .BT. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 351 best friends and kinsmen. I pray you. Sir, once again, cherish him and make ranch of him for my sake. And even so, offering my like readiness to yourself to pleasure you in what I raay, with ray heartiest commendations I coramit you to God. Frora the Court at St. Jaraes's, the 16th of De cember 1583. Your very loving assured friend and cousin, Chr. Hatton.* About the end of April 1582, Sir Thomas Tresham, the brother of Dr. WiUiam Tresham, the writer of the foUowing eloquent letter, heard mass said by a seminary priest, called Osborne, in Lord Vaux's chamber in the Fleet prison,'' and was convicted of recusancy in Janu ary foUowing." It is without date, but may be assigned to this year. The warning he gives Hatton of the Earl of Leicester is remarkable : — WILLIAM TRESHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. If there be no greater grief to the heart of man than un kindness offered where it was never deserved, and where as sured friendship hath been looked for, then. Sir, raarvel not at rae K I be fraught with infinite Woe and full of heariness ; for I ara persuaded that in aU the world there was never any raan that bare raore perfect affection to another than WUIiara Treshara to Sir Christopher Hatton long and faith fully before he was a CounseUor, and never ceased (oh that I ara inforced to declare it !) until so strangely I was rejected. It was not ray own desert, I take God to witness. My heart was too rauch devoted yours, not so rauch as in thought to wish araiss. There was never any man's good-will purchased at so dear a price as I bought the favour of Mr. Vice-Cham berlain : and however, not with the benefit of giving much, (yet greatly pleasuring you as any man that hath gained most ^ Desiderata Curiosa, I. 142. Sir Thomas Tresham was committed •¦ Ellis' Original Letters, 2nd se- and fined for having harboured Cam- ries, vol, in. p, 88, pion, and been privy to his treason- •^ Wright's Queen Elizabeth and able designs. Annals, iii. pt. i. pp. her Times, n. 187. Strype says that 180-181. 352 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583, by you,) but by often and serious protestations, with many humble and earnest requests, with rauch sincerity of raind, great integrity of heart, with resolute avowing not to tarry in Court if you once disliked ray continuing there ; yea, and raore than all that, laraenting with raany grievous tears when soever upon any sraall occasion or siraple surraise you had conceived any displeasure against rae : such was my grief to have your ill-vrill, and ray care to entertain your good liking. Ah Sir, you have often sought to cast rae off when I would not see it, so faithfuUy dear were you always to me in aU fortunes. But oh blind affection that never deceiveth but with late repentance ! How may it be thought that ever you would have rejected rae, your devoted poor friend, for the sole pleasure of the Earl of Leicester, without any occa sion or small suspicion given on ray part to yourself, knowing especially, as you do, that he affecteth you only to serve his own turn ? Take heed of hira in tirae ! I speak it for good will ; and all the harra I vrish you is, that you will with the eyes of vrisdom look into him thoroughly ; and then you shall find that he knoweth only to gain friends, and hath not the good regard or grace to keep them. I pray you. Sir, deceive not yourself so far as to think that CounseUors only are wise ; for there are many other raen of great judgraent and understanding, whora fortune never advanced to so high degree, sapientissimus enim ipse qui discrete seipsum videt, and deeraeth not vainly or passionately of others. I make sraall account in what sort you scorn ray letters now in my absence, considering how little grace my speeches had in your ears when I was present with you. For myself, I know, being a banished raan, you can pleasure me little ; but my poor brother, detained now in prison for the remorse and liberty of conscience, may haply fare the better if he find favour in your sight ; which if it shall please you to vouchsafe hira in this discorafort and heaviness of affliction that he now lieth in, you shall both requite with courtesy a friend that hath ever loved you with constancy, and bind rae with my devote prayers to God to be thankful unto you for it. I ^T, 43,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 353 pray you, Sir, reraeraber, that the bee gathereth honey of every flower, and of raany travails franieth a sweet and com fortable being for herself and young ones all the cold winter ; but the grasshopper all the suraraer-tirae joyeth with gallantry in the pleasant raeadows, and dieth coraraonly with the cold dew of Bartholoraew. You know that the high cedar-trees on the tops of huge raountains are raost subject to thc danger of storras, and therefore have most need of many and sure roots. We are all in God's hands, to be raised or pulled down as it shall please Him ; and there is none so high now, but may one day, through affliction, stand in as great need of corafort as now ray poor brother and your dear friend doth. I beseech you think of him, and vouchsafe to bind us and our posterity unto you by the goodness that you may now afford him in furthering bis enlargement. The day may come that you raay find either hira, or his, better able than now they are to acknowledge in all good sort, and thankfuUy to requite your kindness. God bless you with all good favour, and grant you the happiness to love your friends with tbat faith fulness which is due unto thera, and without the which you cannot keep them ! Your Honour's to command, WiLLM. Tresham.* No light can be thrown upon the following letter, which is without either signature or date : — UNKNOWN, TO THE QUEEN. May it please your most excellent Majesty to vouchsafe with your gracious and pitiful eyes the reading of these few lines, and by thera to understand the unhappy estate of rae your Majesty's raost hurable and loyal Subject, who was long in debating with rayseK what course I might devise which was most agreeable to express the duty which I did owe unto your Majesty, and raost likely to reUeve the misery which I did feel within rayself. And, at the last, call ing to mind how ready your sacred hands have been to receive » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 81. AA 354 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. the supplications of the poor, and how rightly noble your princely heart hath ever showed itself in pitying the state of the miserable ; nay, remerabering what undeserved cleraency • you have soraetiraes showed to those which have offended, and what unspeakable favour you have ever used to such as have been innocent, I was eraboldened (though mine own un worthiness dissuaded me), lying prostrate at your Majesty's feet, to present this hurable supphcation of raine, and in it neither to protest further than I can with a good and sound conscience warrant, nor to desire raore than your Majesty shall in your grave and deep judgraent think me worthy. And because that which is past and known is sometime a raean to explain that which is present and not raanifest, I raost hurably beseech your Majesty to consider, how, at my first entrance into the world, I was laid open to all danger and only protected by you ; how I was assaulted by raalice and defended by you ; how I was overthrown by misfortune and upholden by you ; how I must acknowledge all that I have to proceed frora your goodness, and how I do confess that which I ara to be by your favour. And if your Majesty do consider this, I know the gracious disposition of yours (which is easily raoved to believe the best though it be doubt ful, and hardly drawn to conceive the worst though it be manifest) will not suffer you without open and evident proof to conderan rae of so great and horrible ingratitude as that I should think a thought which raight displease you, rauch less do a thing which should offend you. Wherefore, seeing I am not only bound to your Majesty in that universal and highest band which is comraon to me with all your other subjects, but in this special and particular band which is peculiar to myself alone, as I must acknowledge myself unworthy to live if I have willingly offended your Majesty in the sraallest raatter, so, if it raay be lawful for rae with all humiUty to sue for so rauch favour at your Majesty's hands as that I raight, with your gracious licence, speak unto yourself, I doubt not but so to lay open the sincerity of ray mind and the integrity of ray dealing from time to tirae in anything ^T. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 355 which concerned my duty to your Majesty, that I shall appear far different from that which, peradventure, the malice of some would have made me. And in the raean tirae I raost hurably beseech your Majesty that I raay protest with your favour thus much ; and, for confirmation of it, I will call God to witness that mine own thoughts cannot accuse rae of the least undutifulness to your Majesty; that I ara ready and wiUing to hazard my life, whensoever, howsoever, or where soever it pleaseth your Majesty to coraraand to eraploy rae ; that the whole course of ray IKe is bent to serve you ; that it is ray daily study how to please you, and my only desire by any mean to content you; that I have no comfort in this world but your favour, and that no earthly thing either doth or can grieve me so much as your displeasure. To conclude aU in a word, that I desire God so to prosper rae in this world, and to bless rae in the next, as I have been in all ray words, intents and actions, true, faithful, and dutiful unto your Majesty. And thus, craving pardon vrith all huraility if either I have been in this supplication raore tedious than be comes me, or have done in anything otherwise than agreed vrith your Majesty's Uking and pleasure, I beseech God frora the bottom of ray heart ever to send your Majesty that happi ness which your raost incoraparable virtues do deserve, and your raost affectionate subjects do desire.* Dr. Mathew never appears except as an importunate suitor ; but the precise nature of this application is not stated : — DR. MATHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Mr. Cox, I never call upon you but when I have need to use your friendship ; and, when I need it, I ever find it. I thank you for it. My good friend Mr. Doctor Lougher wiU let you know the cause, and let you see the letter that now doth move rae to solicit Mr. Vice-Charaberlain. I pray. Sir, raost instantly direct Mr. Doctor what course he shall take in » Additional MSS. 15891, l 118", A A 2 356 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583, discoursing with hira, which I have entreated hira to do ; for that I dare not corae to the Court, as weU lest I should exas perate raine adversaries, as also being in this place so subject to the sickness as I know not with what safety or duty I may approach unto his Honour. My especial affiance, you know where it is, and I beseech you answer ray expectations once for all. I do raore than raarvel that we have no word of an swer to the letter written to the Prebendaries of Durham, in her Majesty's narae, frora ray Lord of Leicester and Mr. Vice- Chamberlain. If you understand anything thereof, I pray you impart it to this bearer, as all other things that you would to rayself. So fare you most heartily and friendly well. Your assured friend, Tobie Mathew.* TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, This raessenger your ser vant having given rae sorae Uttle warning to wait on you, I have adventured to trouble you vrith ray iU-vn-itten letter, false English, and matter as little to be regarded as the pro fession of her good-vrill who wrote it, who is herseK little or nothing worth. Nevertheless, when I remember your courtesy offered even then when Fortune most showed her despite against me, I am persuaded a certain planet reigned that then assured rae, and so doeth still, that I should receive sorae good of you, though the storras of my iU-fortune have shed since many drops untimely for rae to gather fruit of your favour. I have nothing to present you with but the thought of the heart by the pen's description, in what thank ful raanner I take your good and kindly offer to do rae plea sure ; holding that opinion of your great virtue that I have ever conceived, which is, that you love faithful plain-dealing, and hate dissiraulation. I ara grievously sorry for her Ma jesty's heavy displeasure so kindled against me, as I fear it is. If God will make my prayers worthy to enter into His ears, I will vrith all lowliness of mind incessantly beseech Him to prosper her estate ; and for ray offence, which she •> Additional MSS, 16891, f. 105. .ET. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 357 supposeth to be heinous in her judgraent and justly deserv ing her disfavour, I appeal to the Highest, that is best able to look into the bottom of my heart, whether my innocency have not always dreaded only to conceive so rauch as an ill thought of her. God bless her ! and give rae grace to serve Him, that by His goodness it may plainly appear unto her how unjustly I am afflicted with her disgrace and indigna tion. It shall make me less careful than I have been (but only for duty sake) for that life of courting. But, country woman or courtier, as long as Mr. Vice-Charaberlain vriU do me the honour to judge rae worthy to be esteeraed an honest poor friend, I vrill ever, with all honour that any tongue can express, think I do right to rayself in giving you that which your virtue deserveth. Yours, as ever vowed during life, Elizabeth Post. — I hope. Sir, that if a poor pUgrira, wandering in the Park vrith a long bow, shoot at rovers, and hit a buck where the sign is, and die of it, you vrill not raake it a pre tended raurder.* The following letter, relating to some proposed changes in the Church of St. Patrick, which wiU be again no ticed, was written by Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Dub lin from 1567 to 1605 : but the date is not given, and it may have been written in 1584,, or even in 1585 : — archbishop of DUBLIN TO LORD BURGHLEY. May it please your Lordship, Upon the retum hither of the Archdeacon of Dublin, vrith report of his success in the hurable suit exhibited in his behalf of the Church of St. Patrick, I did not only find the gracious resolution that was set down there by the Lords and others of her Majesty's Privy Council, but the especial favour showed by your Lord ship, so honourable and conscionably vouchsafed as deserveth the perpetual prayers of ray brethren and me; the sarae reso lution tending to this end, that nothing should be done in the " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 62. 358 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583. dissolution of the Church without a conference between the Lord Deputy and me, and a consent in rae (as I take it), is now brought over, as I hear, by Sir Lucas Dillon, but is not hitherto, neither I think shall be, iraparted to me by his Lordship. I know, my good Lord, that nothing but zeal and care of the coraraon good doth carry ray Lord Deputy into the settled purpose to change the ancient institution into such an alteration as he conceiveth to be raore beneficial to the Commonwealth, by establishing public lectures in several studies and sciences ; which if it might be without overthrow ing the great for the less, or with the expense and dirainish ing only of raine own private, and not with the ruin in man ner of all the Professors of Divinity in the land, I would not stand against his Lordship (whom I honour and love) in a cause that hath so good appearance for the public wealth. But this, my good Lord, is the case : My church standeth not upon temporalities, as all churches in England do, but every dignity and every prebend is a parsonage with cure of souls, saving a little demesne land in the country for the dean and the chaun ter ; no impropriation belonging to all St. Patrick's ; but the dean, the two archdeacons, chaunter, treasurer and prebends are all persons without vicars endowed, and ought to be all divines, for so the foundation requireth. The church of Christchurch neither hath, nor is able to raaintain, one preacher. Then, my Lord, behold the state of this wretched Country; in aU the whole Reahn there is not one preacher (three bishops excepted, of whom two were pre ferred out of this church, but only in St. Patrick's.) These preachers must be removed, and as it were banished, in hope that, twenty years hence, sorae divines may spring out of a lecture to be instituted out of this intended college. In the mean season, the several cures of the incumbents of the church raust be left to unlearned stipendiaries. The arch- bishoprick raust neither have archdeacon to visit, (for Christ church hath none,) neither hath he one church in the Realm whereunto to present a learned raan ; a perpetual indignity to all my successors, Archbishops, which since the Conquest MT. 48.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 359 have been all Englishmen (one only excepted), and all in more than ordinary credit here with their Sovereigns. Now your Lordship in all^odly vrisdora looking into these things may see ray estate : either I raust contend with hira, whora I highly esteera, and ought in all dutiful love to obey, or else I must neglect my personal charge, or leave myself to all my successors a perpetual blot and infaray, that the endowraents of the church, founded by noble Princes, and continued in so many ages, should determine in ray tirae, and a present evil to grow upon hope of a future good. I might say, schools are provided for in every country here ; Oxford and Cara bridge are not far off, all under one dorainion ; but this will not satisfy. Therefore, ray dear Lord, I conclude, that if her Majesty by her private letters do not expressly forbid this dissolution to be taUced of in Parliaraent, I foresee (as things are like to be wrought) the ruin both of this See and of this Church, with a general discontentraent of the people, her Majesty having never given the like exaraple. And there fore, if that letter may not by your only favour be procured, it shall be best for me (being old, and not suffered longer to do good,) to avoid the present eril, and to resign the bishop rick with all duty and humiUty to one raore worthy than ray seK, that can frame reason for the tirae ; which is my deterrai nate purpose with your Lordship's good advice and favour, whereupon I depend more than any worldly raan. I have given order to Mr. Bancroft, the bearer hereof, and one of the prebendaries of ray church, not only to deUver these letters to your Lordship, but also to attend on you for this cause, in such sort and at such tirae as it shall please you to comraand hira. And so, coraraending your Lordship to God's gracious favour in ray humble prayers, I forbear to trouble you any longer.* The Bishop of St. David's, to whom Dr. Mathew com pares himself in this letter on the old subject, was Mar maduke Middleton, who was translated from the See of Waterford in December 1582 ; — » Additional MSS, 15891, f. 143. 360 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1583, DR. MATHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Mr. Samuel Cox, I trust you will license me with good leave to challenge your proraise at my departure, not only to have consideration, but care, of my suit. I cannot but re raeraber your words full of friendship and good affection ; and by this tirae, it raay be, you can beyond conjecture send me some good hope of better expedition than I found at my last being there, yet too soon methought by so sudden an alteration as seeraed very strange, no raore to rayseK than to sundry others. But all things have their tiraes, and that time was not the time of that thing. But wiU it be in any tirae, trow you ? Can Mr. Michael Stanhope win the time to Write two letters to Doctor Sprint ray friend and countryman, and assure him that he shall have the Deanery of Durham if he vrill come, or send his brother to enter as one authorized for such a raatter, and so to carry it away vrithout delay ; and cannot Mr. Cox see, or foresee, or aftersee what cause or colour might work such alteration ? Ara not I an old man ? — ^he is younger. Am I raarried ? — ^he is once raore 'raarried than I. But what speak I of age, or raarriage ? when, to let all other answers pass, her Majesty was pleased araidst those exceptions to advance, I say not to a Deanery, but to the Bishoprick of St. David's, as young a raan as myself and mar ried ; wherefore, some other matter of stay there raust needs be than these. I pray you. Sir, do rae the friendship to learn it, and write it, or say it to this bearer as to rayseK. Be as good to me towards Mr. Vice-Chamberlain as his Honour hath been towards her Majesty for me. If there be any secret, desire it may be discovered, that so you raay the less trouble him, and he her Majesty, and I ray friends. Howso ever this fall, I trust you will love us as we like you. Your assured loving friend, Tobie "Mathew.* Another letter from Dr. Mathew, expressing his grati tude to Hatton, without any date, may also have been written about this period : — » Additional MSS. 15891. 43.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 3G1 DR. mathew to sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, Your special favour towards me hath many ways appeared, but most singularly of late, to my great comfort, araidst ray sickness ; for the which your goodness and bounty albeit no length of words or writing would suffice me to be worthily thankful to your Honour, yet such is, you know, my present occasion, as I raust think the rest, and only say, that, K ever such a one as I were most bounden to such a person as yourseK, I ara the man, both sick and whole, both in your presence and in your absence, as finding your Honour my best physician, and your cook my best apothecary. Now wonld to God, Sir, I were as worthy to enjoy my health as you raay be assured to coramand my IKe. And even so, vrith my humble thanks nnto you, and mine unfeigned prayers for you that God vriU increase your Honour to His glory, I take my leave. Your Honour's most bounden in aU duty, Tobie Mathew.* The earUest letter in 1584 relates to the persecution of some unhappy Homan CathoUc : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Though for my ovra part I do very weU aUow of the course you were entered into touching the examining of Keeper, yet, seeing the Earl of Leicester doth not hold it best, I think it best forborne until we may confer vrith him to-morrow what way he shaU think meet to be taken vrith the said party. In the mean time, I doubt not but that you wUl have care, both that he may be forthcoming, as also that he may be kept frora intelligence. They that have given adver tiseraent that he is a priest do take upon them to be most as sured of it, as the Lord of Hunsdon telleth me; and therefore I find it strange that his answers be so peremptory. It mav be, when he shall be pressed vrith oath, he wUljaeld another ' Additional MSS. 16891. 362 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1584, answer. If he prove to be a priest (as is reported), then will he not greatly weigh his aUegiance, having, as the rest of his associates have, a very unreverent opinion of her Majesty's authority. Thus, Sir, I ara bold to scribble sorae raore lines than were necessary, and so do corarait you to the tuition of the Almighty. At Seething Lane, the 30th of January 1583 [1584]. Yours most assuredly to command, Fra. Walsingham.* A marginal note gives this account of the writer of the following letter, who was, he says, " a sworn officer touching the Queen's revenue:" — " This was that Wil liam Dodington, that wilfully brake his neck by casting himself down headlong from the battlements of St. Sepulchre's steeple, upon the sight of certain depositions touching a cause in controversy between him and one Bruhker in Chancery." And a letter is preserved, en titled " A lamentable ejaculation of W. Dodington's distressed soul;'"' intimating his intention to commit suicide. MR. WILLIAM dodington TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May it please your Honour, The morrow after ray departure frora you ray late Master sent for rae, and showed me the order devised by Mr. Manners, being the same which I had read to you the day before. He told rae that he received it of the Lord Treasurer, with earnest desire to have the cause so laid as the lands raight corae again to her Ma jesty, and so to Mr. Manners' hands. I prayed him not to deal with you to that effect ; I told him the harm and shame would grow to rae thereby, and that for ray part I would never agree to it whilst I Uved. He wished rae not to la bour you to the contrary, and said he knew what he would do therein ; and this was all our talk : sithence I hear by Mr. Carey that your Honour is drawn to that course, as a » Additional MSS. 16891. " Lansdowne MSS. 99, art. 32. ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 363 thing whereunto 1 should have also yielded ray consent. I raost humbly beseech you to weigh my hard case. Mr. Man ners hath of record accused rae (her Highness' sworn Officer touching her revenue), first of fraud, of deceit, of cunningly and closely inserting and shifting into a bill, to be signed by her Majesty, matter to her great loss and hindrance in the same revenue : this is in his bill. In his replication he particu larly entertaineth his slander, and not obscurely in the end chargeth me with perjury, to make rae araends vrithal. But I ara in a sort discharged of aU this raatter, saving the per jury ; and now Mr. Manners must have the land again by Wil Uara Dodington's consent. But whether I consented to re assure the lands to the intent to be discharged of the fraud, or were discharged without consent, that raust reraain for ever a question ; and, make the best of it that may be made, the conclusion is, if I be washed at all, it shall be yet. Sir, (as the proverb is,) but with Sowler's ink. Touching the land, it is your Honour's now, and you may do vrith it as it pleaseth you, always reserved that my consent shall never be that Mr. Manners shall have it ; and be it spoken without offence, I take it not convenient that your Honour should yield to no good friend of yours such a favour, for hurting of him that would, if he might, be your good servant. Your Honour did once friendly for him, as rauch as he now re quireth, and it liked hira not to have it that way. Be you sure, that, when he hath it, he vrill neither esteera you nor care for rae ; and that which he could not hitherto win of me by other means I shall now be forced to yield by your prece dent. This I say. Sir, over boldly, as I am wont in your gal lery at London ; and, if I were afore you in place of judg raent, I would then chaUenge you to do me justice, and to grant me daraages at ray accusers' hands. Marry, this is another course not fit for that place ; for now the party that hath done the injury shall be benefited, and he that is already wronged shall be further punished. But, Sir, God's will be done and yours, and follow that which is best for yourself. As for rae, it is no great raatter ; and it would be more grief 364 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. imto me to have your Honour disquieted, than pleasure to see mine eneray requited. If the worst befal rae, I shall fiy to Chaucer's borrow, sit down and sigh, and drink raine own sorrow. Having troubled your Honour too long, I humbly pray you to forgive me, if I have said anything amiss : in truth, in this case I am not mine own raan. God evermore prosper you ; and so I raake an end. Frora Brearraore, in the New Forest, the 4th of March 1583 [1584]. Your Honour's, as I ara bound, William Dodington.* Mr. Cox, Hatton's Secretary, seems to have prided himself upon his epistolary talents, for several letters'" from him occur in the " Letter Book," which, like the following, are remarkable for nothing but their style : — MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, I ara sorry to hear of the heavy news of your father's departure out of this life, a gentleraan to whora 1 was in raany respects rauch beholding, and one whora I have ever especi ally honoured for his integrity and virtue ; the lack whereof is the chiefest cause that now justly raoveth me, as rauch as any raan, to lament the loss of so rare and faithful a friend. But, seeing God hath thought good in His high wisdora to take hira from the earthly tabernacle of this worldly mansion, as fitter to be placed with Hira in the heavenly inheritance of His glorious Kingdora, where he remaineth eternally happy, than to dwell here any longer amongst us in this vale of worldly vanities, there is no cause, in the true course of Christianity, why we should raourn so rauch for his death, as we should take comfort and rejoice for his happy change ; neither ought we to murmur at the divine pleasure of God, who hath so ordained it. I understand, by the report of such as seera to know much, that he died intestate, whereof is like to ensue some dissension and unkind debate between you and your breth ren ; which I should be sorry were true, as well for the slan- » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 120''. few others of a miscellaneous nature, I" Most of these Letters, with a will be found in the Appendix. ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 365 der which by this raeans might be raised against your dead father, (whom the worid might judge, through this lack of providence, to be inconsiderate in his deatii, though grave and wise in his Ufe,) as also for the particular love I bear you, both for his sake and your own ; in which respect 1 wish that these unnatural quarrels raight be far frora you. It is said he made a will, but not orderly and perfect ; be cause therein some part of the solemnity of law was omitted, the intervention whereof was necessary. It was written plain and at large, with the subscription of his hand, but there wanted the seal and witnesses ; for which cause, in the strict censure of law, he is in truth judged to die intestate : paria enim sunt, aliquid omnino non fieri aut minus rite fieri. Other some say that he left a direct and a perfect vrill behind him ; but pronuntiabatur irritum et injustum, prop ter secundi testamenti f actionem ; in which case the law find eth him likewise to die intestate, idem enim est mentum omnino non facere vel facere quod pronuntietur. But, this day, a friend of mine advertised me, a raan of good leaming and judgraent, that he made a will, but did not nominate therein any certain executor ; which being true, the law is directly apparent, in the opinion of all men, that he died intestate : nam intestatus est cujus haere ditas adita non est. It is the executor that giveth consum mation and effect to the vriU, vrithout the which the true meaning of the testator cannot be observed ; and therefore the law esteeraeth it to be a vain and frivolous will, and no will at all indeed, where the executor to the testator is not expressly mentioned, wherein I would vrish you to take good adrice, vrith the best endeavour and expedition. The great est scruple that might justly trouble you most, if it were true, is the report that he died distracted and furious ; and that there was a will readily raade and framed by some about hira, without his privity or direction, who afterward brought it unto hira, and, putting the pen in his hand, constrained him to subscribe it by leading and guiding the same, accord ing to their own corrupt fancies. If this should fall out to 366 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584, be proved by witnesses, it is indubitable also, in ray poor opinion, that he died intestate, nam furiosus, pupilhis et prodigus testamenti faciendi jus non habent ; and so he will be found to raake no will, though in this case he be not proprie intestatus, but intestabilis, cum- nullus testandi pra- cesserit habitus. Thus you see how ray good-vrill hath raade rae bold to deliver you ray rude and siraple advice ; which, though it be not worthy of your notice, yet, I pray you, accept of it well, because it was well raeant to do you good in that which raight best satisfy the effect of your virtuous desires ; the increase whereof, and of all other prosperity, wishing ever to you as to rayself, I reraain yours unfeignedly at coraraandraent. In haste ; frora the Court at Greenwich, the 29th of March 1584, Your poor fast true friend, Samuel Cox.* The following letter from Hatton to the Queen shows that in April of this year he had taken offence at her Majesty's proceedings, and withdrawn from the Court; the cause of which is thus stated in a marginal note : " A man of his, Mr, George Best, was slain in fight a little before by one Mr. Oliver St, John, and, as it was suspected, scarce manfully and in good fight, which Mr. Vice-Chamberlain took very grievously ; and finding the Queen unwiUing that he should prosecute the offender in course of justice, but rather desirous to save him, Mr. Vice-Chamberlain took this, and some other hard measure offered by the Queen, very unkindly, and there fore forbore his wonted access and attendance, and withdrew himself from the Court to his house at Hol denby, in Northamptonshire, where he remained in great sorrow and perplexity many days, until at the length she was pleased to take some pity of his grief, and to » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 134. MT. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 367 send for him." It is remarkable, that, though his letter is full of humility and contrition, and though he admits his " too high presumptions " towards her Majesty, yet he prays of her to remember the " causes," which were, he says, as " unfit for him as unworthy of her" ; — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. On the knees of ray heart, most dear and dread Sovereign Majesty, I beseech pardon and goodness at your princely hands. I fear I offend you in lack of attendance on your princely presence, wherein, before our God, frowardness and obstinacy of raind are as far frora rae as love and duty would have them; but that the griefs and sorrows of my soul so oppress rae as I cannot express unto you, and so entangle my spirits that they turn me out of rayself, and thereby making rae unfit to be seen of you, is the true cause that I forbear access. I raost hurably thank your sacred Majesty for your two late recorafortations. Would God I had deserved your forraer goodness ; for, God knoweth, your good favour hath not been ever, or at any tirae, evil eraployed on me your poor disconsolate wretch. I vrill leave all forraer protestations of raerit or meanings ; only I affirm, in the presence of God, that I have followed and loved the foot steps of your most princely person with all faith and sin cerity, with a raind raost single, and free frora all arabition or any other private respects. And though, towards God and Kings, men cannot be free of faults, yet, vrilfully or vrittingly. He knoweth that made me, I never offended your most sacred Majesty. My negligence towards God, and too high presumptions towards your Majesty, have been sins worthily deserring more punishraents than these. But, Ma dara, towards yourseK leave not the causes of ray presurap tions unreraerabered ; and, though you find thera as unfit for me as unworthy of you, yet, in their nature, of a good mind they are not hatefully to be despised. I hurably prostrate myself at your gracious feet, and do most heartily 368 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584, recognize that all God's punishraents laid on rae by your princely censure are taken by rae with singular humility ; wherein I stand as free from grudging of heart as I am full of intolerable and vain perplexity. God in Heaven bless your Royal Majesty with a long Ufe, a joyful heart, a prosper ous reign, and with Heaven at the last. AprU the Srd, 1584. Your Majesty's most lowly subject and most unworthy ser vant, Ch. Hatton.* Philip Earl of ArundeU, the head, and many mem bers of the House of Howard, were supposed to have been implicated in Throckmorton's treason ; and, though Camden mentions that Mr, Henry Howard, whom he describes as " a man of most noble blood, a bachelor, passing Popish, and in very great favour amongst the Papists, afterwards Earl of Northampton, was often examined on the subject," neither he nor Howard's bio graphers notice his sufferings and imprisonment, as described in this and in other letters to Hatton. He was, however, suspected of a design to marry the Queen of Scots, and of being elected King of England by the EngUsh Catholics'"; — HENRY HOWARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Though you were none of those, good Mr. Vice-Chamber lain, to whom it pleased her Majesty to recoraraend the trial and examination of ray cause, yet now that ray Lord of Lei cester, mine especial good Lord, and Mr. Secretary, my raost assured friend, have given their faithful and honourable pro- raise to deal for ray liberty, I cannot omit your Honour in the number of my constant friends, whom during my last suit I found so willing to do rae good, and so favourably bent to recoraraend and further ray petition. Six raonths cora plete I have endured aU kinds of sifting and exaraining, with « Additional MSS, 16801, f. 121"'. " Camden's Annals, B. iii. pp. 34, 41. ^T. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 369 what integrity 1 could rather wish you should receive at their raouths (as I doubt not but you have done already) who were acquainted with the raatter frora the first beginning, than by raine own report, who may be deemed over-partial in raine own particular. Only thus rauch I will note, that neither I spake ever with one Throckraorton (with whose farailiar acquaintance I was charged) raore than once, and then of nothing otherwise than feU out by chance, vrithout offence to any man alive ; neither did 1 ever receive any ring frora the Queen of Scots, whereof I was accused. This long and close endurance hath already brought me to that extremity of the stone, as, I protest to God, Ihad rather yield my life in the fa vour of Almighty God to any sudden stroke of fortune whatso ever, than languish in this endless maze of pain and raisery. Wherefore I raost hurably beseech you, good Mr. Vice-Cham berlain, first for charity, and then for the pity and corapas sion which is engrafted in your honourable raind, and, last of aU, for that favour to rayseK whereof (to ray inestiraable cora fort) your own raouth assured rae, that it will please you to adjoin your favourable help to the rest of ray good friends for the procureraent of ray Uberty. You shall by this mean bind a gentleman to rest at your commandment during life, who no less earnestly calleth on you for your assistance in this cause, than he esteeraeth you raost worthy of all service and honour. Thus, beseeching God to increase and prosper you in aU good haps that your own honest and honourable heart can desire, I raost hurably take ray leave, this 27th of April 1584. Your Honour's most hurable and assured at coraraandraent during life, Henry Howard.* The annexed letter from John Whitgift, who was translated from Worcester to the Archiepiscopal See of Canterbury on the death of Archbishop GrindaU, is elucidated by a. passage from Camden's Annals : — » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 122'>. B B 370 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1584. To hira [Whitgift,] the Queen (who as in civU matters, so also in the ecclesiastical laws, thought that no relenting was to be used) gave in charge, that before aU things he should restore the discipline of the Church of England, and the uniforraity in the service of God, established by au thority of Parliaraent, which, through the connivance of the prelates, the obstinacy of the Puritans, and the power of cer tain nobleraen, was run out of square, while sorae of the rainisters covertly irapugned the Queen's authoiity in ecclesi astical matters, separated the administration of the sacraraents frora the preaching of the word, usurped new rites and cere raonies at their pleasure in private houses, utterly condemned the liturgy and the adrainistration of the sacraments esta blished, as contrary in sorae points to the Holy Scriptures, as also the vocation of Bishops, and therefore refused to come to Church, and made a flat schism, while the Papists stood at pleasure, and drew raany to their side, as K there were no unity in the Church of England. To take away these incon veniences, and restore unity, he propounded these articles to be subscribed unto by the rainisters : — First, that the Queen had the highest and suprerae power over all persons born within her Realras, of what condition soever they were ; and that no other Foreign Prince or Prelate had, or ought to have had, any civil or ecclesiastical power in her Realms or Dorainions. Secondly, that the Book of Common Prayer, and another Book of ordaining of Bishops and Priests, contained nothing con trary to God's word, but might lawfuUy be used ; and that they should use that, and no other forra either of prayer or adrainistration of the sacraments. Thirdly, that they ap proved the Articles of the Synod at London, published by the Queen's authority in the year 1562, and beUeved the same to be consonant to God's word. By occasion hereof, incredible, it is what controversies and disputations arose, and what hatred, what reproachful speeches he endured at the hands of factious ministers, and what troubles, yea and injuries also, at the hands of noblemen, who, by proraoting unraeet and unworthy men, raised trouble in the Church, or else hoped ^T. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 371 after the Livings of the Church ; nevertheless through con stancy, fortitude and patience he overcame at last, and re stored peace to the Church, so as not without good advise ment he may seem to have usurped that motto, Vincit qui patitur, that is. He overcometh which suffereth with pa tience." * The Archbishop " in his weighty business," observes Strype, " had the encouragement and cordial friendship of Sir Christopher Hatton, who had sent to the Archbishop a paper of notes, containing, as it seems, the sum of those petitions for reformation that were to be brought into the Parliament house now ere long to sit, that so the Archbishop might the better understand the import of them, and get replies ready upon occasion. The Arch bishop made use of Mr. Bancroft, his faithful Chaplain, as his messenger to Sir Christopher.'"" In a letter from Dr. Bancroft to Hatton, on the 4th of November 1584, subscribed "your honour's most bounden and dutiful Chaplain," he says " I have been with my Lord's Grace as your pleasure was, and have returned your notes according to your commandment" ; — ARCHBISHOP WHITGIFT TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Right Honourable, I ara bold to use that great friend ship and courtesy which you raost honourably offered unto rae, especially at this tirae in the public cause of the Church and State. Yesterday certain gentlemen of Kent were with rae to entreat release of some of the Ministers whora I had suspended for not subscribing to the Articles according to the order taken ; and because, upon great and weighty considerations then declared unto thera, I refused to grant their request, they said they would raake their petition to her Majesty, or to the Lords of her Highness' raost ho nourable Privy Council; sorae of thera also after a sort " Camden's Annals, B, iii. p. 27. '' Strype's Annals, in. pt. i, p, 333. B B 2 372 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. threatening rae otherwise than they durst have done ui tiraes past to raen of my calling. I have in my diocese in Kent one hundred preachers and more, whereof ten only, or there abouts, have refused to subscribe, and eight of thera never hcensed to preach by any lawful authority; who besides their refusing to subscribe, have spread abroad and pubUshed certain articles tending not only to the defacing of the Book of Coramon Prayer by law estabUshed, but also to the al tering and changing of the whole state of governraent in raatters ecclesiastical, to the discrediting of the religion now ¦professed, and disturbing of this most happy and quiet regi ment : wherefore I heartily beseech your Honour to foresee ,(as much as in you lieth) that these raen receive no encou rageraent frora thence, and (if need require) to signify this ray petition to her Majesty. If these few, being of none account either for years, learning, or degree, (which I speak of knowledge, whatsoever the gentleraen in their favour shaU report to the contrary,) shall be countenanced against the law, against, rae, and against aU the rest of the preachers in my diocese, it will not be possible for me either there or any where else to do that good in procuring the peace of the Church, obedience and observation of good orders, which I am assured I shall bring to pass, if I be suffered without such overthwarts to proceed as I have begun. Unless such con tentious persons were sorae way aniraated and backed, they would not stand out as they do. And yet, (God be thanked) the nuraber of thera in this province is not great, and indeed of no account in coraparison of the rest, wherefore ray hope ia, the rather by your Honour's good means, tbat nothing shall be .done prejudicial to the order set down by her Ma- jesty's'consent and according to the laws established, which I most heartily desire you by all ways and means you can to procure. And so, remaining yours most assuredly in any thing that shall lie in my power, I coramit your Honour to the tuition of Alraighty God. Frora Lambeth, the 9th of May 1584. Your Honour's as his own, John Cantuar.* • Additional MSS, 16891, f, 123. MT. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 373 The name of this supplicant to Hatton is unknown : — TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour, Such hath been your goodness towards rae as I raust acknowledge for due the offer of ray life in your serrice. I presented unto Mr. Secretary on Sunday last ray petition to your Honour and the rest of my Lords for my Uberty and raitigation of fine, together vrith the reasons that constrained me to that boldness. I humbly beseech you, even for God's cause, to prevent ray ruin and utter overthrow, vrith your honourable furtherance for the safety of ray goods. The Lord of Heaven knoweth I entreat not for the ease of ray person, but for the preser vation of ray poor house and children. Alas, Sir ! in reason I can say nothing for rayseK, having so highly offended such a gracious Prince and so honourable a Government, but do simply appeal to her Majesty's mercy and your favourable goodness. I dare not crave according to the raeasure of ray necessities, but do coramend my hurable suit, ray service, and Ufe, to your honourable favour ; and so do take ray leave, beseeching God to preserve you in all happiness. Frora the Fleet, the 10th of May 1584. Your Honour's in aU duty.* Mr. Cox might well suppose that his learned dis quisition on the difference between Deputies and Am bassadors would "offend by tediousness." He says nothing to show in what manner Calveley had given offence, nor has any information on the point been found elsewhere : — MR, SAMUEL COX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I ara sorry you have conceived so great offence and displeasure against ray poor kinsman, Robin Calveley, for deaUng in a just cause more roundly with the Deputies of the Low Countries than was expedient he should have done, " Additional MSS, 16891, f, 124, 374 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. in respect of their place and calUng. I confess it was an error in hira to use violence, or any such rigorous course, against personages whora we ought in coraraon duty to re gard and reverence ; but, where it pleaseth you to call thera Arabassadors, and to privilege thera under the protection of so honourable a title, and so to raake his fault the greater, I ara of opinion, under your favourable correction, that they ought not justiy to be so esteeraed, nor aptly to be so terraed, considering what they are and frora whom they come. I say not this to extenuate vainly the error of the offender, but to let you know, that, not taking them for Ambassadors, but for Deputies, hiraself was the rather induced to think he might the more boldly proceed with them as he did. They are not all Arabassadors that are sent to any Prince or people to deal with thera in raatter of state ; neither ought they to enjoy the privileges of Arabassadors. Subjects in tirae of rebeUion, revolted frora their natural Sovereign King, raay authorize and send Coramissioners unto him to treat of peace, whora we cannot properly call Arabassadors, but Deputies ; for no Prince or State can, in the justice of law, assurae unto himself the right of legation unless he be absolute and Sove reign of hiraself, not depending upon the Iraperial authority of any other, or any way tied by any oath of fideUty or obe dience to any other Prince or superior power whatsoever. Subjects cannot constitute or send Ambassadors to their own Prince, for the law will not give them any such autho rity ; neither can they send any to a Foreign Prince, without peril of treason : populi et civitates quce alterius imperio parent suis auspitiis legates mittere non possunt. When the great sedition, ob leges agr arias Rorae, Fulvius Flaccus and Lucius Craccus, the authors thereof, sent the son of Flaccus as Arabassador to treat vrith the people and Senate for a coraposition of peace. As soon as Opiraius the Consul heard he was come, he was so far from entertaining him as an Ambassador, that, by the decree and order of the Senate, he caused hira to be comraitted to prison. The Romans would not receive those men as Ambassadors ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 375 whora Spartacus sent unto them, a raan famous, as you know, for the fortune of three notable victories. Tiberius rejected Ukewise, and would by no means give thera the reputation of Ambassadors, which Talpharinus sent unto him, a man so mighty and potent that he possessed almost all Africa with his infinite huge host which he had of bondmen. When John, who usurped the Empire of the West parts, did send his Commissioners to Theodosius, Emperor of the East, Theodo sius would not receive them as Ambassadors, but cast them into prison ; whereby it is manifest that the Roraans would not aUow thera for Arabassadors which were sent unto thera from their rebelUous subjects ; they were not reputed legate, but selecti, whom the Subject sent to their Prince, and there fore not to be accounted sacrosancti, or inviolabiles, because they came not from any Sovereign, Kingly state, or absolute Commonwealth. Legati enim a Regibus, imperatoribus, rebus- ve pub. quae superiorem Casarem non agnoscunt mittuntur, atque, oh id, sacrosancti et inviolabiles sunt. Neither are they properly called Ambassadors, whora the Prince sendeth to the Subject, but missatici, juridici, or delegati ; and yet we read, that when Marcus Antoninus was conderaned of treason, the Roraans, considering how raany legions he had under his com mandment, sent Serrius Sulpitius and many other Arabassa dors of quaUty and honour unto him, fearing lest they might otherwise have provoked hira to take up arras : but Tully will not admit this for a legation, but for a denuntiation, quoniam paratum erat illi exitium nisi Senatui paruisset. Thus you see how my honest raeaning and defence of ray friend raaketh me offend by tediousness, where I least should and would. Unless it please you, therefore, to use your accustomed benig nity .... in good part, I fear my long vain letters, which are written to entreat pardon for him, wiU be accusations against myseK to declare my unworthiness to speak for ano ther. I raust refer aU to your goodness, without the which my friend and I both are like to faU into the peril of your dis favour, which would grieve me more than I will now raention. And so I corarait you to God's eternal providence and best 376 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. direction. Frora the Court at Greenwich, the 20th of May 1584. Your assured poor friend, Samuel Cox.* In his letter of the 27th of AprU, in a subsequent page, Mr. Howard says he had then been subjected to six months' confinement ; and as in the following one, which has no date, he states that he had " lain seven months in prison," it was probably written about the end of May or beginning of June in this year : — HENRY HOWARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It was no sraall corafort unto rae, good Mr. Vice-Charaber lain, to understand by Mr. Treshara of your favourable ac ceptance of ray letter ; hoping rather by plain deeds than words, if ever it raay lie in ray power, to raake good ray mean ing. And where I perceive by the same friend that sorae have sought to put into your head (as I heard before) some jealousy of my devotion towards you, I can say no raore than that their tales are both false and slanderous ; desiring thus much only for ray further trial, that, whosoever hath been author or inventor of the sarae, he wiU take the pain to avow thera in this quarter, and, as we can agree'upon the price, so you will vouchsafe to settle and to frarae your judgraent. I protest that never doubtful thought against you lodged in ray heart ; but if you found rae not so forward in appearance or foUovring, (as I know myself most clear and innocent frora harra,) irapute the sarae rather to the plainness of ray nature, which could not serve in divers caraps, nor look one way (like a cunning bargeraan) when I stretch mine arms another, than to the raalice of my meaning. God can witness mine upright conceit of yourself, and of your plain and honour able deaUng, when I swerved furthest from your course ; and often would I wish but one such friend as you, when I found scant answerable offices to my devotion. I ara not ignorant that sorae, which proraise great good-will to you, were ever » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 136. MT. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 377 opposite in private inclination against me, and would never suffer any sound conceit of ray good-will to settle in your judgraent. But if none dare avow such prefye fancies as they have suggested by report, then credit siraple truth, that hath none other arraour than good faith ; and think ray raind to be so great, howsoever fortune bear me down, that, if I carried any spark of grudge to you, I would not seek to be beholding to you for one drara of favour. I pray God you may Uve as happily as yourself can wish, till I ever stoop to seek for favour of raine eneray, or with a servile shadow cover an unfaithful meaning. I have lain seven raonths in prison, and yet ara not privy to the least offence either to my Prince or country. AU the world acquitteth rae from sight of any gewgaw. Stevens is not yet a Jesuit, much less he was then. My Lord of Southarapton can avow upon his honour that I never heard raass with hira, and yet I raust be kept in prison. Good Mr. Vice-Charaberlain, according to ray trust reposed in your friendship, rid rae frora these raanacles which I never raerited. You know ray case, and therefore I will urge no further, but desire you to conceive, that as I have received wrong conceming pubUc causes, so have I done by private whisperings, to drive raatters nearer to the quick. I rest yours, and so vrill do, in spite of those that labour to ira- print another fancy in your favourable judgment. And so, with as raany vrishes of good success as ray pen can utter or yourself desire, I end in haste, this Saturday raorning. Your poor friend raost assured at coraraandraent, Henry Howard.* Lady Leighton has been already mentioned. Her present letter is only remarkable for what she says of the Queen's " grief and solitariness," which agrees with Camden's statement that Elizabeth was greatly affected by the death of the Duke of Anjou, which took place on the 10th of June, seven days before the date of this letter : — > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 119i>. 378 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. LADY LEIGHTON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I ara sorry, for mine own sake, you are any way hin dered of your honourable proceeding in ray suit, but speciaUy that it should happen by so ill an accident as the grief and solitariness I hear her Majesty gives herseK to of late. But I hope that tirae and her wisdora will overcorae that which is both so harraful to herseK, and helpless to the cause that pro cures it. And as the extreraity of her sorrow decreaseth, so I hope you shall have your wonted opportunity to do good to those that have their affiance in you ; as rayself, for one, that will ever ground ray assurance upon your faithful proraise. And I beseech you think, that ray often troubling of you with my scribbUng riseth not of any mistrust I have in the perform ance of your word, but to show myself thankful for your favour, howsoever I speed. And so I leave you to as great honour and happiness as ray opinion thinks you worthy of. Charter-house, this 17th of June 1584. Your poor friend, if it please you, E. Leighton.* When it was resolved to destroy a theatre, in June 1584, Hatton, as well as the Lord Chamberlain, vainly endeavoured to befriend the poor players. Serjeant Fleetwood, Eecorder of London, in one of his gossipping letters to Lord Burghley, dated on the 18th of that month, says, "Upon Sunday, my Lord" (apparently the Lord Chief Justice Anderson) " sent two Aldermen to the Court for the suppressing and pulling down of the theatre and curtain ; for all the Lords agreed there unto saving my Lord Chamberlain and Mr. Vice-Cham berlain : but we obtained a letter to suppress them aU. Upon the same night I sent for the Queen's players and my Lord of Arundell's players, and they aU weU nigh obeyed the Lords' letters. The chiefest of her * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 135"'. *T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 379 Highness's players advised me to send for the owner of the theatre, who was a stubborn fellow, to bind him. I did so." In the same letter, Mr. Fleetwood said, " The eldest son of Mr. Henry, I hear, upon Mon day, being yesterday, fought in Cheapside with one Boat," that is, or lately was, Mr. Vice-Chamberlain's man ; and all was, which of them was the better gen tleman, and for taking of the wall.'"" Hatton again appears as an intercessor : — TO THE EARL OF DERBY AND THE BISHOP OF CHESTER. My VERY GOOD Lords, Whereas I am informed that your Lordships have taken bonds of Richard Massy, of the County of Chester, gentleman, to appear before you concerning mat ters Ecclesiastical at the feast of St. Bartholomew next, I am moved (upon sorae consideration, but specially in hope of his conformity and better disposition to her Majesty's proceedings hereafter than he hath showed heretofore,) to intreat. your Lordships to be pleased once again to extend your favour to wards him ; as namely, upon the reraoring of his bonds to forbear his appearance before you till Candlemas next; by which time I am persuaded your Lordships shaU find such token of reformation in hira as, I trust, you shaU think your good ness herein weU bestowed on him, and be glad of this course of lenity taken presently vrith him in hope of his amendment. Wherein praying your Lordships' favourable acceptance of this my request, I coramend you, as myself, to the grace of Almighty God. From the Court at Richraond, the 23rd of June 1584. Your good Lordships' very loring assured friend, Chr. Hatton." archbishop whitgift to sir christopher hatton. Right Honourable, I give you most hearty thanks for that most friendly raessage which you sent unto me by your a Sic. ° Desiderata Curiosa, I. p. 150, ^ Wright's Queen Elizabeth and her Times, ii. 229, 230, 380 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. man, Mr. Kemp. I shaU think myself bound to you for it as long as I live. It hath not a httle comforted me in respect of some unkind speeches lately received frora those who, I little thought, of all others would have taken offence against me only for doing my duty in this raost necessary business which I have now in hand. I marvel how it should corae to pass that the self-sarae persons which vrill seera to wish peace and uniforraity in the Church, and to raislike of the contentious and disobedient sort, cannot abide that anything should be done against thera ; wishing rather that the whole rainistry of this land should be discountenanced and discouraged, than a few wayward persons, of no account in coraparison, should be suppressed and punished. Men, in executing of laws accord ing to their duties, were wont to be encouraged and backed by such as now, in this weighty service, do partly irapugn the due course of justice. It falleth out in these days clean con trary. Disobedient and wilful persons (I will terra thera no worse) are aniraated, laws conteraned, her Majesty's will and pleasure not regarded, and the executors thereof, in word and deed, abused. Howbeit, though these thwarts soraething grieve me, yet I thank God they cannot withdraw rae frora doing that duty in this cause which, I ara persuaded, God hiraself, her Majesty, the laws, and the state of the Church and Coramonwealth do require of rae. In respect whereof I ara content to sustain all their displeasures, and am fully re solved to depend upon none but upon God and her Majesty. And therefore your Honour, in offering unto rae that cu racy, offereth me as great a pleasure as I can desire. Her Majesty must be my refuge; and I beseech you that I may use you as a mean, when occasion shall serve. Whereof as suring myself, I comrait you to the grace and favour of God, to whora you shall ever have ray most hearty prayers for your health and prosperity. Frora Larabeth, the 17th of July 1584. Your Honour's assuredly, John Cantuar.* > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 124. J3T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 381 The Earl of Leicester's only legitimate child, Kobert Lord Denbigh, died at Wanstead on the 19 th of July 1584; andthe following admirable letter from Hatton on his loss, with Leicester's reply, form additional evi dence of their having lived on terms of friendship with each other : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO THE EARL OF LEICESTER. My SINGULAR GOOD LoRD, Your excellent wisdora, made perfect in the school of our eternal God, will, in the rule of Christian reason, I trust, subdue these kind and natural affec tions which now oppress your own loving heart. What God hath given you, that hath He chosen and taken to Himself, whereat I hope you will not grudge ; as weU for that it is the executor of His divine vrill, as also for that He hath made hira co-heir of His heavenly Kingdora. When in the raeditation of your religious conceits it shaU please you to weigh the singu lar blessings and benefits which God hath conferred on you in this world, I nothing doubt you will be joyfully thankful ; and accept this cross as the sign of His holy love, whereby you shall becorae happy and blessed for ever. Unto the Gospel of Christ His poor fiock do find you a raost faithful and raighty supporter ; in the State and Governraent of this Realra, a grave and faithful Councillor ; a pillar of our long-continued peace; a happy nourisher of our raost happy Coraraonwealth; fiou rishing in the stirp of true Nobility abundantly in all rirtuous actions towards God and raen ; all which are the high gifts of the High God. Leave not yourseK, therefore, ray dear Lord, for God's sake and ours. Go on in your high and noble la bours in the corafort of Christ, which no raan can dirainish nor take from you ; cherish yourself while it shall please God to let you dwell on earth ; call joy to dwell in your heart, and know for certain, that if the love of a child be dear, which is now taken from you, the love of God is ten thousand times raore dear, which you can never lack nor lose. Of raen's 382 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. hearts you enjoy raore than millions, which, on my soul, do love you no less than chUdren or brethren. Leave sorrow, the]?efQre,.ray good, Lord, and be glad with us, which much rejoice in you. I have told her Majesty of this unfortunate and untimely cause which constrained your sudden journey to London, whereof I assure your Lordship I find her very sorry, and wisheth your corafort, even frora the bottora of her heart. It pleased her to tell rae that she would write to you, and send to visit you according to her wonted goodness ; and there fore she held no longer speech vrith rae of the raatter. Thus, remaining hurably at your Lordship's coraraandraent, I for.^- bear any longer to trouble you ; beseeching God to comfort you, in your lamentation and grief, vrith the reraerabrance of His gracious goodness. Frora the Court at Nonsuch, the 21st of July 1584. Your good Lordship's hurably to coramand, Chr. Hatton.* the earl of leicester to sir christopher hatton. Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, I do most heartily thank you for your careful and raost godly advice at this tirae. Your good friendship never wanteth. I raust confess I have re ceived raany afflictions within these few years, but not a greater, next her Majesty's displeasure : and, if it pleased God, I would the sacrifice of this poor innocent might satisfy ; I mean not towards God (for all are sinful and most wretched in His sight, and therefore He sent a most innocent lamb to help us all. that are faithful), but for the world. The afflic tions I have suffered may satisfy such as are offended, at least appease their long hard conceits : if not, yet I know there is a blessing for such as suffer ; and so is there for those that be merciful. Princes (who feel not the heavy estate of the poor afflicted that only are to receive relief from theraselves) sel dom do pity according to the true rules of charity, and therei fore men fly to the mighty God in time of distress for com fort; for we are sure, though He doth chastise, yet He for saketh not, neither wilb He see thera unrewarded with the * Additional MSS, 16891, f. 128, ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 888 highest blessing. I beseech the same God to grant me pa tience in all these worldly things, and to forgive rae the neg- Ugences of my former time, that have not been more careful to please Hira, but have run the race of the world. In the same sort I commend you, and pray for His grace for you as for myseK; and, before all this world, to preserve her Majesty for ever, whom on my knees I most humbly thank for her gracious visitation by KiUigrew. She shaU never comfort a more true and faithful raan to her, for I have lived and so vriU die only hers'. 23rd July 1584. Your poor but assured friend, Robt. Leicester.* The Mr. Drake to whose son Hatton was god-father was Eichard Drake, Equerry of the Queen's stable, ancestor of the family of that name, which was long seated at Shardeloes, in Buckinghamshire ; — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO Sir, It hath pleased God to bless my good friend Mr. Drake vrith the birth and coihfort of a young son, and he hath eamestly entreated me to christen hira ; which being a holy office and fuU of piety in itself, hath easily persuaded me to satisfy his desire, but rauch the rather for the love and good- will I bear him. And because among raany friends of mine in those parts which vrish me well, and with whom I may be bold, I know none more zealous, kind, or fitter than yourseK to testify so sacred an action, I have been raoved before all others to request your favour and presence in sup plying my place in this Christian aiid reUgious office : wherein as you shall do an acceptable deed to God, and to the parents of the child, in vritnessing and receiving of him into the congregation of the faithful by the apposition of that gracious seal of God's promised mercy, so shall you particularly make me much beholding to you as one whora you shall find thankfully vrilling to requite this kindness vrith > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 129. 384 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. the like courtesy in any occasion wherein you shaU think good to use rae. And so I coramit you to God. Frora the Court at Nonsuch, the 4th of August 1584. Your very assured friend, Chr. Hatton.* Sir Christopher Hatton's chaplain. Dr. Richard Ban croft, afterwards Bishop of London and Archbishop of Canterbury, was a candidate for the Eectory of St. An drew's, Holborn; — LORD BURGHLEY TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I perceive by your courteous letters your desire to procure your Chaplain, Mr. Bancroft, to succeed in the place of the parson of St. Andrew's, lately deceased, the patronage whereof is belonging to the Earl of Southarapton, now in wardship, and so, as you suppose, to be disposed of by us. Herein I am very willing, both for your own sake and for Mr. Bancroft, being very meet for the place, to do what in me lieth. The doubt I have is, that the patronage appertaineth to the Earl in right of his house in Holborn, that was afore time the Bishop of Lincoln's; and then the right of present ation belongeth to the executors, whereof one of the heirs is principal, and Edward Caye another, and one Wells another, with whom you raay do well to deal; and, if it be not in thera, you shall have ray assent. And for better knowledge hereof I have given your Chaplain ray letter to the Auditor of the Wards, who can best inforra whether it reraains to the Queen or to the executors. From my house at Theobald's, the Gth of August 1584. Yours assuredly as any, W. Burghley.* The "young child" mentioned in this letter was one of the numerous children of Sir Eichard Knightley of Faws- ley, in Northamptonshire, by his second wife, Elizabeth, » Additional MSS, 16891, f, 126, " Additional MSS, 15891, f. 270, ^T. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 358 daughter of Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, the Protector, whose widow was one of the other sponsors : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO THE EARL OF HERTFORD. My very good Lord, 1 have been requested by my dear friend Sir Richard Knightley to christen his young child, which it hath lately pleased God to send hira ; an office godly and fuU of piety in itseK, and such as I could have been right glad to perforra in person, if her Majesty's serrices here did not otherwise dispose of rae by her own coramandraent. I have therefore raade bold (not finding any nobleman in Court at this present fit to accompany ray Lady's grace, your mother, in that holy action) to entreat you to supply the" place for me, and to do me the favour to be a witness, in baptism, of God's goodness participated through that holy Sacrament to this young infant, of whom I hope another day you shall receive both thanks and corafort for it; and, in the raean while, of myself a grateful acknowledgraent of this honour able courtesy, which I vrill be ready to requite with all faith ful good-vriU in anything I ara able. I will send a gentleraan unto you to-raorrow, at one of the clock, to wait on you with such duty as is fit and belonging to the cereraony of this ac tion ; which coraraending to your honourable regard, I wish ever to your Lordship, as to rayseK, the gracious favour of the Alraighty. Frora the Court at Nonsuch, the 7th of August 1584. Your Lordship's very loving assured friend, Ch. Hatton.* Lord Grey of WUton, from whom several letters have been inserted while he was Deputy of Ireland, had been superseded by Sir John Perrot : — ARTHUR LORD GREY DE WILTON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. ' Sir, If convenience of a messenger had been as ready as cause and good-will, you had not been so long without re- » Additional MSS, 16891, f. 126. 0 0 386 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. ceiving frora me the due thanks that your great courtesy hath merited of me. I have found, by your officers and keepers hereabouts, your frank and friendly pleasure for my taking of sport in the games here under your comraandment ; of which offer as I have been bold to make trial, so have I found more than required therein afforded. Thanks is the least therefore that I can render, and yet thanks is all that for the present I can yield you in requital of your gentleness, which I give you in infinite vrise, and do further bind the uttermost of my power upon any occasion to be ever acknowledging your honourable kindness. In the raean while hold me still, I pray you, in your good love and opinion, as you shall un feignedly rest with me not the least beloved and esteeraed. And so, wishing you and my other great friends there at Court, with your great honours, part of that quiet yet which I here in my poor lodge enjoy, which makes me in private not to envy your fortune's babe there, howsoever for other cause I little brook hira, I betake yourself to all welfare and happiness. Frora Northampton, this Sth of August 1584. Your most fast friend and loring kinsman, A. Grey.* A reference to the former Order of Council respect ing horses affords an explanation of the following docu ment : — FROM THE LORDS OF THE COUNCIL. After our hearty coraraendations, Where, in the beginning of this suraraer, we and some others, authorised by her Majes ty's coraraission under her Great Seal, did, by virtue of the said coraraission, narae, ordain, and depute you to cause all raan ner of persons within that County (who, by their abiUties in lands or goods, were, according to the Statutes, chargeable to have and keep horses and geldings for service, and raares for breed,) to put in readiness such horses, with raeet horsemen, furnished accordingly with armour and weapon, and to show' * Additional MSS. 15891, f. 6"°. ^t. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 387 them before you this sumraer at times convenient, to be ready at her Majesty's commandment for the service of the Realm. And to this end we did send to you, with our letters and com missions, certain instructions in writing, hoping that you have had due regard thereof. But yet, doubting that by reason of some impediments in this summer and harvest-time this service hath not been put in such due execution as was raeet ; and yet not doubting but if you have not already raustered them, and given order for reforraing the defects, yet you have raade out your precepts to all persons to charge thera against sorae day prefixed, before the end of this month or shortly after, to come before you with their horses ; and therein we pray you to continue such a course as the service may take good place, as well to increase the number as to make the same service able as near as raay be both for the horseraen and the horses. And notvrithstanding that you shaU have thus deterrained of sorae especial day for your rausters before the receipt of these our letters, yet, to the intent that aU abuses may be avoided, and aU suspicion that no horse or gelding shaU be showed in muster at several places and tiraes to supply two rooras by way of borrowing or lending; it is determined that one especial day shaU serve in aU parts of the Realra for the full and perfect rauster, which shaU be upon the last day of Sep teraber next. And so we will and require you, that (notwith standing any other shows and rausters to be made before you at any time before the day which we aUow and think needful to be done to make the service raore perfect,) that in anywise you direct and coraraand the universal muster for that Shire to be raade the last day of Septeraber. And we require you, as earnestly as we raay, that none of you being put in trust for this service, be absent from the said rausters without great and necessary cause ; and that if you cannot finish the sarae upon that one day, in reforraing the defects, we can aUow you to continue the same until the next day, and then also to con tmue the said rauster, so as you receive the bills, according to our former instructions, of aU the horses the first day ; and that, if time raay serve, you do also view thera at the least, 0 0 2 388 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1584. whereby no abuse be of answering two rooras with one horse; and, after that you have made this last rauster, we require you -to raake your books and certificates thereof ready, and to send thera to us as soon as you conveniently may, that her Majesty raay be certified thereof, according to that she expec teth. And we could be content to have your opinions who are raeet and skiKul persons within that shire to take charge, to lead any bands of these horseraen, as well for leading of twenty-five, fifty, or five hundred, so as hereafter, when her Majesty shaU understand thereof, she raay deterraine her plea sure for the sarae. And thus we bid you fareweU. From the Court at Oatland's, this 18th of August 1584. Your loring friends, W. Burghley. Ro. Leicester. Ch. Howard. H. Sidney. Chr. Hatton.' About September in this year, Hatton appears, from the following well written letter, to have been so much displeased with Mr. Cox, his Secretary, as to have sus pended him from his employment. Cox's offence was his having taken fees to obtain his Master's influence with the Queen in granting suits ; and it is curious to observe, that such was the universal corruption that Cox says the Clerk of every Judge in England took gratuities for what he calls the "expedition" of justice; adding, that such bribes formed their only means of support, Hatton's integrity is certainly placed in a favourable light by this letter ; but he does not appear to have treated his dependants with much liberality. Several other letters occur on this subject, which show that Cox had quarrelled with his fellow-servants ; — » Additional MSS, 15891, f. 20. MT. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 389 MR. SAMUEL COX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May it please your Honour, I raost hurably beseech you to vouchsafe so much favour to ray poor painful unworthy service as to afford me your honourable patience in reading these disordered lines at your fittest leisure, and to pardon my boldness therein, or rather my just cause of grief that presum- eth thus far to trouble you. I find, greatly to the touch of my poor credit, that my adversaries' accusations are of such force and raoment with your Honour, that it should seem they do every day raore and raore kindle your displeasure against rae, and increase my disgrace ; and that there want not some charitable, well-disposed ministers in store, (according to the course of the world,) who, taking opportunity of tirae, as de lighting to fish in other raen's troubled strearas, are glad to put oil to this fire, in hope, by bringing it sooner to a fiame, they may the better work me a quick dispatch out of your Honour's service. Of these raen I will say nothing, but that I assure rayseK your justice and vrisdora will easily distinguish thera frora other raen by their manners, and conceive of thera in the end as they deserve. For ray own particular, I thank God I need not fear their raaUce ; for I know I ara innocent, and I have as Uttle cause to doubt of justice, for that I ara sure of the goodness of an honourable and a just judge, who vrill not credulously beUeve whatsoever iU-wiU shaU say, that never said well ; but wiU, in the equal balance of indifference, according to the farae of his virtue and worthiness, judge that only to be true, against his poor servant especially, which by honest, credible, unsuspected persons is substantially proved and testified. I know not what the witnesses are which, in these false objected criraes, are appointed to be censors of my shame and iU-fortune. I only crave that they raay be raore than one for one raatter, and not such as are said albo reti aliena captare bona; raen seeking to please and win favour by slander, or such as have borne spleen and former malice against the raan accused ; which if they have, I hope your Honour will not think thera fit raen to condemn me, but such 390 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. as make up their own buildings vrith other men's ruins, and delight to say anything that may entrap the guiltless. What soever they are, I dare boldly say thus rauch, with your ho nourable favour and patience, that if sorae of thera shame not to say that again which they have many times spoken hereto fore, they shall confess in your own presence that I have served you as carefully, and with all honour possible, both in word and deed, by my duty and dUigence, as any man in Court that had so little countenance of his Master as rayself in the poor place which I supplied. 1 understand I ara charged to have sold such justice and favour as your Honour was wont to afford to your friends and poor suitors. It is a great fault, I confess, to sell the favour of so noble a personage, and a greater to sell justice ; I know it well. Yet I hope your Ho nour will be pleased to think, and I may speak it truly vrith out offence, that there liveth not so grave nor so severe a Judge in England, but he alloweth his poor Clerk under him, even in the expedition of raatters of greatest justice, to take any reasonable consideration that should be offered hira by any man for his pains and travail. It is the poor man's whole maintenance, and without it he could not Uve. I know your Honour wiU think it reason he should have it. If this be to seU justice and favour, sometimes to take a gratuity of 10s. for one letter among one hundred, soraetiraes more, sometimes less, according as the party was benefited, or as myself had deserved, I then confess with all humbleness, that as a poor scribe under your Honour (though unworthy), not knowing else how to live, I ignorantly erred, (as aU the rest of your servants have done,) where I thought in that kind I should never have offended ; and so raight I in truth justly deserve this sharae, which in Court and Country your Honour hath heavily laid upon rae. Yet ara I induced to think in reason, that K all the letters and other matters which I have written for you, early and late, were laid together before your Honour in your charaber, that you might but take a view of thera to see how large and infinite they were in nuraber which have passed my pen, howsoever this accusation (as it were to raake ^t. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 391 up the tale) is inserted among the rest, you would, in the virtue of your own nature and noble condition, rather pity the writer, and vouchsafe him a far raore large reward than think hira unworthy of such little benefit as, through his painful attendance, he hath reaped in your service towards the relief and corafort of his poor estate ; which though it be very small, and in respect of other raen's gains under you not worthy speaking of to trouble your Honour withal, yet, as it is, it may be happUy one day a sufficient cause to an honest, grate ful servant, when sickness shall by course of nature fall upon him, to make hira pour out his prayers to God for the comfort and goodness of so honourable a Master. And I beseech your Honour, that I raay say thus rauch without your dishke of him that accuseth me in this point, who hath most deeply, and greatly to your dishonour, as I wiU show you when place and time shall serve, offended in that which he now objecteth, to the reproach of his fellow. If he had spent seven summers and as many vrinters with that continual attendance and pains that I have done, (though I humbly acknowledge I did no more than my duty,) and had reaped no raore fruit of his tra vaU, in recompense of his service, than I have gotten since ray first repair to Court, I am sure he would either have thought hira a very raalicious raan that should have repined thus at his poor reUef, or would, ere this, have shamelessly iraportuned you for some more honourable increase of your bounty and goodness. The siUiest soul that is would be glad to eat, and to better his estate if fortune served. If, now and then, I got sorae sraaU reUef towards ray charges, (which God knoweth was very sraaU, and soraetimes not 10s. in a twelvemonth,) which, being Uttle or much, is left as the only and .ordinary mean to your poor men wherevrith to help themselves in your service, shall this be iraputed to rae as a corruption, or a buy ing and selling of justice, when neither I nor any of your servants (I except not those whora you have enriched by your offices and liberal ways) either can do or wiU live without it ; and when other Masters in Court (considering the hardness of this age) allow it comraonly to their servants, without the 392 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. least dislike, as a necessary succour ? I raost hurably crave of you, that in your honourable patience you will vouchsafe me leave to be plain with you, without offence, in the subraission, reverence, and duty of ray honest poor love towards you. I neither let nor set your lands nor leases. I ara no Deputy Officer to enrich rayself with continual fees ; I never charged you with- any kind of wages, nor other gift or bounty of your own whatsoever ; I was never worthy to be any of those whora you have advanced to reputation and wealth by your service. In seven years my ill-foitune would not that ever I should obtain anything by your goodness of her Majesty, but only a lease in reversion, which hath yielded me, I confess, two hun dred and odd pounds. I have had nothing to help rayseK but the labour of ray pen and the diligence of mine own study, which your Honour knoweth, rauch better than I can iraagine, is able at this day to get rae in ... . living, I only thirsted to please my Master, as a inatter which I raade my greatest wealth in this world. How should I possibly raaintain rayself, or in truth serve your Honour, with the comeliness which is fit, having no raore reUef than the ordinary contentraent of your service, and being barred of such sraall benefit for soU- citing of suits as I ara now blaraed for ? It is no honest raan's part, but a base disposition, to accuse any raan, rauch raore his fellow ; yet, if I should say generally in this point what I think, I ara persuaded your Honour would have few left to serve you in your charaber, or to wait on you at Ely House, if it should please you to be as severe to aU those as you have been to me, which raight be any way touched with taking of rewards for soliciting of suits. Your wisdora foreseeth raore than I can conceive ; and no doubt you do it aU to a good end. I must, therefore, and vrill think the best of the course you take, and bear my burden with patience and duty. Some of my friends have let me understand that your Honour raeaneth nothing less than ray discountenance in this inter raission of service, nor will leave me to the infamy of my ac cusations, whatsoever should happen. I do herein acknow ledge in most dutiful part, as becometh me, your singular ^T. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 393 goodness. God raake rae thankful for it, and requite it in you with increase of His manifold graces and richest blessings. It is some comfort to a raan in misery to enjoy his favour that hath cast him down : but, fides semel amissa nunquam rediit ; and a man once wounded in his farae shaU never rid of the scar. What other raen's stomachs will digest in matter of sharae and infaray I know not ; but for raine own part I pro test (such is ray folly) that if I did conjecture any man's malice could so rauch vanquish the noble disposition, which hath been always coraraended in your Honour, as to make you think any one part of those calumniations to be true, which you know his spleen and iU-will only hath objected against rae, who hath ever hated rae, God is ray vritness, I would rather banish myself to the utterraost parts of Egy^t, to eat my tears instead of bread among the barbarians, than live tainted vrith rillany and infaray in England in the best favour and countenance that it raight please you to afford me : no, I hope I shaU never live to be reputed so sharaeless as to look ray Master on the face every day in Court, that shall every hour judge me in his heart a rillain and a varlet. I beseech God rather shorten my days than suffer me to live in such re proach. I most hurably crave pardon of your Honour for ray bold presuraptuous writing. It is ray fault, I confess to ray sharae, and yet in yourself I have ever thought .... virtue. I will be so no raore, if it mislike you. I vriU do everything vrith aU huraility and duty that raay best con tent you. I wiU, in the devotion of my heart, hold up ray hands, and raake ray prayers to God to bless you, and to abridge their days that love you not, and love those that wish you aU prosperity and happiness ; not desiring to Uve longer rayseK than your Honour raay conceive I have, and wUl ever serve you faithfuUy and truly. From NorthaU, the 4th of October 1584. Your Honour's raost humble, poor, dejected servant, S. Cox.* > Additional MSS. 15891, f. 129'', 394 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584, Considering the mess on which the Queen had break fasted, it is not surprising that it disagreed with her. The delivery of the staff was apparently the appoint ment of Lord Hunsdon to the office of Lord Chamberlain, which had become vacant by the death of the Earl of Sussex in the preceding year; but, singular as it must appear, no list of the great Officers of State has ever been compiled, the accuracy of which can in any degree be relied upon ; — TO LORD BURGHLEY. My singular good Lord, Her Majesty, since your going hence, hath been troubled with much disease in her stomach. The cause thereof, as both herseK thinketh and we all do judge, was the taking in the raorning yesterday a con fection of barley sodden with sugar and water, and made ex ceeding thick with bread. This breakfast lost her both her supper and dinner, and surely the better half of her sleep. But, God be thanked, I hope now the worst is past, and that her Highness wiU shortly recover her old state of health, to the comfort of us all. I have considered the speeches your good Lordship used to me touching the great Office at your last being here ; and find ing the time of this great feast of All Saints raost apt for the accoraplishraent of so great a grace frora her Majesty, and that ray Lord raight receive rauch the raore honour by this occasion taken of so tiraely a caUing, I thought it not amiss to put your Lordship in remembrance thereof, to the end that, K it pleased you to be here somewhat the timeUer on Saturday next, you might possibly work the delivery of the staff either that even, or in the morning before her Majesty's going to the closet. My Lord Chancellor is looked for here, and raany more Lords, ih respect of the solemnity of the day; and we agree here the time will be most fit. I assure your good Lordship that your earnest kindness herein will be raost grate fully taken ; and if the cause should fail, yet this course in jjT. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 395 your good-wiU cannot be but most acceptable. And so, your pardon prayed for this hasty rude letter, I humbly take my leave. In the Privy Chamber on the Queen's side, where now her Majesty is deterniined to lie, this 29th of October 1584. Your good Lordship's most bound, Chr. Hatton.* sir christopher hatton to mr. samuel cox. As I am right sorry for your separation frora ray poor ser vice, so should I have been very glad to have found you raore desirous of the same. In the sight of your letters I have found some show of your love towards rae, but in the dispo sition of your actions there appeareth not so rauch as a prof fer to raake good your reconciUation with rae. It is true, that through the height of your heart and disdain of your feUows in doraestical conversation, you have given them cause to fear your credit and hate your person ; besides that, they have discovered some petty practices of yours, tending rather to their undoing than disgrace. But of these their griefs it seeras you be not only reckless, Uttle weighing rae, whora the quiet of this concord might most comfort, but them also, whom it doth most concem ; but God would it were other wise ; and for your duties' sake in Christianity I was persuaded this office should not have been neglected. Pride and wrath have brought forth these maUcious dissensions to the great ature and discretion, and to the great grief and offence of rae your poor friend. But, for conclusion, I say, alter the course, or you raay not be mine. That you have been hardly handled, I wiU not deny ; and that you have de served it, I must likewise needs confess. Appease your nature, vrith the even and considerate weighing of aU matters on both sides, and then do that you ought, and you shall find of me what you would wish. For causes touching rayseK I vrill first teU you, I find thera not so forcibly proved, as they were plainly informed ; neither am I of so light belief that thereby 1 will be carried to leave the men I have loved for '¦ Autograph in the State Paper Office. 396 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584, such reports as have been uttered, I will not touch your farae without the warrant of justice, nor be your enemy be fore I feel your injury. I know you to be wise, and there fore these few may suffice you. I have showed you the way ; I trust therefore, you will travel therein so as you may bring peace horae with you, and so should I be right glad of such a servant. As sedition is a thing raost dangerous, so is doraes tical faction raost pernicious, and to rae raost hateful. Know me thus hereafter and please rae for ever. Return your pur pose of proceeding herein to Mr. Bruskett and then shall you receive ray further resolution and deterraination towards you. From the Court this 26th. of October 1584. Your loving master, Ch. Hatton.* MR. SAMUEL COX, TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May IT Please Your Honour, I find that the long sus pense of your favor, hath bred an opinion amongst raost raen, that ray offence towards you is so great and notorious, as you have utterly cast rae off, for an unworthy servant, which the world taking notice of daily to ray sharae, increaseth ray grief raore than I will raention, and my discredit more than I ara sure you wish for. Your Honour easily seeth it yourseK in your wisdora. I raost hurably beseech you, (if that faithful poor raerit past, of your disconsolate servant raay anything raove you,) to redress it tiraely in your wonted goodness. All I crave, is an end for raine own discharge, to restore me again to your good opinion, without the which ray languishing raind, looking back continuaUy to storms that are past, shall have small corafort to serve you cheerfully: though I hope, as carefuUy, as any raan towards you. God I take to vritness (whose only vrisdora sifteth the cogitations of aU raen's hearts) I have been always so far frora detracting anything from your worthiness, that I never wittingly offended you so much as to conceive an unreverent thought of you. What I have often spoken to others, of the rare and singular blessings which God hath given you, I will now forbear to say to your- » Additional MSS', 15891, f. 126''. ^T. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 397 self, for raodesty. They are tokens of his divine love and fatherly goodness in you, such as all raen see, have raade you a most worthy minister under her Majesty, to dilate His glory and her Highness's service. God increase thera manifoldly in your Honor through the access of his highest favor, and make me, and raany other poor wretches, as thankful for thera as we ought to be in respect of the inestiraable fruit and corafort which in the of our Country, we have liberally reaped by them. And so wishing all prosperity to your honour agreeable to your virtue and worthiness, raost hurably craving pardon for my presuraption, I coraraend you in ray prayers to God, who ever bless you. Frora ray lodging in Cornhill, the 26 of Oct. 1584, Your Honour's poor servant, most hum bly devoted in all faithful duty, S. Cox.* DR. MATTHEW TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Mr. Cox, Now I wish I had staid ray l^t letter for answer to both yours, I wrote upon Monday last, by reason Mr. Walby remained longer at Newcastle, than that I looked for him again here, knovring nothing of his going thither, but doubting he had been departed southward. But at his return hither vrithin two hours of ray said letter sent, we conferred at the full of both those things, that you raade choice of. The particulars whereof, I dare refer to the report of his in differency ; albeit to say the truth, he hath been more irapor tune on your behalf, than I think was needful. If that accord which he and I have agreed on, do like you I ara glad, and shaU be to perforra it ; if otherwise I shall be sorry, erad yet ready to yield you, if not a better yet a sooner satisfaction. But if you had been raine own natural brother, as I have . . my very good friend I could have used no raore either inquisition into the state of the lease, or expedi tion to compass it to your hands than I have carefully and faithfully done, the late death of the lessee, and present childhood of his vridow considered. I hope only to find in you that courtesy, as to regard partiy my credit, though spe- " Additional MSS. 16891, f. 125". 398 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584, cially your profit ; which truly I shall be as willing to fur ther, as yourself to desire. It will be near Easter before I can call for the lease to be shewed in court, which I am cer tainly inforraed is either none or nought. If between this and that, it please you any further to irapart unto rae, I pray you do it by this gentleraan, vrith whom (for his experience and faithfulness to you) I do best like to deal. In Easter term, I hope to bring you your lease, under seal, as I have said to hira ; taking his word for the performance of your part thereof. I offered hira his charges that (as you wrote) he might not return erapty handed ; but I could fasten nought upon hira. And thus I raost heartily betake you to God. Frora Durham, 27th October 1584. Your assured ever, ToBiE Mathew.* Mr. Dutton was the father of the Peter Dutton whom Hatton, in a former letter, calls " his cousin and ser vant; — " to the bishop of CHESTER. My GOOD Lord, I am let to understand to my exceeding great grief, there is sorae raatter of suit depending before your Lordship, between ray very good friends Mr. John Dutton of Dutton, and Mrs. Eleanor his vrife, upon certain coraplaints which she hath lately exhibited against hira. And (for the earnest good will which I have always borne them, both in respect of alhance and of other good friendship pass ing between us) I am raoved to write these few words unto you, and heartily to entreat you to be pleased to take some careful regard of this cause and of the weightiness of the sequel thereof, in case it be not timely prevented. Your Lordship knoweth how ungodly a course of proceeding this is between man and wife, like to breed utter discredit to them both if it should go forward as it hath begun. If therefore it might be stayed and the cause ended with quietness through your Lordship's good and godly means, I should have cause greatly to rejoice thereat. But if this raay not conveniently * Additional MSS. 15891, f, 132, ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 899 be brought to pass, then am I earnestly to pray your Lord ship, to set such good order for a direct course of proceeding to be observed therein, as the cause raay be dealt in with all the indifferency tiiat may be ; so as there ensue no obloquy or to touch the name of Mr. Dutton, which other wise would leave too great a scar in his credit and reputa tion, being a principal gentleraan of the Shire, who may hardly endure any such disgrace, and the same perchance be cause of further inconvenience hereafter. Herein your Lord ship shaU do a most Christian act, worthy of your calling and function, and make me exceedingly beholden unto you for it. The perforraance whereof I refer to your most grave and wise consideration, vrith this addition only, that concerning the exhi bition to be aUowed unto Mrs. Eleanor it may please you to set down such an indifferent rate therein as may be to the good contentment of them both, if this possibly can be perforraed. And even so, recoramending your Lordship to the gracious protection of Almighty God, I take ray leave. Frora Harapton Court the 27th of October 1584. Your good Lordship's very loving assured friend, Chr. Hatton." mr. samuel cox to sir christopher hatton. May it please your Honour, I ara grievously sorry to perceive by your raost honourable letters that you still remain in opinion that the factious quarrels risen of late in your ser rice have been chiefly moved by rae, whora you suppose to be a principal author and stirrer of the same; and that, un less I wiU reconcile myseK to my enemies who have sought my destruction and ruin, you have determined utterly to abandon rae as unworthy to be accounted yours. God, who pardoneth the heaviest sins of us all, forgive them I hurably beseech Hm, and I do even as freely as yourseK would wish me, that have cast these nets to ensnare rae, poor wretch, of purpose to bring me, through your disgrace, to confusion. Peck's Desiderata Curiosa, vol. I, p, 157, 400 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584, The revenge is not raine, but his only ; and it is enough I know there is a blessing laid up for those that suffer. To obey your Honour's coraraandraent, the rather concurring in this point vrith ray duty to God, to whose Holy table I may not approach with malice in my heart, I will direct my prayers to his fatherly goodness to give rae patience and grace to quench the passions which fiesh and blood have kindled within rae against the injuries of ray unkind feUows, which I am now willingly content to tread under foot, as desirous from henceforth to forget and forgive thera, after the exaraple of Christ hiraself, who most graciously forgave us all. And for raine own particular cause of grief, in respect of your Honour's displeasure, which I would God had not so wrath fully stirred up against rae, I conceive it was but ray unwor thiness to serve you that hath justly laid the burden thereof upon rae. You have but deservingly disgraced a poor silly wretch, in whora, I confess, there is nothing to merit any bet ter regard at your hands, much less the love and favour wherevrith you are wont to embrace and advance those whom, for their necessary service, you are pleased especially to af fect. God give rae corafort and raore quiet after these storms to serve your Honour cheerfully : raore faithfully, and vrith greater zeal of love, I shaU never do than I have done : and so I raost hurably coraraend your Honour to the heavenly blessings of his grace and favour. From Cornhill, the 29th of October 1584. Your Honour's obedient poor servant.* MR. SAMUEL COX TO Good Mr., I perceive by your last that it should seem you understand by my Master that I misinterpreted the sense of his honourable letters which he wrote last unto rae, in think ing that he intreated rae to a reconcileraent with ray fellows where it were rather ray part, of rayself, to seek it. I would be loth to be reputed so siraply graceless, or so grossly undu tiful, as to think it fit for a Master, especially of his quality, » Additional MSS, 16891, f, 126. ^T. 44,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 401 to intreat his servant, whom he raay justly coraraand, rauch less so poor a wretch as rayself, who ara infinitely bound to his goodness, to lay down ray life at his feet to serve hira. I rejoiced greatly at his letters, for that they were indeed to rae, a disconsolate poor man, most sweet and corafortable ; tending partly (as I took them) to rebuke me, that I had so long omitted such charitable Christian office of reconciliation with those vrith whom he thought it ray duty to God and hiraself to make atonement, which I was gladly willing to yield unto, and in every respect to show myself careful to satisfy his Honour, as well in this as in any thing else that raight here after increase the quiet of his service, or breed friendly good wiU and acceptation between rae and ray fellows ; being so far frora imagining he should intreat my return again, by his letters, as in raine to his Honour (if you reraeraber) I did duti fuUy acknowledge raine own unworthiness to serve hira ; and that he had deserringly laid his disgrace upon an abject, un fortunate poor wretch, whose raerit had not deserved any better regard at his hands. I have often raost hurably sought, and vriU ever seek to please and submit myself to his Honour in aU singleness of heart and faithful duty, as becometh rae ; and when any of my fellows which have taken offence against me shall be content, as I am, to cast off former malice, and to end all private jars and unkindnesses, his Honour, shall find that, (how hardly soever they have dealt with me,) I will yet freely forgive them all their discourtesies whatsoever, as more worthy (respecting that even have wrought) to be written in dust than in raarble : nay, more than that, if I had caused the disgrace of any of thera as (with the peril of my utter ruin,) they have procured mine, or if I had brought any of thera into the open scorn and rebuke of the world, through the disfavour and ill-opinion of ray Master, as they have done rae, to ray greater grief and touch of credit than ever they will be able to repair, I assure you I would have sought them all England over, long ere this, but I would have craved pardon of thera ; and should have thought it my duty to have done so, howsoever they disdain once to make any D D 402 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. proffer of good-will or satisfaction to me, that am made by their raeans a spectacle of sharae and infaray ; and this I know standeth with the course of justice, and his Honour cannot but conceive of it so in his wisdora, nor, I ara sure, will not. I refuse not to be as ready to reconcile rayseK as any of them, I would be glad raatters were so justly weighed as they might receive a peaceful and a charitable end ; but, to be plain with you, (as with one whom I love,) I should think it hard mea sure to do sacrifice for another man's sins, or acknowledge a fault in desiring favour, where the Judge himseK hath justly acquitted me. I will only seek and serve ray Master, whora I have offended, and endeavour to deserve the love of ray fel lows, either by way of reconciliation, or by any other honest raean as they shall think rae worthy of it. Some of thera sent rae word of late that they will bring rae to their bent, or I shall never come more into service. Truly these words are no good workers of concord, for the dutiful love and regard I owe to ray Master I should grieve in my heart to leese him ; but whatsoever should happen, better or worse, I proraise you I think I should sooner forsake life, liberty, and what favour soever, than be a footstool to the frowardness of those that hate rae, especially of such as seera, by their own sayings, to rule the reins as they hst, and have credit to check and dis grace me when they please. If there be not some order taken to bridle these men's tongues, or liberty given to other men to speak what they will as well as they, for raine own part I shall have sraall corafort to serve, especially, finding that all I am able to' say or do, and that the honest, painful duty of my raany years' service so rauch regarded as the blast of one word only frora the mouth of my accuser. This I say boldly to you, ray good friend, who I hope will interpret it well. Think not much if ray tongue do raore liberally deUver than is requisite, what ray heart conceiveth without any ill raeaning. I have already borne so much, that my back is al most broken with the burden of it ; and yet I must go pray forgiveness of the workers of my woe, to make them insult the more over rae. There is a better and more indifferent ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 403 mean, as you know, than this to effect our reconciUation, which I pray you further with your best care of your poor friend, to keep our Master frora offence, and myseK from scorn ; for the which I wiU ever love you and thank you accordingly. And so I corarait you to God. From Cornhill, the 4th of Noveraber 1584. Your most beholding poor friend, Samuel Cox.* mr. samuel cox to sir christopher hatton. May IT PLEASE YOUR Honour, according to ray obe dience and bounden duty in seeking to do that which raight best content you, I have used means to speak with Mr twice or thrice since the receipt of your most honourable letters, of purpose, to grow to sorae such reconciliation and agreeraent with hira as raight be charitable and fit for us both in course of Christianity to accept of. At the length he sent me word he was presently to go into Northampton shire, at his return from whence he would appoint tirae and place where we should raeet and talk together ; in which, mean wliile, I have thought it my duty the rather to avoid all suspicion of slackness, in these few lines to signify thus much to your Honour, whose commandraent shall bind rae as a law while I Uve to do that which may best please and satisfy your most grave and honourable desires endea voured to do the Uke towards ray fellows Mr. . . . and . . . who finding your disgrace to lie so heavily upon rae as it doth, are animated I doubt, to insult the more over rae, and vriU by no raeans be intreated to have conference with rae. When my friends corae to raove thera to any such end, they cast them off slightly as if I were unworthy of their society, and theraselves of better account than to regard the good-will of so poor a raan as rayself. To show your Honour their indecent speeches were too rauch trouble to you, and if you heard thera, I am bound to beUeve by the experience I have of your goodness, that you would not think well of them in your justice. I see it is your honourable pleasure I " Additional MSS. 15891, f. 127''. D D 2 404 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. should suffer all, and so 1 will do with patience, but yet ill words are no good workers of concord. And I raost hurably beseech you to regard rae araong the rest as your poor ser vant, who in the place which I supply under you, hath been, is, and ever will be as careful to serve you, as the best of them, though as insufficient I confess as the raeanest, but yet not unworthy of better usage than they have given rae, which referring to the vrisdora of your Honour's grave judgment, and myself and service to your further pleasure and direction, I beseech God to bless you with health and with the corafort of his highest favours. Frora ray poor lodging in Cornhill this 9th of November 1584. Your Honour's most bound, unfor tunate poor servant, Samuel Cox.* MR. SAMUEL COX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. May it please your Honour, Yesternight Mr. Flowers'" and I met together at your house in Holborn, where, accord ing to our bounden duties, and your honourable pleasure directed to rae in particular, we made such reconciliation and good end of all unkindnesses as was fit for us both to yield unto in regard of our faithful obedience to your Honour's service, and ha,th araply satisfied and contented each of us with all due respect of charity, to which effect Mr. . . . court eously wrote his letters to Mr. Marb— and John, friendly wishing and advising them therein to take the like course with rae, and to corae to Mr. Bancroft's charaber at your Honour's house as we did, to satisfy and agree ourselves in anything that had bred cause of discontentation and ill liking heretofore betwixt us ; whereunto they returned hira answer, that they had business to attend of their own and could not corae ; for so Mr. Bancroft hath told rae. Thus have I will ingly sought thera there three or four tiraes in the zealous care of ray duty to testify the raost hurable and earnest desire to do all that I can to please your Honour ; but I fear it is labour lost and not unlikely to turn to sraoke, unless you shall think it meet in your wisdoin to interpose your com- ' Additional MSS. 15891, fol. 128'". " The name is, however, deleted. MT.U.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 405 mandraent and authority, vvithout the which I fear my devo tion to serve you shall hardly receive that corafort which I have ever greedily thirsted to [enjoy through] the wonted favour and goodness of your Honour, which of all mortal blessings I repute the greatest that can happen to so poor a wretch, and without the which I shall think all life to be woful and miserable : and so, I end with all huraility and most hurable intreaty of pardon for my presumption herein : commending your Honour and your most virtuous actions to the favourable regard and protection of the Almighty. From my poor lodging in Cornhill the 28th of Noveraber 1584. Your Honour's faithful, raost bounden poor servant, Sam, Cox.* Another letter from the prolix Mr. Cox will be in serted here, though it belongs to the next year : — MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, I am sorry to hear that, of late, you are grown more subject to melancholy, and more desirous of solitariness than heretofore you have been. You shall find it (if I be not de ceived) an humour sooner come than gone, and such as breed eth more contention for awhile, than bringeth good or commen dation in the end. I pray you remember, that the wise patient raust as well consider what will hurt him as what will help him, and always eschew the one and insue the other. If you think to receive any solace by means of a soUtary life, you greatly deceive yourself, and fill your body full of raw humidities and ill affected humours, whicb having once taken root in you, will ever lie ready in wait, to search out secret and solitary places conformable to their nature, and forcibly keep you from all mirth and good company. Such false ima ginations, instead of consuming and starving your evil, will give it nourishment, and as the fly, whicb flieth about the candle with pleasure, is bumt at the last, so will they at the length, purchase you pain, yea and death too, if you seek not remedy the sooner. Take heed to it therefore in time • as hidden flames kept down by force are most ardent, so these » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 131'>. 406 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584^ corrupt humours, covertly lurking, do with more force con sume and destroy the fair palace of raan's raind. If you love yourself, have regard to redress this evil, and to change the order of your proceeding in the course of your health, which, if you will do to your comfort, you must then account solitari ness for a poison, and corapany for an antidote and the foun dation of life, frarae yourself to cast off the one, as a concu bine, and take the other into your favour as a lawful spouse. Go unwillingly to melancholy, as the tortoise doth to the enchantraent, she will make you lean, forlorn, and fill you full of putrefied blood, and in the end, draw both your life and manners into corruption. The hasty departure of this mes senger will here force rae to close up my letter, you see how bold I am, where I think my poor advice may be welcome. It is a duty of courtesy, which I was loth should be wanting, wben I thought it might do good and be acceptable to so dear a friend as yourself, whom God ever bless with his manifold gracious favours. From tbe Court at Greenwich the 20th of July 1585. Your assured poor friend, Samuel Cox.* The following letter is without any date, but it seems to have been written towards the end of 1584 : — DR. MATHEW TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. My humble duty reraerabered unto your Honour. Al beit, since my placing in Duresme, it hath not pleased you to coraraand myself or my service in anything ; yet, for that I cannot but acknowledge ray preferment thither was greatly furthered and specially followed by your honourable means, I thought it the part of a thankful man to renew my acknow ledgments thereof unto your Honour, and withal to make hum ble offer of what I may do there, to be ready at your devotion, as the person whom I do much honour, raore for your many rirtues than for your place ; and to whom I ara much bound en, not for this alone, but for divers other favours. That I have not oftener attended upon your Honour, and risited you according to my duty and ceremony of Court, hath not ^ Additional MSS. 16891. ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 407 proceeded from any forgetfulness of that 1 owe you, but rather of sorae scruple that I raake to be cumbersome to such persons as make raore precious account of their tirae than to idle it out in entertainments. And so, trusting this wiU be taken, if not for a sufficient amends, yet for a rea sonable excuse both of my silence and of my absence, here would I put an end to my letter, but that I cannot so refrain my pen frora scribbUng soraewhat of the abundance of ray heart, not as one curious in your causes, but yet bound to be careful of your estate. I ara very sorry. Sir, to hear you give yourseK to be raore private than you have been wont, for soUtariness is a certain huraour sooner corae than gone ; and it rather bringeth contentation for a while, than breedeth coraraendation or good in the end. You be not the first. Sir, that have lost a good servant, or kept a bad ; or that have found both friends unfast and neighbours unthankful, undu tiful followers, and professed enemies. These thwarts are incident, yea, and convenient too soraetiraes, not only to check our joys and to prove our patience, but to let us see and make us feel the odds between God and men, between this and that other world. And happy is he that with a good stomach can brook the perils of these unkindnesses, which are not piecemeal to be eaten and fed on, but rather to be swaUowed and devoured whole. Happy is he at last that is occasioned at first to try all before he need trust any, and so to raake both proof of his friends and profit of his foes. A nobleraan of Germany gave for his words concussus surgo, and bare for his device a great stone in a palm-tree, to show that as the palm riseth against and resisteth the burthen, so it becometh men of council and courage, such as he was, (and such as you be,) the raore heavy they be laden the raore strongly to overbear it. Like advice gave Sybilla to ^Eneas before his travel, araidst his trouble, Tu ne cede malis, sed con tra audentior ito. But to your Honour I will say no more but ' Show yourself to be yourself, and give to your adversary no one foot unless it be to gain two.' I ara not of the sword, but of the robe ; neither is raine ability much, though mine 408 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1584. affection be great : but what I ara is at your coramandraent, as I have good cause and ara desirous to raake some proof as it shall like your Honour to minister the occasion. And thus, not doubting but as after close weather the sun shines brighter and warraer too, so your condition of honour and virtue shall daily increase frora good to better before God and raan, I will humbly crave pardon for my boldness, and so betake you to the gracious protection and direction of the Almighty. From the Savoy, this Thursday raorning. Your Honour's hurable and raost bounden. To. Mathew.* Sir Christopher Hatton gave a remarkable proof of his religious zeal in this year. A bill against Jesuits and Seminary Priests having passed the Commons, it was proposed, on the 21st of December, that the mem bers should repair to their own homes ; but, before sepa rating, " Hatton stood up again, and putting the House in mind of her Majesty's most princely and loving kind nesses signified in her former messages and declarations," of which he had always been the bearer, " of her High ness's thankful acceptations of the dutiful cares and travails of this House in the service of her Majesty and the Eealm," moved the House, " that, besides the render ing of Qur most humble and loyal thanks unto her High ness, we do, being assembled together, join our hearts and minds together in most humble and earnest prayer unto Almighty (xod for the long continuance of the most prosperous preservation of her Majesty, with most due and thankful acknowledgment ofhis infinite benefits and bless ings, poured upon this whole Eealm through the media tion of her Highness's ministry under Him," He added, that he had " a paper in writing in his hand, devised and set down by an honest, godly, and learned man; » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 122, ^T. 44.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 409 and which, albeit it was not very well written, yet he would wiUingly read it as weU as he could, if it pleased them to foUow and say after him, as he should begin and say before them; which, being assented unto most wiUingly of all the whole House, and every one kneel ing upon his knees, the said Mr. Vice-Chamberlain began the said prayer."* Sir John Perrot, Lord Deputy of Ireland, proposed to the Government to found a University in Dublin, and to appropriate the revenues of St. Patrick's Church to its support.*" This was naturally resisted by the Archbishop of DubUn and the Prebends, and some letters from the Archbishop wiU be found on the subject. FROM THE LORDS OF THE COUNCIL TO THE LORD DEPUTY. After our very hearty coraraendations to your good Lord ship. Whereas araong other matters appertaining to the good government of that Realm, your Lordship hath, as we well perceive by sundry your late letters, a very special care to have a University erected there, according to an article of instructions given you in this behalf, before your departure from hence, for the converting of the revenues of the Cathe dral Church of St. Patrick in that Realra towards the erecting of a University, and the raaintenance of certain Readers and Scholars : for as rauch as we are given to understand that the said revenues do consist altogether of tithes, and that the Pre bendaries there are persons impersonees, and have pecuUar charges of sundry parish churches, the tithes whereof do make the revenues of the said College, without any tempora lities or lay fees, we cannot resolve to dissolve or suppress the state of such a Church, considering it is of such pastoral cures, and to turn the living due to the Minister for the said ' Parliamentary History, vol. i. p. p. 386 ; and Monk Mason's History 827. of the Cathedral of St. Patrick. '¦ Vide Harris*^ History of Dublin, 410 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. cures to other uses, without further information how the same may be raore lawfully done, and without inconvenience. Therefore we have thought good to require your Lordship to call unto you the Archbishop of Dublin, and together with hira to consider somewhat better thereof, as well of the means how the said revenues grovring of tithes raight be converted in sorae part to such use as your Lordship hath set down ; as also, if any alterations raay be suffered, how rauch thereof raay be converted, without taking from the ministry and the cures that which appertaineth unto them by all right and conscience ; as also of those letts which shall appear unto you to hinder that alteration, and the inconveniences that thereby raight arise : whereof we pray your Lordship we raay receive frora you, and frora the Archbishop of Dub lin, particular inforraation, with your advice therein, to the end that we may be thoroughly instructed in the cause, and better able to yield you sorae resolution therein ; and we wiU not fail, as we shall see cause, to let your Lordship under stand of our opinion, and what we shall think convenient to be done in that behaK. But, upon the debating thereof with Sir Lucas DiUon, we do think that by Parliaraent there might be some device raade of a contribution out of parsonages impropriate, and sorae other ecclesiastical promotions, not subject to the charge and cure of souls, to serve for mainte nance of certain PubUc readers both in sciences and divinity, and for relief of some convenient number of Scholars, where by sorae beginning might be seen of a kind of public schools, and by access of men's devotions it might be hoped to have such a University planted in that Realm, rather than to raake a spoil of parishes with cures, as we see the intention of dissolving of that College would work. And yet we can wish that the disorders and raisusages of those cures by the Prebendaries (if any be) were reformed, to the which we will yield our helps. So, until we receive further information from your Lordship, we do bid you right heartily farewell. From Greenwich, the Srd of January 1584 [1585]. Your Lordship's loving friends.* » Additional MSS. 16891, f. 144. lET. 45,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 411 The meeting of Parliament, about which the Queen was anxious, took place on the 4th of February ; but it was prorogued on the 20th of March, and dissolved on the 14th of September : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO LORD BURGHLEY. My SINGULAR GOOD LoRD, I havc raoved her Majesty, according to your Lordship's desire, touching the office of the Duchy. I find she hath passed her gracious grant of the sarae unto the Lord WiUoughby two days since, for the which she blameth your Lordship, and is right heartily sorry. Her Majesty marveUeth that, having any liking to those sraall things, you caused nobody about her to speak of thera. I perceive she hath sorae desire to reclaira her proraise, wherein what will be done I am not able to certify your Lordship. I can assure your Lordship her Majesty dealeth most graciously, kindly, and loringly towards you in her speeches and meaning, whereof I beseech you take corafort according to your wisdora. The Queen requireth your good Lordship, with the Lord ChanceUor and the Lord Steward, who is presently at Lon don, to be here the raorrow at night, about the matter of Par liament, wherevrith I find her Majesty somewhat troubled. Her pleasure is. Sir, that you should advertise these Lords, that they fail not to be here ; at which time I shall attend you according to ray love and duty. And so I hurably take my leave in haste, this 26th of January 1584 [1585]. Your good Lordship's most bound poor friend, Chr. Hatton.* Mr. Davison was sent, early in 1585, to the Elector of Cologne, to deliver to him 6000?. ; and he remained in the Low Countries until April, when he was com manded to return to England : — * Autograph in the State Paper i" Harleian MSS. 285, f. 122, 129. Office. 412 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1585, MR. DAVISON TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It raay please your Honour, Since the last dispatch of this bearer ray servant, I have had little to write unto your Honour, the raean tirae affording us nothing frora the States Coraraissioners in France since their departure from Abbe ville, so as hitherto we remain in a doubtful expectation what issue their ambassade vrill take ; whereof all men here, of any judgment, do in the mean tirae carry a very hard and jealous opinion, as ofa reraedy far raore dangerous than either helpful or proper to the disease of this troubled and languishing coramonwealth. Of the late attempted surprise of Bois-le-duc, succeeded with dishonour and loss of four or five hundred men at the least, amongst which was a brother of the Elector Truchses*, this bearer can particularly inform your Honour. Since the enemy hath recovered the forts before Zutphen, some by force, the rest by coraposition, and hath now free passage into Deventer, where the States are driven by this raeans to reinforce their garrisons, Brus sels is reduced to sorae strait, and without hope to hold long, being only sustained with the vain expectation of the un likely or untiraely succours of their new-chosen saint. In Gueldres there is sorae doubt of alteration by the raeans of sorae principal seduced or corrupted by the eneray. In Flanders he turneth all upside down: he hath begun to redress and enlarge the old citadel at Ghant, already de fensible, and hath projected another (as we hear) about St. Peter's within the sarae town, to hold the people the better in devotion. At Bruges the necessities are said to be great, especiaUy through the want of Sluse, where the garrison is now in mutiny for their pay. There was of late sorae expecta tion of a raeeting at Liege by the Archbishops of Mentz and Treves, with other Princes and Coraraissioners of the Empire, to revive some raotion and treaty of peace ; but, since the bruit is that their Comraissioners should be deputed into France, whether to effect the same the better with that King's concurrency, or else to divert hira frora embracing the cause . » Sie. MU. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 413 or, under either pretext, to resolve soraething else that hath been long since in hatching against the surety of religion and the state of others, I leave to the better and raore certain advertiseraent of our Arabassador in France. Sorae here, that pretend to know something, do give out that the Spa niard, vrilling to leave a peaceable estate behind him, is both inclined to peace, and rainded to bestow these Countries, with his eldest daughter, upon the Cardinal of Austria, now in Spain, the better to satisfy other Princes jealous of his greatness, and to incline this people the rather therewithal to a reconcileraent ; in which respect, as some think, or rather to countermine the doings of these States Comraissioners, the Prince of Parraa hath sent thither the Marquis of Haverech and Berques with the Prince of Chiraay. But that this over ture hath any better scope, or will yield any better fruit than the last treaty or colloquy, is of all wise raen suspected ; the disposition whereof I leave to His providence that overruleth all, to whose safeguard and protection I hurably coraraend your Honour. And so, in haste for this tirae, I take ray leave. At the Hague, the 12th of February 1584 [1585]. Your Honour's most bounden to do you service, W. Davison. Postscript. — The fleet prepared in Zealand for the relief of Antwerp is, as we hear, gone up, with the only loss of four vessels, whereof the one is sunk, the other taken. I have Ukewise even now received advertisement that Brussels is entered into some treaty with the enemy; and look to hear by the next of their agreeraent, so as their expected succour out of France shall corae to thera a day, as we say, after the fair.* In December 1584, when the bill against Jesuits and Seminary Priests was read in the Commons, a Dr. WiUiam Parry, " a man," says Camden, " passing proud, neat, and spruce," was the only member who spoke against it, declaring the proposed laws to be » Additional MSS, 15891, f, 140. 414 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585, " cruel, bloody, fuU of desperation, and hurtful to the English nation." For this offence he was committed to custody, and afterwards charged with treasonable matters. Being examined by three members of the Privy Council, Lord Hunsdon, Sir Christopher Hat ton, and Sir Francis Walsingham, he acknowledged his fault, and begged the Queen's forgiveness. On the 25th of February 1585, Parry was tried for high treason before a Special Commission, consisting of Lord Hunsdon, the two Chief Justices and Chief Baron, the Master of the Eolls, Sir Francis KnoUys, Sir James Croft, Sir Christopher Hatton, and Sir Thomas Hene age, and pleaded guilty. Hatton took a very promi nent part in the proceedings ;* and, according to Cam den, " When the prisoner's confession was recorded, and judgment demanded him, Hatton thought it neces sary, for satisfaction of the multitude that stood round about, that his crime might be manifestly laid open out of his own confession.'"" Parry was executed in Great Palace Yard on the 2nd of March.' Sir Thomas Heneage was again made the channel of conveying some "tokens" and a letter from Hatton to the Queen. He sent her a true love's knot, with which she was much pleased, and wrote him a gratifying ac knowledgment; but the most curious part of this letter is that which relates to Sir Walter Ealeigh, and Eliza beth's indignation that he should be supposed to equal Hatton in her estimation. Varney will be recognised by all readers of " Kenilworth." The " priest" was Higgins, who is often mentioned : — •> State Trials, i. 133. <^ Stow, p, 701, Camden's Annals, b. in, p, 45. UT. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 415 SIR THOMAS HENEAGE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Your bracelets be embraced according to their worth, and the good-will of the sender, which is held of such great price as your true friend tells you, I think in my heart you have great cause to take most comfort in, for seldom in my Ufe have I seen raore hearty and noble affection expressed by her Majesty towards you than she showed upon this occasion, which will ask raore leisure than is now left me particularly to let you know. The sum is, she thinks you faithfullest and of most worth, and thereafter will regard you : so she saith, so I hope, and so there is just cause. She told rae, she thought your absence as long as yourself did, and raarveUed that you carae not. I let her Majesty know, understanding it by Varney, that you had no place here to rest yourself, which after standing and waiting you rauch needed ; where upon she grew very rauch displeased and would not believe that any should be placed in your lodging, but sending Mr. Darcy to understand the raatter, found that Sir Wa. R. lay there, wherewith she grew raore angry with ray L. Chamber lain than I wished she had been, and used bitterness of speech against R. telling me before that she had rather see him hanged than equal him with you, or that the world should think she did so. Messengers bear no blarae ; and though you give me no thanks, 1 must tell you, that her Highness saith you are a knave for sending her such a thing and of that price, which you know she will not send back again ; that is, the knot* she most loves, and she thinks cannot be undone; but I keep the best to the last. This enclosed, which it pleased her to read to rae, and I raust be a record of, which if I raight see surely perforraed, I should have one of ray greatest desires upon earth ; I speak it faithfully. The Queen is glad with rae that the priest is taken ; I pray God you may make him open all truth that may advance her surety, and to your Honour, which I wish in all kind as long and as happy as any man's living, and so comraend me all unto you till I see you, * " The true love knot."— Marginal note. 416 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586. which I hope and think best to be as her Highness cometh home to-raorrow at night. Frora Croydon the 2nd of April 1585. Your own ever sure so, Tho. Heneage.* The Countess of Sussex's applications to be restored to the Queen's favour having failed, she renewed her efforts in a letter to Hatton in April of this year : — THE COUNTESS OF SUSSEX TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I raust and will confess while I live, that I have found that virtue, courtesy, and friendship in you that I have wanted in raany others of whom I have deserved better than I have or ever shall be able to deserve of you : and therefore have thought good to make bold of you and to beseech your pains once again in soliciting her Majesty's most gracious favour towards me, the which if I found to be taken from rae, by any my wilful offence towards her excellent and incom parable goodness, I would hate my life and think rayself the raost accursed creature that ever had breath ; but for as rauch as ray greatest fault (I hope) is nothing else but sorae error or oversight (in the raidst of ray miseries being overwhelmed with sorrow) which raight have raade the wisest and perfectest to slide, and yet perhaps ray sliding, enforced and aggravated by eril will, (and raade rauch raore than it was) I trust in God, her raost gracious nature and princely heart will not keep so straight an eye upon any oversight of mine, that spareth to see and to know and to revenge raany offences and offenders in higher degree. Howsoever it be, I have vvith all huraility and duty sought her Majesty; and though 1 be eft soons repulsed, yet will I ever seek her with as great lowli ness as ever poor wretch that lay prostrate at her feat. And if any particularity have been sinisterly brought to her sacred ears, that I have not heard of, if it niight stand with her gra cious favour to be satisfied frora mine own mouth, I shall for ever think myself raost bound to her excellency : and if I clear not rayself of the most of that I have been charged withal, 1 ^ Additional MSS. 16891, f. 147. ^T. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 417 wUl condemn myself as unworthy of her princely presence, and live for ever in exile and disgrace. And if I be able to perform this and to disprove the sinister informations of my contraries, alas! why should I wear out my life with this note of her Highness' indignation by which the world cannot but fancy some great enormity in me ? Sir, I beseech you, let me entreat you once again to plead mine innocency to her Majesty with a raost hurable raind to subrait myself and to satisfy her Highness. And if my hap be so hard as to be the only unfortunate woman of the world, your deserts and good ness are not the less, and my bond to you greatly increased, as knoweth the Almighty. Bermondsey, the 12th April 1585. Your assured friend, Fran. Sussex.* TO MR. EGERTON, HER MAJESTY S SOLICITOR. Sir, Her Majesty being moved lately touching Mr. Doctor Dale's bill for his right of presentation in the Hospital of Sherborne, is graciously contented to sign the same, so the proviso contained therein be a sample as it ought to be, which if you shaU find to be so, her Majesty's pleasure is, you shaU subscribe his bill with present expedition, that it may be returned immediately, for such is her Highness' direction. And so, I commit you to God. Frora the Court at Green wich the 15th of April 1585. Your very loving assured friend, Chr. Hatton. Sir, If you find not this bill forraaUy drawn according to the law, you raust presently raake up another and deliver it to Mr. Dale, subscribed with your own hand.'' Philip Sidney had married Sir Francis Walsingham's daughter, and not only was the Queen reconciled to the match, but she Knighted Sidney at Windsor Castle in January 1584: — > Additional MSS. 16891, f. 135. "> Egerton Papers, p. 113. E E 418 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Before ray departure frora the Court I did recom mend unto her Majesty a suit of Sir Philip Sidney's, where unto it pleased her to give a very favourable ear and to pro mise speedy resolution therein, now for that by reason of my absence it raay depend longer than the necessity of the gen tleman may well bear : I am therefore to pray you as ray good and assured friend, to put her Majesty in raind thereof, and so shall you bind us both to be at your devotion. This bearer shall acquaint you with the suit, and in what sort the same hath been proceeded in. And so, not doubting of your most friendly furtherance therein, I corarait you to God. At Barn Ehns the 26th of April 1585.. Your assured friend, Fra. Walsingham.* This and the following letter appear to relate to the arrest of the Earl of ArundeU. The severity of the laws against the Catholics induced the Earl to take measures for quitting England, but he was apprehended through the treachery of his own followers, and commit ted to the Tower on the 25th of April. He wrote a long and eloquent letter'' to the Queen, which was not to have been delivered until after his departure ; but, being found, the reproaches it contained exasperated his enemies. He was tried and condemned, but the sentence was not ex ecuted, and he died a prisoner in the Tower in November 1595. The person indicated as "D" of this and the foUowing letter has been identified : — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I have perused the examination iti hath pleased you to take of D , and finding by your report of the man that ' Additional MSS. 16891, f. 146. ^ This letter is printed at length by Stow, p 702—706. MT. 45,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 419 he is but simple, and that the last year he was soraewhat dis tracted of his wit, I see no cause but upon bond of good be haviour he may be set at liberty. And so, I comrait you to God. At Barn Elras the 28th of April 1585. Your most assured friend, Fra. Walsingham." The Earl mentioned in this letter was clearly the Earl of ArundeU: — SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I return unto you D 's exaraination; it were hard (though it might be sufficiently proved,) that the Earl's recon ciliation should be urged against him, being a matter rather of conscience than of State, And seeing her Majesty hath heretofore (in point of conscience) dealt gratiously towards Jesuits and Seminaries, men of worse desert, it would be ill thought of that one of the Earl's quality should receive harder measure than those that are reputed the poisoners of this estate. Touching the wherein it is said there were certain hallowed grains, I received it from my Lord Trea surer, who can give particular information about whom it was found. And so praying God to send you continuance of health, which I lack, I commit you to his protection. At Barn Elras, the 29th of April 1585. Your raost assured friend, Fra, Walsingham.*" ArundeU seems, in his misfortunes, to have shewn a magnanimity becoming his race, though Walsingham says he was by nature fearful. The Lieutenant of the Tower was Sir Owen Hopton, who was not, however, as Walsingham recommends, removed from his office, Mr. Henry MacwiUiam, to whose custody the Earl of Arun dell was entrusted, was one of the Gentleman Pen sioners, and his eldest daughter and co-heiress married Sir John Stanhope, from whom several letters occur ;— » Additional MSS. 15891, f, ]47'>, ¦> Additional MSS, 16891, f. 146. S F. 2 420 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585, SIR FRANCIS walsingham TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, The view of your letter hath raade me change my opinion, touching the proceeding with the Earl, whose courage is to be abated, and no advantage to be lost until he be drawn to use some other language, seasoned with more humility. You shall do well to advise Mr. MacwiUiam to look well to his charge : it cannot be but that he receiveth some comfort, and that not from mean persons, that putteth him in this cou rage. No man is of his own nature more fearful. It will behove her Majesty to make choice of sorae other, to supply the place of the Lieutenant of the Tower : it sufficeth not for him that shall bold that place to be only faithful, but he ought to be wise. I know it now to be tbe corruptest prison in Eng land ; which in these dangerous tiraes standeth not with policy. The force of the Guisans increaseth, and so much the raore for that he daily getteth into his hands the King's treasure. The Queen Mother adviseth her son to grow to a peace : at tbe said Duke's price, few or none are willing to serve the King, but those whora he dare not use. Cardinal Montalto,* sometime a grey friar, by the favour of the Spanish faction is elected Pope : a man most furiously bent against those of the religion. There lacketh now, to bring our danger to the height of his pride, only the King of Spain's full possession of the Low Countries, which in the course we hold, will in a few days corae to pass. And so with my most hearty thanks for your promised favour to Sir Philip Sidney, I coramit you to God. At Bam Elms, the 1st of May 1585. Your most assured friend, Francis Walsingham.'' The Archbishop of Dublin's second letter respecting the proposed University was probably written in April ' or May of this year : — « Felix Peretti, Cardinal of Mont- of April, 1585, and took the title of alto, was elected Pope on the 24th Sixtus the Fifth t Additional MSS. 15891, f. 147. r. 45,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 421 ARCHBISHOP LOFTUS TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. It may please your Honour, It pleased the Lords of her Highness' Privy Council in February last, by letters sent over by Sir Lucas Dillon to my Lord Deputy, to signify their opinions touching the Cathedral Church of St. Patrick's, that it should remain in the state wherein it was ; notwithstanding which letter, my Lord Deputy hath ever since continued his former purpose to dissolve the same and to convert it to a University. And because in the livings of that Church I have a special interest, (being ordinary Patron of the most of thera,) his Lordship acquainted rae with his intention, naraely, that the Church should be turned to a place for the Teraporal Court, and the Prebends to the raaintenance of CoUeges to be erected ; which raotion when I raisliked for many reasons heretofore signified by me unto your Honour and the rest of her Highness' Council, his Lordship conceived great offence and displeasure against rae, threatening rae with these terras, that, if herein I would not yield unto hira, he would be ray utter eneray, sift rae, disgrace rae, and raake rae lose as rauch as I raight lose in Ireland. And whereas in the letter sent frora the Lords his Lordship was required to caU rae unto hira, and to confer privately with rae touching that raatter, the letter was detained by his Lordship and kept frora rae until the 1 1 th of this instant. These things proceeding frora a raan of his authority and abiUty, and the due care I had of that poor Church, whereof I have the pas toral charge, enforced rae to solicit ray dearest friends in Eng land for the procureraent of her Majesty's letter to his Lord ship to stay him from that attempt ; which being lately deli vered unto his hands was so grievously taken, that I find thereby his Lordship's displeasure to be increased against me, and have just cause to fear, that whatsoever things can be devised for ray disgrace with her Majesty, or to discredit rae with their Lordships, shall not be oraitted. After the deliver}- of her Majesty's letter concerning her express resolution for the continuance of the Church in the 422 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1585. state wherein it is, the llth of this instant his Lordship sent for rae, and then, first showing the letter of the Lords sent in February, required rae to enter into conference with hira how raost conveniently either the whole Church, or sorae good part thereof, raight be converted into an University ; withal laying before rae a platform of a University drawn by hiraseK, consisting of raany iraposSibiUties, and for sundry just causes to be raisliked. Mine humble answer to his Lordship was this : that, forasrauch as her Majesty had signified her gra cious resolution touching ray Church (for the which I most humbly thank God and her Highness), I would not now pre sume to enter into any new device in this matter. His Lord ship, being grievously offended with this ray answer, forthwith burst forth into these speeches, ' So I think ; nor ui any other good things.' I am secretly inforraed his Lordship intendeth to seek sorae advantage out of this raine answer against rae, and that he doth inforra the sarae into England by Mr, Secretary Fen ton, of whose forwardness in aggravating any cause against rae I nothing doubt, for that he hath professed hiraself an utter eneray to rae and ray poor Church, by the ruin and overthrow whereof he hath conceived an undoubted hope to enrich hiraself. I have further learned, by secret intelligence frora sorae which are farailiarly acquainted with his Lordship's deedings, that, upon this his Lordship's offence conceived against rae, he taketh occasion to seek ray utter discredit with your Honour by certain raost untrue and raalicious inforraations suggested by raine eneraies, the effect whereof ensueth : That in this cause of the Church I oppose rayself against his Lordship only in respect of the private gain and coraraodity which yearly I reap out of the same, thereby to paraper rayself and ray children ; that I have purchased one hundred pounds per annum ; that I have raatched in marriage four of ray daugh ters to four principal gentleraen, and ara in readiness to bestow the fifth; that I have builded a house, which already hath ^T. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 423 cost rae fifteen or sixteen hundred pounds ; that all this wealth and substance I have gained by corruption in raine office of Chancery, and in the High Coraraission for the Ecclesiastical Causes ; and, finaUy, that I am altogether degenerate, and be corae mere Irish. The inforraation, I confess, is of itself most odious, espe ciaUy against a person of ray place and calUng ; but because it containeth manifest untruths, and is reported to my honour able friend, whose knowledge of ray IKe and conversation suf ficeth to disprove so malicious suggestions, I have conceived firm and stedfast hope that before mine answer I shall not be condemned, but shall be admitted to use ray purgation in sort as followeth: First, protesting before Almighty God that private respect have not induced me to stand in the defence of my poor Church, or therein to oppose myself against his Lordship, whom I honour ; but the pastoral charge thereof committed unto rae, which in conscience pricketh me there unto, with raany other reasons which have been alleged. I confess I do enjoy out of the livings of the Church an hun dred pounds per annura, granted unto rae by special com mendam frora her Highness under her Great Seal of England; the confirraation whereof ray Lord Deputy at sundry tiraes hath offered unto rae during my life, in case I would yield my consent to the suppression of the Church ; which honourable offer, made to me at sundry tiraes and by sundry raessengers of special trust and credit, I always refused, having had a greater care of the charge comraitted to rae than mine own coraraodity. The value of my purchase wanteth a good deal of two hun dred marks per annura, which, by keeping of her Majesty's Great Seal in the tirae of Sir WiUiara Fitzwilliam's go vemment, by her Majesty's entertainraent, I gained ; and now do humbly thank the Lord that it is so well bestowed for the relief of my poor wife and fifteen children living, which, othervrise, after ray death would Uve in extrerae beggary. Her Highness' entertainraent was the only raeans thereof which. 424 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. during ray Ufe, I wUl acknowledge. My four daughters are in truth raarried, and the fifth I hope shall be, to the sons and heirs of five honest and virtuous EngUsh gentleraen. But God is witness that all this hath been wrought by God's spe cial providence with a sraall sura of raoney, in regard rather of their favour to ray religion, they being all Protestants, (for which I thank God and the good education of ray daughters,) than of any portion of money, which, in respect of the slen- derness of my living, I was able to disburse. The building of my house, which is newly reared, hath not in truth been half so chargeable as is suggested ; but, whatso ever it hath cost me, I do confess that I gained the same wholly by her Majesty's bountiful entertainment bestowed upon rae in the tirae of the late joint Government, coraraitted to ray partner. Sir Henry Wallop, and rae ; wherewith I have builded a poor castle, of threescore feet long, for the maintenance of my poor wife and children. The only founder under God of this poor work was her Majesty's liberality, which I and my children will never forget. The Lord doth know right well that this hath been the only raean of ray gain or lucre I have attained since ray coraing into this land, which, I trust, hath been bestowed upon good and godly uses ; for as for the suggestion of indirect or cor rupt means by rae used to enrich rayself, either in the Chan cery or in the High Commission, (my duty and reverence re served to the informer and his plan,) I do defy the whole worid, and stand wholly upon my innocency, refusing no cen sure, but most hurably beseeching that ray dealings raight be tried at the Council-board, either to ray utter discredit and undoing, or to the sharae and confusion of mine enemy and accuser, whatsoever he be. Lastly, concerning that raost odious suggestion that I ara now degenerate, and become raere Irish, I refer the trial of this report to the long experi ence which both you and the rest of the Lords of her Majesty's Council have had of ray faithful and loyal service in most dan gerous times, wherein I dare be bold to challenge your Honour to be my witness how far I have hazarded ray whole estate ; ^T. 4,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 425 and, to disprove this raahcious and most untrue suggestion, 1 ara contented to submit myself to the raeanest gentleraen of our nation. These causes of ray grief and great discorafort offered by his Lordship, I have made bold truly (even as before God bemoaning mine estate) to set down before your Honour, pro testing before God that I am innocent of any evil or unkind practice towards my Lord Deputy, being no oppugner, but the defender in this cause both of rayself and of ray poor children. 1 have frora time to tirae raost dihgently sought, both by ray obedience and service, his Honour's favour ; but by no raeans can obtain the sarae. My professed eneray is the Master of the Rolls, (who, even for religion itself, doth chiefiy hate rae,) and beareth so great a sway with his good Lordship, both in this particular cause and in raany other against rae that he daily incenseth his displeasure, and gene rally almost in aU actions concerning her Majesty's service, that as many others are very much discontented, so in parti cular I find rayself very rauch discouraged. I have no refuge to fiy unto in these or any other injuries but only her High ness and that honourable Board, to whora I raust and will appeal, referring the consideration of ray twenty-eight years' service to her and their grave wisdoras. I vrish frora ray heart the corafort of ray Lord Deputy's favour and friendship, which in raost humble manner I have required, and daily do sue for, praying your Honour to be a raeans to his grod Lord ship for the procureraent thereof. And for ray Cathedral Church, since her Highness hath signified her gracious resolu tion that it shaU continue in the state wherein it is, without any innovation, I hurably beseech your Honour to persuade his good Lordship to desist frora the purpose he hath con ceived for the suppression and dissolution of the same. Your Honour's most humble to coraraand.* This and the next letter arose out of the persecutions to which Catholics were exposed after the passing of the Act against Jesuits and Seminary Priests : — » Additional MSS. 15891, f. 160'>. 426 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, I will give present order, throughout the ports for the stay of the party, according to the description contained in your letter. It may please you to give some charge to your servant Pyne, to look well to the port of London, for that raost of tbe profession do pass that way. And so I coramit you to the protection of the Almighty. At Barn Elms, the 1st of May 1,585. Your raost assured friend, Fra. Walsingham.* sir thomas heneage to sir christopher hatton. Sir, I have showed her Majesty your letter, this bearer brought me for answer, whereof her Highness's pleasure is, I should let you know, that she would have Isaac Higgins, now in your custody yet detained three or four days, and in the raean season, that he should be again better exarained ; and that Mr, Secretary should be sent to, and likewise Mr. Top- cliffe witb those in that coraraission, to know if the narae of this raan be in any of their rules, which they keep of such bad fellows as carry and re-carry books and letters into tbis Realm, and out of it, which being certainly known, tbat he be kept or let go, as shall be thought best by you for her Majes ty's service. This is all I was willed to say, but this withal, that her Highness thinketh your house will shortly be like Gravesend barge, never without a knave, a priest, or a thief, &c. So loving you and leaving you, I commend me humbly to you. From the Court at Croydon, this 2nd of May 1585. Your own at commandment, Tho. Heneage.*" Only thirteen years had elapsed since the Duke of Norfolk, when under sentence of death, advised his eld est son to rely upon Hatton's friendship, "^ before that son was himself a supplicant to Hatton to save him from a similar fate : — » Additional MSS, 16891, f. 147''. >¦ Ibid, f. 148^ " Vide p. 9, ante. ^T, 45,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 427 EARL OF arundell TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. I Pray pardon me good Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, that I sent not this letter yesternight. The cause of my stay was, because I have greatly offended her Majesty, and therefore ara desirous for as full a satisfaction as lieth in me to make, truly of myself to confess the sum of ray offence, wherefore I staid this mom ing to see if I could any way call to raind anything that yester night 1 had forgotten. That I have been both confessed and absolved, I cannot deny; but I protest, led unto it raerely by conscience, without intending either to offend her Majesty or her State. My sending to Doctor Alien,* I have already acknowledged. Two things only I ara now to add. Tbe first, tbat I offered to be at bis direction. The second that I wrote a letter unto him, and that was the only letter which ever I wrote, wherein I did signify, as much by writing of my being at his direction, and in this I must needs confess I offended her Majesty. And I protest afore God was so sorry for it after myself, as when the messenger which should have carried it, had not opportunity at the first to go over, I desired that it might be burnt ; and what is done with it, I know not, but Brydges told rae it was bumt. Now having in these points laid open fully and thoroughly wherein I have offended her Majesty, I protest afore God, as far as I can call to reraera brance, I do utterly deny and disavow, that ever I was privy to any plot or practice laid or made against her Majesty, or her state; and if it can be proved, tbat I was made privy either to any former plot, or any new practice, I desire no favour, other wise, I hope so much in tbe goodness and mercy of her Ma jesty, as she will take some pity and corapassion upon rae, I raust confess I was slipping, but not fallen. I call God to witness she hath raised many that have slipped more, and therefore I cannot despair but that she can raise me, and as her goodness in that shall be exceeding great towards me, so I doubt not but my deserts towards her shall be such, as her » Cardinal Allen, vide p. 16, ante. 428 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1585, Majesty shall weU find, that I desire to be thankful, and that I strive by all means to make satisfaction for this my offence. And thus laying myself at the feet of her Majesty's raercy, and comraending ray cause to your favour, I cease further to trouble you. From the Tower, the 7th of May 1585, Yours most faithful and assuredly for ever, Arundell.* During his long career, though exposed to all the jealousies that attend a Eoyal favourite, Hatton had hitherto preserved an unsullied reputation. An event, however, occurred which afforded his enemies an op portunity of fixing a suspicion upon him; and, though the charge may be safely pronounced scandalous and untrue, it is nevertheless material for Hatton's justifi cation that all the facts of the case should be stated. On the 21st of June 1585, Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, who had been for a year a close pri soner in the Tower for high treason, was found dead in his apartment. An Inquest was held in the Tower on the day of his death before the Coroner and a Jury, who found that the Earl, intending to kill himself, had, five days before, caused a kind of pistol called a " dag," with bullets and gunpowder, to be brought into his cham ber by one James a Price a yeoman, and had hidden the dag in the mattress under the bolster of his bed; that, between the hours of twelve and one in the night of the 21st, he " did bolt the door of the aforesaid cham ber, and the inner part of his chamber towards himself," lest any one should prevent his effecting his design ; that the Earl then lay down in his bed, and, taking the dag, which was ready loaded with three bullets, in his hands, " put it to the left part of his breast, near unto ' Additional MSS. 16891, f. 148''. ~ ^T. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 429 the pap," and then discharged the contents " into his body and heart, and through his chine bone even into his right shoulder;" thereby "giving unto himself one mortal wound of the depth of twelve inches, and of the width of two inches, ofwhich he instantly died."" Cam den says that the Jury " found the dag, or pistol, with gunpowder in the chamber, and examined his man, who had bought the dag, and him which had sold it." Two days afterwards, many Peers and Privy Council lors'" met in the Star Chamber ; when Sir Thomas Brom ley, the Lord Chancellor, stated the cause of the Earl of Northumberland's imprisonment, and the manner of his death; " but, to satisfy the multitude, which are always prone to believe the worse," he desired the Queen's At torney and Solicitor- General to state plainly all the facts. After specifying the particulars of the offence for which the Earl was imprisoned, " the manner of his death was related out of the testimony of the Inquest, the Lieutenant of the Tower, certain of the warders, and Pantins; and therefore it was concluded that he had murdered himself with his own hands, out of fear lest his house should be quite overthrown and attaint ed." After saying that the Earl was, by many good men, much lamented, Camden cautiously adds, " What the suspicious fugitives muttered of one Bailiff that was one of Hatton's men, and was a little before appointed to be the Eari's keeper, I omit as being a matter alto- a Stow's Annals, pp. 706, 707, James Croft, Comptroller; Sir Chris- where a full copy of the Inquisition topher Hatton, Vice-Chamberlain ; is given. the Lord Chief Justice ofthe Queen's '' Namely, the Lord Chancellor, Bench, and Chief Baron of the Ex- Lord Burghley, the Earls of Shrews- chequer, and the Master of the Rolls bury, Derby, and Leicester, the Lords and others : the audience very gi-eat Howard of Effingham and Hunsdon ; of Knights, Esquires, and men of Sir Francis Knollys, Treasurer ; Sir other quality .--Somers' Tracts, i, 213, 430 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. gether unknown unto me, and I think it not meet to insert anything upon vain hearsays."^ The proceedings to which Camden refers are, how ever, more fuUy stated in a pamphlet'' printed in that year, and apparently by authority, the object of which publication may be inferred from the opening para graph : — " Malice, among other essential properties ap pertaining to her ugly nature, hath this one not inferior to the rest, and the worst incredulity wherewith she com monly possesseth the minds and affections of all those that are infected with her; so blinding the eyes and judgment of the best and clearest sighted, that they cannot see or perceive the bright beams of the truth, although the same be delivered with never so great purity, proof, cir cumstance, and probabUity." The author says, he was present in the Star Chamber when the statements respect ing the Earl of Northumberland's death were made, and took notes of the several matters declared by the Lord Chancellor, the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General, the Lord Chief Baron, and the Vice-Chamberlain. Great part of the pamphlet is occupied with proofs of North umberland's treasonable conduct ; and it was then said by the Solicitor-General, that, while the Earl was a prisoner in the Tower, he had, by corrupting his keeper, kept up => Annals, Book in. pp. 50, 61, tions of sundry persons touching the '' "A true and summary Report of manner of this most wicked and vio- the Declaration of some part of the lent Murder, committed upon him- Earl of Northumberland's Treasons, self with his own hand in the Tower delivered publickly in the Court at of London, the 28th day of June the Star Chamber by the Lord Chan- 1685. In sedibus C. Barker, Printer cellor and others of her Majesty's to the Queen of England her most most Honourable Privy Council and excellent Majesty." Reprinted in Council learned by her Majesty's Lord Somers' Tracts, ed. Scott, vol. Special Commandment; together i. p. 212; and in Howell's "State with the Examinations and Deposi- Trials," vol. i. p. llll et seq. .«T. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 431 a communication with Shelley, through his servant James Price, and had thus learnt, on Friday or Saturday before Trinity Sunday, (i. e. the 4th or Sth of June,) that Shel ley had in his confessions so deeply implicated him, that, " fearing the justice and severity of the laws, and also the ruin and overthrow of his house, he fell into desperation, and so to the destruction of himself:" that one Jacques Pantins, a groom of the Earl's chamber, had stated, that, on hearing of SheUey's confession, the Earl had declared he was undone, often with tears lamenting his condi tion, and wished for death. The Lord Chief Baron then described the particulars of the Eari's death, "and in what sort he had murdered himself." After mentioning the Coroner's inquest, he said, that, "upon the discovery of the inteUigence conveyed between the Earl and Shel ley, it was thought necessary, for the benefit of her Ma jesty's service, by such of her Majesty's most honourable Privy CouncU as were appointed Commissioners to ex amine the course of these treasons, that Jacques Pantins, attending upon the Earl, and the Eari's corrupt keepers, should be removed ; whereupon Thomas Bailiff, gentleman, sent to attend on the Earl of Northumberland upon the removal of Palmer and Jacques PantinS from about the said Earl, who, from the beginning of his last restraint, attended on him, for the reasons lastly before mentioned, was, by the Lieutenant of the Tower, on the Sunday, about two of the clock in the afternoon, being the 20th of June, shut up with the Earl as appointed, to remain with him, and serve him in the prison for a time, until Palmer, Pantins, and Price, then committed close pri soners, might be examined how the Earl came by such inteUigences as were discovered to have passed between 432 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585, the Earl and SheUey, and between the Earl and others. BaUiff served the Earl at his supper, brought him to his bed about nine of the clock; and after some services done by the Earl's commandment, departed from the Earl to an outer chamber, where he lay part of that night ; and being come into his chamber, the Earl rose out of his bed, and came to the chamber door and bolted the same unto him on the inner side, saying to Bailiff, he could not sleep unless his door were fast. And at about twelve of the clock at midnight. Bailiff being in a slum ber, heard a great noise, seeming unto him to be the falling of some door, or rather a piece of the house. The noise was so sudden and so great, that he started out of his bed, and crying out to the Earl with a loud voice, said, ' My Lord, know you what this is?' The Earl not answering. Bailiff cried and knocked still at the Earl's door, saying, ' My Lord, how do youi ' but finding that the Earl made no answer, continued his crying and call ing, until an old man that lay without spake to him, say ing, ' Gentlemen, shall I call the watch, seeing he will not speak?' ' Yea,' quoth BaUiff, 'for God's sake.' Then did the old man rise and called one of the watch, whom Bai liff entreated with all possible speed to call Master Lieu tenant unto him. In the mean time, Bailiff heard the Earl give a long and most grievous groan, and after that gave a second groan ; and then, the Lieutenant being come, called to the Earl, who, not answering. Bailiff cried to the Lieutenant to break open the Earl's cham ber door, bolted unto him on the inner side, which was done, and then they found the Earl dead in his bed and by his bed-side a dagge, wherewith he had killed himself." Sir Owen Hopton, the Lieutenant of the Tower, deposed upon oath, that on Sunday night, about ^T. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 433 a quarter before one o'clock, he was called up by the watch to come to the Eari of Northumberland, who had been called to by Mr, Bailiff, his keeper, and would not speak (as the watch told him) ; whereupon he went to the Earl's lodgings, opened the outer doors till he came to the chamber where Mr. Bailiff lay, which was next to the Earl's bedchamber; and when he entered the room. Bailiff said to him that he was wakened with a noise as if a door or some large thing had fallen, and that he had caUed to the Earl, but could obtain no answer. Hopton then went to the Earl's chamber; and, " finding the, same bolted fast on the other side within the Earl's lodging, so as he could not go into the Earl," he called to him, teUing him the Lieutenant was there, and prayed his Lordship to open the door. " But, receiving no answer, and finding the door fast bolted on the inner side of the Earl's chamber with a strong iron bolt, so as they could not enter into the same out of the lodging where the said Bailiff lay with out breaking up the chamber door, caused the warders, who were with this examinate, to thrust in their hal berds, and to wrest the door thereby as much as they could, and withal to run at the door with their feet, and with violence to thrust it open, which they did accordingly. And when this examinate came into the chamber, in tuming up the sheets, he perceived them to be blooded; and then, searching further, found the wound, which was very near the pap, not thinking at the first sight but that it had been done with a knife. This examinate went thereupon presently to write to the Court, and took the warders into the outer cham ber, and left them there until he returned, bolting the door of the Eari's bedchamber on the outside. And, F F 434 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1685, as soon as this examinate returned from writing of his letter to the Court, he searched about the chamber, and found a dagge on the floor, about three feet from the bed, near unto a table that had a green cloth on it, which did somewhat shadow the dagge ; and, after turn ing down the bed-clothes, found a box, in the which the powder and peUets were, on the bed under the coverlet. And saith, that the chamber where the Earl lay hath no other door but that one door which was broken open as aforesaid, save one door that went into a privy, which hath no manner of passage out of it ; and that the Earl's lodging chamber and the entering into the privy are both walled round about with a stone wall and a brick wall; and that there is no door or passage out or from the said Earl's bedchamber or privy but that only door, which was broken open by the appoint ment of this examinate."" Sir Owen Hopton then mentioned the names of the four warders, who, with his own servant, were present with him " at the breaking up of the Earl's chamber door," all of whom were likewise examined, and who con firmed Sir Owen's statements in every point. With re spect to there being but " one door in the Earl's chamber, saving the door of the privy, which, together with the chamber, was strongly walled about with stone and brick, the Lord Chief Baron confirmed the same, having viewed the chamber himself where the Earl lodged, and was found dead." At the Coroner's Inquest, James Pantins, the Earl's groom, confessed that James Price had given the dag or pistol to the Earl in his, (Pantins') presence, on which he suspected that his Lordship " meant * Page, 221, ;ET. 45,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 435 mischief to himself, and did all he could to persuade the Earl to send away the dag, but could not pre vail;" but that he was commanded to hide it, where upon he hanged it on a nail within the chimney in the Earl's bedchamber ; where the Earl thinking the same not to be sufficiently safe in that place, it was by the Earl's appointment taken from thence and put into a slit in the side of a mattress, that lay under the Earl's bed, near to the bed's head ; and that the same Sunday morning that the J^axl murdered himself at night, he saw the dag lying under the Earl's bed head. The dag was bought not many days before of one Adrian Mulan, a dag-maker, dweUing in East Smithfield, as by the said Mulan was testified, viva voce, upon his oath, in the open Court, at the time of the public declaration made of these matters in the Star Chamber." It was declared by the Lord Hunsdon and the Lord Chief Baron, " that the dag wherewith the Earl mur dered himself was charged with three bullets, and so of necessity with more than an ordinary charge of powder, to force that weight of buUets to work their effect. The Earl, lying upon his back on the left side of his bed, took the dag charged in his left hand, (by all likelihood,) laid the mouth of the dag upon his left pap, (having first put aside his waistcoat,) and his shirt being only between the dag and his body, which was burned away the breadth of a large hand, discharg ed the same, wherewith was made a large wound in his said pap, his heart pierced and torn in divers lobes or pieces, three of his ribs broken, the chine bone of his back cut almost in sunder, and under the point of the shoulder-blade, on the right side within the skin, the three buUets were found by the Lord Hunsdon, which he 436 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. caused the Surgeon in his presence to cut out, laying all three close together within the breadth and compass of an inch or thereabout. The bullets were shewed by his Lordship at the time of the publication made in the Court of the Star Chamber." The Lord Chief Baron then noticed the reports that were spread abroad, tbat the Earl had grown sickly and become weary of his life, from the small and unhealthy apartments in which he was confined, which he refuted by stating their size, having himself measured them ; adding, that during the day the Earl had the range of five large chambers, and two long entries. When the Chief Baron had concluded his address, Sir Christopher Hatton, who, " as it seemed, had been specially employed by her Majesty, among others of her Privy Council, in the looking into and examining of the treasons aforesaid, as well in the person of the Earl as of others, and was at the time of the Earl's com mitment from his house in St. Martin's to the Tower of London, sent unto him from her Majesty, to put the Earl in mind of her Majesty's manifold graces and favours in former times conferred upon him, proceeding from the spring of her Majesty's princely and bountiful nature, and not of his deservings, to advise him to deliver the truth of the matters so clearly appearing against him, either by his letters privately to her Majesty, or by speech to Master Vice-Chamberlain, who signified also unto him that if he would determine to take that course, he should not only not be committed to the Tower but should find grace and favour at her Majesty's hands, in the mitigation of such punishment as the law might lay upon him. And here Master Vice-Chamberlain repeated at length the effect of her Majesty's message, at that time sent to the Eari, beginning first with the remem- MT. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 437 brance of his practice, undertaken for the conveying away of the Scottish Queen, about the time of the last Eebellion, (as hath been declared in the beginning of this tract,) and that he confessing the offence, being capital, her Majesty nevertheless was pleased to alter the course of his trial by the justice of her laws, and suffer ed the same to receive a slight and easy punishment by way of mulct or fine of five thousand marks, whereof before this his imprisonment (as it is credibly reported) there was not one penny paid, or his land touched with any extent for the payment thereof; which offence was by her Majesty not only graciously forgiven, but also most christianly forgotten ; receiving him not long after to the place of honour that his ancestors had enjoyed for many years before him, and gave him such entrance into her princely favour and good opinion, that no man of his quality received greater countenance and comfort at her Majest/s hands than he; insomuch that in all exer cises of recreation used by her Majesty, the Earl was always called to be one; and whensoever her Majesty showed herself abroad in public, she gave to him the honour of the best and highest services about her pefson, more often than to all the noblemen of her Court."* The evidence that the Earl of Northumberland com mitted suicide is so satisfactory, that it seems difficult for even religious bigotry or sectarian malice to have raised a doubt on the subject. Independently of the design to destroy himself, and the delivery of the dag, as stated by his servant Pantins, the testimony of Sir Owen Hopton, whose integrity has never been ques tioned, corroborated by that of five other persons, that the door of the Earl's chamber was so strongly fast ened on the inside as to require considerable force to => Somers' Tracts, I, 223, 438 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585. break it open, that there were no other means of access to it, and that he himself first discovered the Earl's body pierced with bullets, is not to be controverted by such remarks as that " the change of his keeper, the great difficulty of conveying fire-arms to a prisoner in the Tower, and even the solicitude of the Court to convict him of suicide, served to confirm in the minds of many, a suspicion that his enemies, unable to bring home the charge of treason, had removed him by assas sination,"" But Dr. Lingard's account of Northumber land's death is not written with the impartiality which distinguishes the earlier part of his valuable work. He does not State the cause of the removal of the Earl's ser vants or keeper, nor that it was done by a committee of the Privy Council ; no notice is taken of the evidence of Sir Owen Hopton and the warders ; the delivery of the pistol by Price is doubted; and he refers to a letter from Sir Walter Ealeigh to Sir Eobert Cecil, in 1601, to show that "it was assumed as a fact known to them both, that the Earl was murdered by the contrivance of Hatton." In that letter, which was written by Ea leigh, to advise Cecil not to relent toward the " tyrant " Essex, from any fear of consequences to himself, he says: — "For after-revenges, fear them not; for your own father, that was esteemed to be the contriver of Norfolk's ruin, yet his son followeth your father's son, aild loveth him. Humours of men succeed not, but grow by occasions and accidents of time and power. Somerset made no revenge on the Duke of Northumber land's heirs. Northumberland that now is thinks not of Ilatton's issue. KeUoway lives that murdered the brother of Horsey, and Horsey let him go by all his life- " Lingard, History of England, vol, viii. p. 237, Murdin's State Papers, p, 811, MT. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 439 time." Here Ealeigh (who was, it may be remarked, Hatton's rival, if not enemy) first enumerates the persons whose ruin, not murder, had been caused by political enmities; and there is no more reason to believe that Ealeigh meant it to be inferred that Hatton had assassinated Northumberland, than that he meant to say that Burghley had murdered Norfolk, or that Dudley had kiUed the Protector Somerset; and when Ealeigh did really mean to allude to "murder," he expressly said so in a separate sentence. Bishop Kennett relates two traditions in the Percy family, respecting the Earl of Northumberland, which, however valueless, show at least that they did not believe in the assassination of their ancestor. It should be remarked, that the Earl of Essex, who had married this Eari's granddaughter, being a prisoner in the Tower on account of the Eye House Plot, he com mitted suicide in the same chamber in which Northum berland kiUed himself. " I have heard a tradition," says Bishop Kennett " from some of the family, that the dag or pistol was sent him inclosed in a cold pie, carried to his table without suspicion, I have heard Dr. Mapletoft, who traveUed with the last Earl of Northumberland, say, that it helped much to confirm him in a belief of the Earl of Essex murdering himself in the Tower, because he had seen him pointing at the picture of this Henry Earl of Northumberland, and telling the then heir of the family, ' You owe more to that brave man than to any one of your ancestors ; he had the courage to save your estate for you,"* Meaning that, by having taken away his own life, he had saved his lands from forfeiture. It has been pertinently observed," that Price, who, ac- '' Lansdowne MSS, 982, f. 75''. 440 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1585, cording to Pantins, brought the dag to the Earl, was " not produced, though in custody." It certainly is not expressly stated that Price was examined ; but the printed accounts of the transaction do not give the names of aU the witnesses at the Coroner's Inquest, and it is impossi ble to beUeve that BaUiff was not one of the principal, though his name, like that of Price, is not mentioned. The insinuation as to the presumed non-examination of Price is, that the dag, instead of having been brought to the Earl, belonged in fact to his assassin, which involves the whole question of the manner of the Earl's death. The suspicious circumstance of the removal of the Earl's keeper and servants is explained by their having conveyed communications to his confederates ; and it was the act of the Privy CounciUors, who had been appointed Commissioners to investigate the subject. Hatton was no doubt a member of that commission, and may probably have recommended one ofhis own retainers to supply their place, from being weU acquainted with his trustworthiness. That very night, however, the prisoner is found dead in his bed of a gun-shot wound ; and if it were inflicted by any other hand than his own, suspicion would of course fix itself very strongly upon Bailiff, as the person nearest to him, and in whose custody he was; and if he were thought guilty, it is not surprising that Hatton should have been suspected, by his enemies, of having prompted the deed. To these remarks it will only be added, that there is not the slightest evidence of any enmity or unkindness having ever been between the Earl of Northumberland and Hatton ; that, as is well remarked in the pamphlet, " if men consider the inconvenience happened thereby, as ¦¦ Lingard, .ET, 45,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 441 well in matter of State as commodity to the Queen's Majesty lost by the prevention of his trial, who can in reason conjecture the Earl to have been murdered of policy or set purpose, as the evU affected seem to con ceive ? If the Earl had Uved to have received the cen sure of the law for his offences, all lewd and frivolous objections had then been answered, and all his goods, chattels, and lands by his attainder had come unto her Majesty, and the honour and State and prosperity been utterly overthrown ;" that, if it were desired to assassi nate a prisoner, poison or the dagger were far preferable instruments to fire-arms ; and that, though Hatton and other courtiers might, and probably would, Jiave gained by the forfeiture of the Earl's lands had he been exe cuted, they derived no advantage whatever from an act which secured his estates to his famUy," The Letter Book contains few letters written in 1586, and scarcely any of them are of much interest. No fact relating to Hatton has been found before August, except that in February, when the Earl of Leicester had excited the Queen's anger by his proceedings in the Low Countries, Hatton, knowing her weak point, advised him " to bestow some two or three hundred crowns in some rare thing for a token to her Majesty.'"" MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, Your letter being so full freighted with matters of great moment, makes me fear what to write, in respect of my inabi- * It is much to be regretted that great weight. As, however, his Lord- Lord Campbell did not, as might ship has merely raentioned facts, in reasonably be expected of the bio- a single sentence, without referring grapher of a Lord Chancellor charged to any authority whatever, it may be with so ford a crime as assassination, doubted if he even saw the Inquisi- investigate all the evidence on this tion in Stow, or the pamphlet in So- subject; for, had it been sifted byhis mers and Howell, great legal acumen and practical ex perience, the conclusion to which he * The Hardwicke State Papers, i, might have arrived would have had 299, 442 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586. lity to answer it to your good contentment. Your news of the blustering winds abroad, threatening (as you fearfully suspect) some approaching inward storms at bome, will, I hope, de ceive you, and show you to be no great divine. The Pagan philosophers that would take upon thera to prognosticate over boldly, would yet plainly affirra for truth, that nulla est astro- rum necessitas. I ara no philosopher, but your poor friend, and I may say to you, I hope, without offence, man's conjec tures of future things, are but dreams and mere imaginations, no divinations when reason hath well wakened his spirits. Our long blessings of peace are the wonderful graces of God, collated upon us, his unworthy people, for the wbich I beseech him to make us thankful. Yet ara 1 afraid, tbat they do many times fare with us, as our sweet things do with man's body; which corrupt nature with their great dulcetness, and filleth the blood with undigested waterisbness, making it apt to boil and putrefy : such peril carrieth security witb it, and so sweet hath our peace been, that I fear it will bring somewhat witb it, tbat will be sour and loathsome in the end. Dulce things are nourishing, but yet (as the physician saith) accom panied with loathing, honey is sweet and comfortable, but yet it inflameth swiftly, engendereth choler : our long happy peace, through her Majesty's provident care and goodness hath been a restorative, or rather a preservative as you term it, of tbe Kingdora and poor people ; but I doubt greatly tbat (as dulce things carry with thera their dregs, which we take great de light to taste of notwithstanding, whereof oppilations do rise in tbe stomach, through the operation of the gross substance, wherein the savouriness of sweetness is grounded,) so will the over sweet food of our long tranquillity so comfort and restore the liver and spleen of our estate and country, (members naturally thirsting after sweetness,) that the pure fine blood of it (which is religion and justice) will be corrupted, and the lungs, lights, and the very heart itself, shortly putrefied, if (like good physicians) we look not to the nocuments in time, and first remove their causes, whereby to avoid the perilous effects, which otherwise raust needs ensue ; whicb I pray God .ET. 45.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 443 her Majesty may do happily and timely, but ever safely for the preservation of her royal person, whose health is our earthly life, and whose death will be the destruction and deso lation of us all, as in the which we shall most raiserably stifle and perish. God direct it from us in his clemency and goodness, to whose gracious favour I coramit you. From the Court at Greenwich, the 7th of July 1586. Your poor friend fastly faithful, Samuel Cox.* The foUowing letter shows that Hatton, being seri ously iU, had retired to Holdenby towards the end of August. The "horrible practices" to which he alludes, was the weU-known conspiracy of Babington to assassinate the Queen ; SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO LORD BURGHLEY. Assuredly, my good Lord, I find myself much bound to you for your oft and raost honourable letters. I find thereby the time is deferred, and I fear the cause in this course will receive some prejudice. Is it not possible that, with the eye of her Majesty's wisdom, these most horrible and dangerous practices may be thoroughly looked into ? Surely, Sir, if she did, there would be no days given to the prevention of them. God hath mightily defended us. He is aU and EveR one. I beseech Him that these our negUgences may not tempt Hira. I ara come sick to my poor house, fuU of a fever, with stitches, spitting of blood, and other bad accidents. I raust commit myseU" to God and the physician for awhUe ; and though your access hither be further off than before, yet. Sir, by reason of ray sickness I cannot return ; whereof (because such it seemed was her pleasure,) I most hurably beseech you to excuse rae, for in truth I ara very evil. God bless your good Lordship for E\eR. Haste, frora ray poor house at Hol denby, the 2nd of September 1586. Your good Lordship's most bound poor friend, Chr. Hatton,'' » Additional MSS. 15896, f. 137. " Autograph in the State Paper Offico. 444 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1586. Sir Christopher Hatton was, it appears, also one of the Privy Councillors by whom Mary's secretaries, Nau and Curie, were examined ; for on the 4th of September, Burghley wrote to him, " that they would yield some what to confirm their mistress, if they were persuaded that themselves might escape, and the blow fall upon their mistress,, betwixt her head and shoulders."" IU as Hatton describes himself to have been on the 2nd of September, he was able to return to London, and to sit as one of the Commissioners on the trial of the conspirators, Babington, Chidoke, Titchbourne, Savage, Abington, Ballard, Gage, Donn, and others, for high- treason, at Westminster, on the 13th, 14th, and 15th of that month. It is deserving of attention, as accounting in some degree for his subsequent elevation to the Wool sack, that Hatton took as prominent a part in those pro ceedings as any of the Judges.** When Savage had pleaded " guilty" to two and " not guilty" to one of the charges against him, and was told by Chief Justice Anderson and Chief Baron Manwood, that he must answer directly "guilty" or "not guilty," Hatton added, " To say that thou art guilty to that, and not to this, is no plea; for thou must either confess it generally, or deny it generally; wherefore delay not the time, but say either guilty or not ; and if thou say guilty, then shalt thou hear further, if not guilty, her Majesty's learned counsel is ready to give evidence against thee." On the Attorney-General's saying " Now I hope is Savage's indictment sufficiently and fully proved," Hatton observed, " Savage, I must ask thee one ques- ' Lingard's History of England ed., "although the two Chief Justices 1838, vol. VIIL, p. 219, who refers and Chief Baron were present. Hat- to this letter in Leigh's collection. ton took the lead in the conduct of '' Lord Campbell considers, that, the trial," p. 142. .et, 46,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 445 tion: Was not all this willingly and voluntarily con fessed by thyself, without menacing, without torture, or without offer of any torture?" to which he simply replied "Yes."* When it was proposed to adjourn the Court, Hatton sigmfied its consent, and stated what would be the course of proceeding on the next day. On the 14th, BaUard was caUed upon to plead, and saying " I answer as my case is," he, like Savage on the preceding day, was told by the Chief Justice either to deny the indictment generally, or to con fess it generaUy; and Hatton added, "Ballard, under thine own hand are all things confessed ; therefore now it is much vanity to stand vaingloriously in deny ing it." — " Then, Sir, " said Ballard " I confess I am guilty." The Vice-Chamberlain's indignation against the prisoners was sometimes displayed in a manner which would not now be considered decorous in a Judge, though such conduct was then by no means uncommon. Donn confessing, that, when he was made privy to those treasons, " he always prayed unto God that that might be done which was to his honour and glory;" Hatton ob served, " Then it was thus, that they said ' The Queen should be killed,' and thou saidst ' God's will be done !' ; " and Donn answering, " Yes, Sir," Hatton exclaimed, " 0 wretch! wretch! thy conscience and own confession show that thou art guUty." — " Well, Sir, then I confess I am guilty." There was much of natural pity in Hatton's re mark on Babington's statement, that he was partly seduced by BaUard's persuasions. "0 Ballard, Bal lard, what hast thou done? A sort of brave youths, otherwise endued with good gifts, by thy inducement * Lord Campbell says, " the poor tive and the eagerness of the reply wretch, in the vain hope of mercy, are known only to his Lordship, eagerly replied ' Yes ;' but the mo- 446 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586, hast thou brought to their utter destruction and confu sion." Ballard finished his reply to Babington's charge with the words " Howbeit, say what you will; I will say no more :" on which Hatton said "Nay, Ballard, you must say more, and shall say more, for you must not commit high treasons, and then huddle them up. But is this thy Religio Catholica? nay rather it is Diabolical" Barnwell declared that what he had done was only for conscience sake, and that he never intended any violence to her Majesty's person ; on hearing which Hatton broke out with, " 0 Barnwell, BarnweU, didst thou not come to Eichmond, and, when her Majesty walked abroad, didst not thou there view her and all her company, what wea pons they had, how she walked alone ? and didst traverse the ground, and thereupon coming back to London, didst make relation to Babington how it was a most easy mat ter to kill her Majesty, and what thou hadst seen and done at the Court : Yes, I know thou didst so. How canst thou then say that thou never didst intend to lay violent hands on her Majesty? Nay, I can assure thee moreover, and it is most true which I say, that her Majesty did know that thou didst come to that end, and she did see and mark thee how thou didst view her and her company; but had it been known to some there as weU as unto her, thou had never brought news to Babing ton. Such is the magnanimity of our Sovereign, which God grant be not over much in not fearing such traitors as thou." * BarnweU replied. — " What I did was only for my conscience sake, and not for any malice or hatred to * Upon this speech Lord Camp- however, probable that most of tlie bell, with some justice, remarks, that facts had been stated by Barnwell in Hatton, "taking all this for con- his previous examination before the tcssed, he then, without being sworn, Privy Council. gives some evidence himself." Itis, et. 46.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 447 her Majesty's person," upon which Hatton said, " Theu wouldst thou have killed the Queen for conscience. Fie on such a deviUsh conscience!"" At the conclusion of the proceedings "then began Sir Christopher Hatton, and made an exceUent good speech in opening and setting forth their treasons, and how they all proceeded from the wicked priests, the ministers of the Pope, And first he showed how these wicked and devilish youths had conspired to murder the Queen's most excellent Majesty; secondly, to bring in Foreign invasion ; thirdly, to deliver the Queen of Scots and make her Queen; fourthly,'' to sack the City of London ; fifthly, to rob and destroy all the wealthy sub jects of this Eealm ; sixthly, to kill divers of the Privy Council, as the Earl of Leicester, the Lord Treasurer, Mr. Secretary, Sir Ealph Sadler, Sir Amias Paulet; seventhly, to set fire on all the Queen's ships ; eighthly, to cloy all the great ordnance ; ninthly, and lastly, to subvert religion and the whole state of government. The inventors and beginners whereof were these devil ish priests and seminaries, against whom he doubted the Parliament had not yet sufficiently provided, who now a days do not go about to seduce the ancient and discreet men, for they (as the priests say) be too cold ; but they assail with their persuasions the younger sort, and of those the most ripe wits, whose high hearts and ambitious minds do carry them headlong to all wicked ness. In the end he concluded with remorse for the youth of some of these unhappy men, and with detestation of the facts of Ballard; and also shewed forth a notable proof of the falsehood of these lying Papists, which was a book printed at Eome, and made by the Papists, wherein • Page 134. bell observes, " unsupported by any •^ These charges were. Lord Camp- evidence." 448 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586. they affirm, that the English Catholics, which suffer for religion, be lapped in bear-skins, and baited to death with dogs, — a most monstrous lie and manifest falsehood. "Then spake my Lord Anderson to the like effect, almost in every point, in abhorring the abomination of the Jesuits and Seminaries; and in the end concluded with an exhortation for the health of their souls; and last of all pronounced the terrible sentence of their con demnation."* On the trial of Abington, Tilney, Jones, and others, on the 15th of September, Sir Christopher Hatton again took a prominent and less creditable part. When Abington asked to be allowed a pair of writing-tables, to set down what was alleged against him, and was informed by the Clerk of the Crown that "it was never the course here," Hatton said, " When you hear anything you are desirous to answer, you shall speak an answer at full, which is better than a pair of tables." In the course of the proceedings, the Attorney-General, address ing Hatton, said, " Mr. Vice-Chamberlain, you desired Abington to set down the truth of these things; there upon he set down a great deal in writing, and yesterday he tore it in a hundred pieces, andhere Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower hath given me the pieces, and here they be." On which Sir Christopher Hatton observed, " Abington, you be very obstinate, and seem indurate in these treasons." The prisoner then answered the charges at some length; and concluded by saying that Babington's accusation was of no weight, for, having committed and confessed treason in the highest degree, "there was no hope for him but to accuse." — " For Babington's hope thereof," said Hatton, " I am persuaded he hath no hope at all; and my Lords here can assure there is no hope at all of his life : but " Hargrave's State Trials, folio I., pp. 127-134. MT. 46.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 449 he confessed what he knew for discharge of his con science, and what he did, he did it willingly and volun tarily ; for had not Babington voluntarily named Abing ton, who could have named Abington ? and had he not also willingly accused Tilney, who could have accused Tilney?" Hatton showed some kindness to one of the conspirators called Charnock, for when he entreated him to induce the Queen to pardon him, he said, " Charnock, thy offence is too high for me to be an obtainer of thy pardon, but I am sorry for thee, if thou hadst applied thyself the best way, thou mightest have done thy Coun try good service." The prisoner said, " I beseech you then that six angels, which such a one hath of mine, may be delivered unto my brother to pay my debts." " How much" asked Hatton " is thy debts ? " and being told that the six angels would discharge it, Hatton repUed, " then I promise thee it shall be paid,"" The following letter from Babington was probably addressed to' one of the conspirators, two of whom were caUed Eobert, namely, BarnweU and Gage : — ANTHONY BABINGTON TO E.0BYN, Non soUcitce possunt cura mutare rati stamina fusi. I am ready to endure what shall be inflicted : Et facere et pati magna, Romanum. What ray courses have been towards Mr. Secretary you can witness ; what my . love towards you, yourself wiU confess. Their proceedings at ray lodging have been strange. Look to your own part, lest of these my infor tunes you bear the blarae. I ara the sarae I pretended. I pray God you have been and ever reraain so towards me. Est exilium inter malos vivere, Farewel^ my sweet Robyn, if (as I take thee,) true to me ; if not, adieu, omnium bipedum inir quissimus. Return thine answer for ray satisfaction, and ray » Howell's State Trials, vol. i. pp. 1127—1162. G U 450 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586. diamond, and what else you wUt. The furnace is made, wherein thy faith must now be tried. FareweU tiU we meet, which God knows when. Yours, you know how far, Anthony Babington.* The disclosures of the conspirators caused a Commis sion to be issued on the Gth of October for the trial of the Queen of Scots. Hatton was appointed one of the Commissioners, and they left London for Fotheringay before the Sth, and assembled there on the llth of that month. It appears, that when not engaged in the pro ceedings, Hatton remained at Apthorpe, the seat of Sir Walter Mildmay, another of the Commissionei's, which was about five miles from Fotheringay ; and that on the 13th, Mr, Conway arrived from the Queen, with some special communication which had a " little daunted" him, and who brought back the following reply : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO THE QUEEN. May it please your sacred Majesty, Your princely goodness towards me is so infinite, as in ray poor wit I ara not able to coraprehend the least part thereof. I raust therefore fail in duty of thankfulness as your Mutton, and lay all upon God, with ray hurable prayers to requite you in Heaven and Earth in the raost sincere and devout raanner, that, through God's grace, I raay possibly devise. Your Majesty's good servant, Mr. Conway, hath taken a wonderful sore journey. He hath from your Majesty a little daunted me. I raost humbly crave your Majesty's pardon. God and your Majesty * Additional MSS, 15891, f. 136''. .ET. 46.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 451 be praised I have recovered ray perfect health ; and if now for my ease or pleasure 1 should be found negligent in your service, I were rauch unworthy of that life which many a time your Royal Majesty hath given me, 1 raight likewise sustain sorae obloquy, whereof I have heard somewhat ; but ray will and wit, and whatever is in rae, shall be found assuredly yours, whether I be sick or whole, or what .Eveii becorae of rae deem they what pleaseth them. God in Heaven bless your Ma jesty, and grant rae no longer life than that ray faith and love may E-veR be found inviolable and spotless to so royal and peerless a Princess. At Apthorpe, this 13th of October 1586. Your Royal Majesty's most bounden poor slave, Chr. Hatton.* Mary, having refused to acknowledge the competency of the tribunal, or to appear before it, Hatton represented to her on the 13th, that she "was accused (but not con demned,) to have conspired the destruction of our Lady and Queen anointed. You say you are a Queen. Be it so. But in such a crime the Eoyal dignity is not ex empted from answering, neither by the Civil nor Canon law, nor by the law of nations nor of nature. For if such kind of offences might be committed without punishment, all justice would stagger, yea, fall to the ground. If you be innocent, you wrong your reputation in avoiding trial. You protest yourself to be innocent, but Queen Elizabeth thinketh otherwise, and that neither without grief and sorrow for the same. To examine, therefore, your inno cency, she hath appointed for Commissioners most ho nourable, prudent, and upright men, who are ready to hear you according to equity with favour, and will re joice with all their hearts if you shall clear yourself of this crime. Believe me, the Queen herself will be much " Autograph in the State Paper Office. G G 2 - 452 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586. affected with joy, who afflrmed unto me, at my coming from her, that never anything befel her more grievous than that you were charged with such a crime. Where fore lay aside the bootless privUege of Eoyal dignity, which now can be of no use unto you, appear in judg ment, and show your innocency, lest, by avoiding trial, you draw upon yourself suspicion, and lay upon your reputation an eternal blot and aspersion." " The next day, Mary sent for some of the Commission ers, and said she consented to appear, as " she was very desirous to purge herself of the crime objected against her, being persuaded by Hatton's reasons, which she had weighed with advisement." *• The trial accordingly took place on the 15th; and at its conclusion Mary, being asked if she wished to say any more, replied that " she required that she might be heard in a full Parliament, or that she might in person speak with the Queen and with the Council ; " and then, " rising up with great con fidence of countenance, she had some conference with the Lord Treasurer, Hatton, Walsingham, and the Earl of Warwick, by themselves apart."" The Commissioners re-assembled at Westminster on the 25th of October, and pronounced their iniquitous sentence. To the new Parliament, which met on the 1 5th of Oc tober, but was adjourned to the 29th, Hatton was again returned for Northamptonshire ; and he resumed his po sition as Leader of the House of Commons. On the Sth of November he declared, that the principal cause of summoning Parliament arose out of the late conspiracy against her Majesty, at the instigation of the Queen of Scots, tending to the ruin of the true religion established, » Camden's Annals, b. iii. p. 37. " Ibid. p. 88. " Ihid. p. 96. MT. 46.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 453 the invasion of the Eealm, rebellion and civil wars : " Yea, and withal, which his heart quaked and trembled to utter and think on, the death and destruction of the Queen's most sacred person, to the utter desolation and conquest of this most noble realm of England ! " After dilating, at sonie length, on the execrable treacheries and conspiracies of the Scottish Queen, he said, that " speedy consultation must be had by this House for the cutting of her off by course of justice ; " for that other wise the Queen's person would not be safe; and con cluded his speech with these words, "Ne pereat Israel, pereat Absolon."" Both Houses agreed to present a pe tition to the Queen, entreating her to order the execution of the Queen of Scots; and the following letter, which was marked to be sent " with all possible speed," relates to the presentation of that petition, which took place on the 12th of November. Davison had been made Secre tary of State, and sworn of the Privy Council on the 30th of September : — lord burghley and sir CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO MR. SECRETARY DAVISON. Mr. Secretary, Whereas I the Treasurer perceive by the report of me the Vice-Charaberlain, that her Majesty could be content that the coraing of the Lords of Parliament and the Cominons should be rather to-raorrow than on Saturday. In very truth so would we both have it ; but the dispersing of both Houses is such, as the Lords have prorogued their Ses sions until Monday or Tuesday, and therefore not possible to give the Lords appointed warning to corae afore Saturday, and in like sort it wiU be to-raorrow nine o'clock before the Commons asserable ; wherefore we both pray this night you to make our excuse herein to her Majesty, and in the raorning * Parhamentary History, vol, i. p, 836, 454 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1586, also there wUl be two or three Lords with her Majesty, to re quire audience of her Majesty ; and thus being late in the evenmg, this Thursday, the 10th of Noveraber 1586, we bid you farewell. Your assured loving friend, W. Burghley. C. Hatton." On the 14th of November, after the Speaker had re ported the Queen's answer to the petition, Hatton rose, and having first affirmed that the Speaker's report was true, he added, that the Queen had commanded him that morning to signify to the House, " that her High ness, moved with some commiseration for the Scottish Queen, in respect of her former dignity and great for tunes in her younger years, her nearness of kindred to her Majesty, and also of her sex, could be well pleased to forbear taking of her blood, if by any other means, to be devised by the Great Council of this Eealm, the safety of her Majesty's person and government might be preserved without danger of ruin and destruction. But herein she left them, nevertheless, to their own free liberty and dis positions of proceeding otherwise at their choice; for as her Majesty would willingly hearken to the reasons of any particular Member of this House, so, he added, they might exhibit their thoughts in that case, either to any of the Privy Council, being of that House, or to the Speaker, to be by him delivered to her Majesty." He then reminded the House, that at the commencement of the Session the Queen had intimated her pleasure that no laws should be made in this Session ; and moved the ad journment of the House to the 18th of November, during which interval the Queen might, he said, send some other answer to their petition, which she had not yet read. " Original in the State Paper Office. >ET. 46.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 455 On that day the House again met, and, after many speeches, came to the resolution, " That no other way, device, or means whatsoever could or can possibly be found or imagined, that such safety can in any wise be had, so long as the said Queen of Scots doth or shaU Uve." " The French Ambassador was suspected of having tampered with William Stafford, the son of one of the Ladies of the Queen's bedchamber, to take away her life, through Du Trapp, his secretary; "but Stafford as detesting the fact refused to do it, yet commanded one Moody, a notable hackster, a man forward of his hands, as one who, for money, would, without doubt, despatch the matter resolutely :" '' — TO lord burghley. May it please your good Lordship, This evening we have had Moody before us, with whora notwithstanding we have dealt very roundly, yet can we draw nothing of sub stance frora hira. We have, therefore, thought it convenient to send to Mr. Randolph for his prisoner to be brought hither to-morrow, very early in the moming, to the end, that if we find this man to persist in his denial, he may be confronted with hira as one that hath opened raatter enough to touch them both by his own confession. We have likewise thought it fit to send very early in the morning for the keeper of Newgate, and one Romane his servant, with two other prison ers named by Stafford to have been by at his access to Moody, to exainine thera, touching the point of Du Trapp's resort unto him, wherein, as in the rest of our proceeding, we will use that care of secrecy which both the matter requireth, and her Majesty expecteth, — and in the meantirae beseech your Lord ship to advertise us, whether you think this course of con fronting the parties fit or no for this first raeeting, that we ' Parliamentary History, i. 843. '' Camden's Annals, b. iii, p. 105, 456 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587. may proceed accordingly. And if in the raorning we find any further raatter worthy the advertiseraent, we will not fail, iraraediately to raake your Lordship partaker thereof, other wise, at our return to the Court in the evening, to bring the report ourselves how we find the sarae. And so we hurably and heartily take our leaves this Friday night, at ten of the clock the 6th of January 1586 [1587.] Your Lordship's at coramandraent, Chr. Hatton W. Davison.* SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON AND MR. SECRETARY DAVISON TO LORD BURGHLEY, May it please your good Lordship, According to that I the Secretary did signify to your Lordship this morning, Du Trapp was brought very closely to this place; where, after some little stay, we thought it good for the better clear ing of the truth to sound what he could say to the matters ob jected against him by Stafford ; who, after some vehement pro testations, that he would deal plainly, as before God, respecting raore his Honour than either Arabassador, or any other whatso ever, he offered to set down as much as be could say with his own hand, wbich we thought not amiss to yield unto, till we had prepared some other raatter to offer unto hira by way of exa raination; whereof at the return of me, the Secretary, to the Court this evening, your Lordship shall receive the particu larities. Since, we have again called Moody before us, and spent some tirae and labour with him, who standing resolute in his denial at his first coraing, doth now begin to relent ; and having confessed the access of Du Trapp unto hira, we no thing doubt his coraing on with the rest. We find already that Stafford's discoveries are no fables ; albeit Moody seeras resolved to lay the original and ground of this practice upon Stafford, protesting his own fault to be chiefly in concealraent thereof; which, as he saith, he did for the respect of his bro ther being his master, and the rest of that honourable House " Original in the State Paper Office. .ET, 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 457 of which Stafford is descended : he hath now likewise offered to discourse the whole cause in writing, wherein he is presently occupied. What it will fall out to be, your Lordship shall understand this evening. In the meantime it may please your Lordship to acquaint her Majesty with our proceeding thus far, to the end we may have her Highness' most gracious di rections for our dealing in this unhappy action. And so we humbly take our leaves. At Ely-place, this 7th of January 1586 [1587], Your Lordship's at commandment, Chr. Hatton. W. Davison.* Parliament met on the 15th of February; and on the 22nd Sir Christopher Hatton, by the Queen's command, acquainted the House of Commons with the threatened invasion by Spain. In a long speech he said, that the dangers the Nation then stood in arose from ancient ma Uce against the Queen, and traced them to their root, the CouncU of Trent, " which agreed to extirpate the Chris tian religion, termed by them heresy, to which divers Princes had assented, and solemnly bound themselves." He divided his speech into five heads; the Catholics abroad, the Pope, the King of Spain, the Princes of the League, the Papists at home and their Ministers. After adverting to the various proceedings against this Country by the Pope, and the intended invasion by the King of Spain, he observed, that, " if we serve God in sincerity of heart, we need not fear." He then stated the force of the Spanish Armada in ships and troops, and pointed out the expediency of assisting the Low Countries, " the head of whose miseries was the Spanish Inquisition, by pla card, using strange tortures not to be suffered." He repeated that " the great grief was religion," said, that all godly persons were bound to defend it; and * Murdin's State Papers, p. 578. 458 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587. concluded his address by commending the Queen's cou rage, " which was not less than that of the stoutest Kings in Europe."* On the 1st of March, several questions were submitted by Mr. Wentworth, respecting freedom of de bate,'' which the Speaker refused to put; but having showed them to Sir Thomas Heneage, Wentworth, and four other Members who had spoken on the subject, were committed to the Tower. On the 4th of March, it was moved that the Queen be petitioned to restore those Mem bers to the House, when Hatton said, " that if the gen tlemen were committed for matter within the compass of the privilege of the House, then there might be room for a petition; but if not, we shaU occasion her Majesty's further displeasure," He rather advised them to stay till they heard more, which could not be long; and further, as to the book and petition, her Majesty had, for divers good causes best known to herself, thought fit to suppress the same, without any further examination of them; and yet he conceived it very unfit for her Majesty to give any account of her actions." Parliament was dissolved on the 23rd of the same month. Between the years 1582 and 1587, Hatton received large grants of lands. In August 1582, he obtained the manor of Parva Weldon, in Northamptonshire, and va rious lands in other counties; in 1585, the keepership of the Forest of Eockingham and the Isle of Purbeck were granted to him; in 1586, the site of the monastery of Buer, in Oxfordshire, and several manors in other parts of England; in January 1587, the domain of Naseby, in * Parliamentary History, I, 847 — of England," says, "No historian 850. takes notice of the commitment of '' Dr. Parry, in his very accurate, Mr. Wentworth and his companions." useful, and learned, though little Svo. 1839, p. 230. known, " Parliaments and Councils " Ibid, pp. 862, 853. MT. 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 459 Northamptonshire ; and in July, being then Chancellor, the manor and rectory of West Drayton, and a tenement caUed Perry Place, in Middlesex, part of the lands for feited by Lord Paget, were bestowed upon him." It ap pears, moreover, that he had partaken largely of the estates forfeited by the rebels in Ireland, as, in Septem ber 1587, he held the castles and lands of Knockmoan, Cloyne, KiU, and Ballynecourty, alias Courts Town, with various baronies and othgr lands in the county of Waterford, which had belonged to Eichard Fitz Morice, the Fitz Thomases, or to the Earl of Desmond.'' On the 21st of May he was authorised to grant letters of deni- zenship to aliens, at his discretion, during the Queen's pleasure, though it is laid down in the strongest terms by Lord Coke and Blackstone, that the Crown cannot delegate that power to any Subject, "it being by the law itself so inseparably and individuaUy annexed to the Eoyal person;'"" and on the same day he received a war rant for the payment of the "fees, reward, and diet " ap pertaining to his office of ChanceUor.*^ On the 12th of September he was appointed Lieutenant, or as that officer is now caUed, Lord Lieutenant of Northamptonshire." In the proceedings respecting the dispatch of the warrant for the execution of the Queen of Scots, Hatton took a prominent part. On the 2nd of February 1587, when Davison began to feel uneasy about the Queen's in tentions, he went to the Vice-Chamberlain and communi cated all the circumstances, adding^ that he was deter mined not to proceed any further in the affair by himself, * Rot, Patent, 27, 28, 29, Eliz, the 4th of September, 1587, in the passim. State Paper Office. ¦: Seventh Report 25'', Calvin's Case, i- Book entitled « The Under- '^ Rot. Patent, 29 Eliz. taker's Lands in Munster," sent on ' Ibid, 460 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587. but would leave it to Hatton and others to determine what should be done. The Vice-Chamberlain then said, that, "as he was heartily glad the matter was brought thus far, so did he for his own part wish him hanged that would not join with Davison in the furtherance thereof, being a cause so much importing the common safety and tranquillity of her Majesty and the whole Eealm ;" and resolved to go with Davison to Lord Burgh ley, and confer with him on the subject. They accord ingly did so, when it was determined to assemble the Council the next day; and in the mean time Burghley undertook to draw up the letters necessary to accompany the warrant, which Davison delivered into his hands. The next morning Burghley sent for Hatton and Davi son, and showed them the draught of the letters; but Hatton finding them " very particular, and such as, in truth, the warrant could not bear," showed his disappro bation of them, and appeared to dislike their contents even more than he expressed. Burghley offered to write others in more general terms by the afternoon ; and they agreed to assemble the Privy Council immediately, which met within an hour in Burghley's chamber. His Lord ship then addressed them on the Scottish Queen's of fences, and the necessity of executing the sentence ; said that in signing the warrant, the Queen had done aU that either reason or the law required of her ; stated what had taken place between Her Majesty and Davison, but that Davison had refused to act alone; that as they were all equaUy interested, he thought they should make it a ge neral and common cause ; and that the warrant should be despatched without any further reference to the Queen. Each of the members of the CouncU having offered to take his share of the responsibility, it was resolved to for- ^T. 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 461 ward the warrant by Mr. Beale, the Clerk of the Council ; and the letters proposed by Burghley to accompany it, being approved, they were ordered to be drawn up by the evening. The Council then separated, and went to dinner, but met again at two o'clock, when the letters were signed, and given to Beale, with express and urgent directions to use the utmost expedition in proceeding to Fotheringay.' The Privy Councillors who were present at those proceedings, and who signed the letters, were Lord Burghley, the Earls of Derby and Leicester, Lords Howard, Hunsdon and Cobham, Sir Francis KnoUys, Sir Christopher Hatton, Sir Francis Walsingham, and Mr. Davison.'' No sooner had information arrived that the sentence was executed than Elizabeth sent for Hatton, and assured him that she was ignorant of the act, and that it was entirely against her intentions. Though her assumed indignation lighted upon all her Ministers, it feU principally upon Davison, who was committed to the Tower on the 14th of February ; and while in confinement he underwent three examinations. Sir Christopher Hatton and Mr. WoUey, were first sent to him on the 12th of March, when the following " arti cles were ministered to him :" — Whether upon signing of the warrant, her Majesty gave it not in express charge and commandment unto you to keep the same secret, and not to utter it to anybody ? He answereth that he hopeth her Majesty doth not forget how she coraraanded my Lord Admiral to send for him to bring the warrant to her, having, as his Lordship told me, resolutely determined to go through with the execution. Upon my coming to her, it pleased her to call for the warrant, and voluntarily to sign it, " Life of Davison, Svo. 1823, Ap- " Ibid p. 97, and Elhs's Original pendix A and B. Letters, Second Series, vol. in. p. 111. 462 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587. without giving me any such commandment as is objected, which he confirraeth in the presence of God. Other interro gatories made and bold answers given, 16th March 1586-7.* Davison's own account of the examinations contains the " other interrogatories," and his " bold answers.'"" It does not appear by whom the examinations on the 14th and 16th of March, were made; but, as is weU known, Davison was sacrificed to the Queen's cruel and selfish policy. It is remarkable, however, that neither Hatton nor any other of the Queen's Ministers, who signed the letters that accompanied the warrant for Mary's execution, was present in the Star Chamber on the 28th of March, when Davison was sentenced to be heavily fined and imprisoned, except Sir James Croft, the ComptroUer, who, however, had the modesty and good sense to say little on the occasion. Great as had been the favours lavished upon Hatton by his Sovereign, the Country was not prepared for the extraordinary promotion which raised him to the highest office in the Eealm, and imposed upon him judicial duties of the most important nature. On the 12th of AprU, Lord Chancellor Bromley died, and the Great Seal wag sent in the evening to the Queen, at Greenwich; and except on two pressing occasions, it remained in her hands. The Queen appomted the Earl of Eutland, " a profound lawyer, and accomplished with all excellent learning," to succeed Bromley,' but he died six days " Lansdowne MSS. 982, f. 97. landi^e Comes ex Jianeiorum," &c. I" Life of Davison, Appendix E. In his own translation, Camden's ¦^ Camden, b. in. p. 127. In his words are, " And the sixth day after original work (ed. 1615, p. 475) [died] Edward Earl of Rutland, Camden^ after mentioning the death whom the Queen had appointed to of Chancellor Bromley, says, "Et be his successor," &c. This posi- sexto post die, qui illi successor h tive statement of a learned contem- Regina destinatus, Edwardus Rut- porary writer is thus misrepresented XT. 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 463 afterwards, before he had received the Great Seal ; and on Saturday, the 29th of that month, she delivered it to Sir Christopher Hatton, and appointed him Lord Chan ceUor of England. The ceremony is thus described: the Court was then at the Archbishop of Canterbury's palace at Croydon ; and about four o'clock in the after noon, in a private ambulatory or gaUery, near her pri vate chamber, and in the presence of the Archbishop and some other personages of high rank, her Majesty took the Seal, which was lying in a red velvet bag in a win dow, into her own hands, and carried it to the centre of the gaUery. She then delivered it to Hatton, but immediately received it back again, and commanded it to be taken out of the bag. The Seal was then affixed to an instrument, and replaced in the bag, when the Queen re-deU vered it to Hatton ; and she " then and there made and constituted the said Sir Christopher Hatton, Lord ChanceUor of England."* It was to be expected that the appointment of any one, except an eminent lawyer, to the office of Lord ChanceUor, would excite the astonishment, if not the en mity of the Bar. " The great lawyers of England," says by Lord Campbell: — "Camden says, ing to become an orator and a states- there was a speculation likewise at man." "Love and gratitude filled Court, that Edward Earl of Rutland the mind of Elizabeth, and after some would be appointed Chancellor, had misgivings, whether he who would he not suddenly died," p. 137. have made a most excellent Lord " Rot. Clans. 29 Eliz. p. 42, ^ Chamberlain, was exactly fitted for printed in Lord Campbell's Life of the duties of Lord Chancellor, re- Hatton, p. 147. No authority has solved to appoint him. The inten- been found, and his Lordship does tion was, however, kept a profotmd not eite any, to justify the following secret from all except Burghley, till observations. After the execution the time when the deed was done." of Mary, says the noble biographer, " Sorne of the Courtiers at firet "baUs and masques were resumed, thought that this ceremony [the de- and being still the handsomest man livery of the Great Seal] was a piece and the best drest, and the most of wicked pleasantry on the part of gallant, and the best dancer at Court, the Queen," StQ. pp, 146, 147. he gained new consequence, pretend- 464 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587, Camden, "took it very offensively, for they, ever after the ecclesiastical men were put from this degree, had with singular commendations for equity and wisdom, borne this highest place of gowned dignity, bestowed in old time for the most part upon churchmen and noble men. But Hatton was advanced thereunto through the qunning. Court practices of some, that by his absence from Court, and troublesome Office of so great a magis tracy, for which they knew him to be insufficient, his favour with the Queen might be abated. Yet bare he the place with the greatest state of all that ever we saw, and what was lacking in him in knowledge of the law, he laboured to supply by equity and justice,"* Speaking of Hatton's appointment. Fuller says, " The gownsmen grudging hereat, conceived his advancement their injury, that one not thoroughly bred to the laws, should be preferred to the place. How could he cure diseases, unacquainted with their causes, who might easily mistake the justice of the Common law for rigour, not knowing the true reason thereof? Hereupon it was that some sullen Serjeants at the first, refused to plead before him, until partly by his power, but more by his prudence, he had convinced them of their errors and his abilities,"^ No letter or other document exists to shew that Hatton himself sought this great Office ; and it may be inferred from Camden's remark, that it was given to him through the intrigues of his enemies : nor ^ Annals, b. iii. p. 127. Chancellor ; but a few who looked *> Fuller's Worthies ed. 1811. vol. eagerly for advancement, dissented," II. p. 165. Lord Campbell, who p. 148. All that has been found on quotes part of the ahove passage, the subject is stated in the text ; erroneously assigns it to Naunton, and there is nothing whatever to and says that " Meetings of the bar show that there were " any meetings were held, and it was resolved by of the bar," or any general resolu- many Serjeants and apprentices that tion of the profession not to plead they would not plead before the new before the new Chancellor. MT. 47,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 465 has any allusion to his appointment been found in the correspondence of the period. The Chancellor, on the Srd of May, the first day of Trinity Term, rode from Ely Place, in Holborn, in great state to Westminster, to take the oaths. He was pre ceded by about forty of his gentlemen, uniformly dressed in a blue livery, weaidng gold chains, and by several Pensioners and other gentlemen of the Court, on foot, and was attended by the officers and clerks of the Chan cery. On his right hand rode Lord Treasurer Burghley, and on his left the Earl of Leicester ; and he was fol lowed by some of the Nobility, the Judges, many Knights, and a great troop of their retinue.* The fol lowing account of Hatton's reception in the Court of Chancery, stands only on the authorities referred to ; — " It is said," by Lord CampbeU, " that Hatton was received in the Court of Chancery with cold and silent disdain. Nevertheless, there was, from the first, some Uttle business brought on before him. .The Attorney and Solicitor-General, lest they should themselves be dis missed, were obliged, however discontented they might be, to appear to countenance him. He made no public complaint of his reception, and graduaUy gained ground by his great courtesy and sweetness, to say nothing of the good dinners and excellent sack, for which he was soon famous. It would appear that there was much public cu riosity to see ' the dancing Chancellor ' seated upon his tribunal; and the crowds of strangers in the Court of Chancery were so great, that there came out an order ' by the Eight Honourable Sir Christopher Hatton, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, and Lord Chancellor of England,' in these words : — ' For the avoiding of such » Stow's Annals, p. 741. H H 466 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587. great numbers of suitors and others as do daUy pester the Court in the time of sitting, by reason whereof here tofore it hath many times happened that the due rever ence and silence which ought to be kept and observed in that honourable Court hath been undutifully neglected, and contrariwise much unmannerly and unseemly beha viour and noise hath been there used, to the hindrance of the due hearing of such matters and causes as were there to be handled, and to the great derogation of the honour of this Court, and due reverence belonging to the same ' — Then follow regulations, by which none were to come into Court but counsel, attorneys, . officers, and their clerks and parties, who were ' to continue so long as the cause shall be in hearing, and no longer; and all other suitors whatsoever (except Noblemen, and such as be of her Majesty's Privy Council) were to stand without the Court, and not suffered to come in without special li cence.'* He was quite at home when presiding in the Star Chamber, where he had before been accustomed to sit as a Privy Councillor, and he had the Chiefs of the Common Law to assist him. To this Court, according to usage, he dedicated Wednesdays and Fridays. On other days he sat for Equity business in the Court of Chancery; in Westminster HaU in the mornings, and in his own house in the afternoons. He made an order that four Masters in Chancery should always attend, and sit on the bench with him in Court, and two in his own house.'' " He was exceedingly cautious, ' not venturing to wade beyond the shallow margin of Equity, where he could distinctly see the bottom,' He always took time to con- " " Reg. Lib. B 31 and 32 Eliz. '' " Ordo Curiee, decimo viii." die 1589, p. 498."— Lives of the Chan- Aprilis Anno Regni Elizabethse Re- cellors. ginae xxx." "—Ibid. ^t. 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 467 sider in cases of any difficulty; and in these he was guided by the advice of one Sir Eichard Swale, described as his 'servant-friend,'" who was a Doctor of the Civil Law, and a Clerk in the Chancery, and well skilled in all the practice and doctrines of the Court, By these means Lord ChanceUor Hatton contrived to get on marvellously well ; and though suitors might grumble, as well as their counsel, the public took part with him, and talked with contempt of ' the sullen Serjeants,' who at first refused to plead before him. All were dazzled with the splen dour of his establishment; and it was said, that he made up for his want of law by his constant desire to do what was just.'' But the more judicious grieved ; and, in spite of all his caution and good intentions, he committed absurd blunders, and sometimes did in- justice."" Upon this statement it may be observed that as " none of Hatton's decisions have come down to us,'"* and as there is no report of his proceedings in his Court, the evidence of those " absurd blunders," and of his occa sional "injustice," is wholly wanting; while even his learned biographer admits, that, in the cause of which a report" is preserved, he " presided with great gravity, and, with many apologies for the leniency of the sen tence, he fined the defendant 2000Z., and directed the Judges to testify this punishment on their circuits, to the end the whole Eealm might have knowledge of it, and the people no longer be seduced with these lewd libel lers." As Hatton " shewed great industry," and " made himself tolerably well acquainted with the practice of * Puller's Worthies, ^ Ibid. p. 158. '' " Camden." ' Regina v. Knightly, in the Star ¦^ Lord Campbell's Life of Hatton, Chamber. Howell's State Trials, pp. 149—151. I, 1270. H H 2 468 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587. the Court of Chancery;" and as he "issued several new orders to improve it, which were much applauded," it may be inferred, with more probability, and certainly with more candour, that he performed the duties of his high office with satisfaction to the public and credit to himself. The fact, that none of Hatton's de crees were reversed, is met by the remark, that, " if he and his adviser. Dr. Swale, had erred ever so much, there were hardly any means of correcting them; for there was no appeal to the House of Lords in Equity suits tUl the reign ofCharles II. , and there was no chance of bringing, with any effect, before the Council the decree of a Chancellor still in power."* " To give the public a notion," says his biographer, " that he had attended to the study of the law, he ac tually published a 'Treatise concerning Acts of Par liament, and the Exposition thereof; ' * but it was well known to be written by another, and was withal a very poor production;" but the fact is, that the work thus positively said to have been " actually published " by Hatton, with so unworthy an object, was not printed until he had quietly reposed in his grave for eighty- six years ! ° Even the boldest and most important act which a Chancellor can be called upon to perform, — the refusal of his Sovereign's command to affix the = Lord Campbell, p. 157. seen the book, has formed a higher '' Ibid, p. 158. opinion of its merits than Lord " "A Treatise concerning Statutes, Campbell. Speaking of Hatton he or Acts of Parliament, and the, expo- says, " There is also a short Trea- sition thereof; written by Sir Chris- tise ou the Construction of Statutes, topher Hatton, late Lord Chancellor which was printed in 1677, after his of England. London ; printed for death ; if this was really written by Richard Tonson, at his shop under him, it must be allowed not to be Gray's-Inn Gate, next Gray's-Inn entirely destitute of merit." — Obser- Lane. Anno 1677." 12mo. Bar- vations on the more Ancient Sta- rington, who appears really to have tutes, p. 405. ^t. 47,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 469 Great Seal to letters-patent, conferring an unconstitu tional office upon the most powerful man in the Eealm, — eUcits no other praise than that it showed the mis take of supposing that " he would be utterly dis graced by the incompetent manner in which he must discharge his judicial duties;" and it is insinuated, that but for the opportune death of the party, he might have been induced to comply.* Though represented as hav ing been so incompetent a Chancellor, Hatton is never theless said to have been so incessantly occupied with his judicial duties, as to have lost the Queen's regard by his absence from Court, where he was supplanted by Essex and Ealeigh; and "on his occasional visits to WhitehaU, or St. James's, to Eichmond, or Greenwich," he had, it is added, " the deep mortification of finding himself entirely neglected and slighted for younger men.*"' It was " on one of these occasions " that " he saw" Ealeigh attract the Queen's notice by throwing his " brave sUken cloak " before her when he was " in stantly taken into favour by her, and appointed to the post which he himself had once held ;" and so intimately acquainted is the noble biographer with the Chancellor's private feelings, that he says, Hatton " would now have been delighted to exchange " that post" for the Great Seal." " It unfortunately happens, however, that there is not the slightest foundation for this pathetic story, inasmuch as Ealeigh was taken into favour by the Queen, and was an object of Hatton's jealousy, at least five years before the Vice-Chamberlain was raised to the - Lives of the Chancellors, p. 153, ' Ibid, p. 155. >• Ibid, pp, 154, 155. 470 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1587. woolsack;* and Ealeigh had obtained the post of Captain of the Guard nearly twelve months before that event. On the 12th of May the Lord Chancellor received the following letter from Lord Burghley :-^ TO the lord chancellor. My Lord, I am sorry that my pains are such as I cannot attend on you to-day in the Star Chamber, baving yesterday, by more zeal of service in the Exchequer Chamber, than of regard to ray harras, so weakened and pained ray leg, as I can not stir it out of ray bed ; but this my declaration of my state is to no purpose to occupy your Lordship withal. This great matter of the lack of vent, not only of clothes, which present ly is the greatest, but of all otber English commodities which are restrained from Spain, Portugal, Barbary, France, Flan ders, Haraburgh, and the States, cannot but in process of tirae work a great change and dangerous issue to the people of the Realm, who, heretofore, in time of outward peace, lived thereby, and without it raust either perish for want, or fall into violence to feed and fill their lewd appetites with open spoils of others, which is the fruit of rebellion ; but it is in vain to remember this to your Lordship, that is so notorious as there need no repetition thereof. The evil being seen and like daily to increase beyond all good reraedies, it is our duties that are Councillors to tbink of sorae remedies in tirae, before the same become remediless ; and briefly the best means of remedy raust follow the consideration of tbe causes of this evil, and so " contrariis contraria curare." The original cause is apparently the contentions and enraities betwixt the King of Spain and his countries, and her Majesty and her coun tries. The reduction hereof to amity betwixt the Princes, and to open traffic according to the ancient treaties of inter course, would be the sovereign remedy ; but this may be wished sooner than speedily effectuated. But yet, seeing there is a sig nification notified of the good inclination of both the Princes, » Vide, p. 275—278, ante. ^T. 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 471 and a great necessity to press them both thereto for the sou- agement of their people, it were pity any course should be taken either to hinder this or not to hasten it, which surely in the Low Countries would be done, with whatsoever a reason able cost may be, to keep the enemy from victuals, and to withstand his enterprises against our friends until this next harvest; and by this proceeding against him, there is no doubt but he will yield to all reasonable conditions meet both for her Majesty and her protected friends ; otherwise, if the good fortune of our friends do decay, and the enemy recover that which he now lacketh, that is store of victuals, he will either underhand make peace with our friends, whom he shall find both weak and timorous, and leave her Majesty in danger for recovery of all that she hath spent, and in greater charges to maintain her two cautionary towns against the whole Low Countries than two Boulognes were, or else he will, being puffed with pride, make a very Spanish conquest of Holland and Zealand, — a raatter terrible to be thought of, but most terrible to be felt. But to insist upon this remedy is as yet in vain, and therefore such other poor helps are to be thought of as may somewhat mitigate the accidents present, and stay the increase thereof, whereof when I do bethink myself, I find no one simple remedy, but rather compounded of divers simples, and to say truly tbey are but simple remedies, until peace may ensue, which is the sovereign sole medicine of all. To have vent increase, there must be more buyers and shippers than there are, and seeing our merchants say that they cannot have sales sufficient, 1. It were good that the Steelyard raen were licensed to trade as they were wont to do, with condition upon good bonds that our raerchants adventurers shall have their former liberties in Hamburgh. 2, These Steelyard raerchants must also have a dispensation to carry a competent nuraber of unwrought cloths that are coarse, which are the cloths whereof the great stay is in the Realra. 3, Beside this, the raerchant strangers might have a like 472 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587, dispensation for the buying and shipping of a competent num ber of like white coarse cloths. 4. And if her Majesty, for some reasonable time, would abate only 2s. upon a cloth, I tbink there would grow no loss to her Majesty, having respect to the raultitude of the cloths that should be carried, whereas now the strangers carry few, but upon licences, for which her Majesty hath no strangers' customs but English. 5. The strangers also must have liberty to buy in Blackwell Hall, or else there raay be a staple set up in Westrainster, out of the liberties of the City of London, which, rather than London would suffer, I think they will grant liberty to stran gers in respect of the ballage raoney which they shall leese. Notwithstanding all these shows of remedies, I could wish that our merchants adventurers were raade acquainted here with, and to be warned, that if they shall not amend tbe prices to clothiers for their coarse cloths, whereby the. clothiers may be reasonably apparent gainers, and that to be put in practice this next week, that tben ber Majesty will give authority to put tbe former helps in practice. Thus, my good Lord, because I understand you are to go to the Court this after noon, I have thought good to scribble, as I do (lying in pain), these few cogitations, submitting them to a more mature dis" quisition. Your Lordship's most assured, W. Burghley.* FROM the lord CHANCELLOR TO SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM. Sir, This afternoon Sir Rowland Hayward and Sir Edward Osborne bave been with me to deliver an answer in the mat ter of buying and selling of cloths in Blackwell HaU. They bave assembled tbeir Common Council upon this cause, wherein by a general consent their resolution is this — That with all reverent duty they submit tbemselves to anything it shall please her Majesty to comraand them. But in this mat ter, that Strangers and other Subjects not being of their Com pany should have to do in Blackwell Hall (the same being an » Original in the State Paper Office, indorsed, " 12th May, 1587," MT. 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 473 express breach of their liberty,) they most humbly crave to be excused. It is directly (as they affirm) against their oath, to admit any others into this freedora, and the only recorapence reserved for their servants, in hope of this future benefit and commodity, which being takeii away by communicating the same indifferently unto others, would exceedingly discourage them, and perchance enure to farther inconvenience hereafter. They do therefore earnestly entreat me to be a mean their humble excuse may be received in this behalf, and that her Majesty will graciously vouchsafe to accept thereof. It may please you. Sir, in your wisdom, to deliver the effect hereof to her Highness, in such terms as may best be fitting with the cause, which referring to your good consideration, 1 bid you most heartily farewell. From London, the 27th of May 1587. Your assured loving friend, Chr. Hatton, Canc* THE LORD chancellor TO WILLIAM CLOPTON, ESQ. AND JOHN GURDON, ESQ., JUSTICES OF THE PEACE IN SUFFOLK, After ray very hearty commendations, by this 1 am inforraed of some unseemly and unnatural contention growing between this gentleman and his mother, for the sup pressing whereof (being a matter of much rebuke unto thera both) I find an honest disposition in him to have the cause taken up by any indifferent gentlemen for the avoiding of such a trouble or obloquy unto thera in this behalf. I have there fore thought fit (being very desirous to furtber so good and godly a purpose) to refer the consideration of this suppliant grief unto you, as gentlemen of whose integrity and upright dealing in causes of like trust I am right well assured. Ear nestly praying you upon the receipt hereof to call both parties before you, and upon due examination of the matter and ori ginal cause of their strife and unkindness, to seek (if you can) to reconcile the same, and to take such indifferent course for a final end between them as you shall find to be most agreeable with equity and justice. And in case that either of them * Original in the State Paper Office, 474 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1587, shall refuse to stand to your order therein, then my desire is you should advertise me thereof, and by whose default the same shall happen, to the end [that I] may take such other course as in that behalf shaU fit and convenient. And so not doubting of your w . . . .^ . pains and travail for so good a purpose, and the rather st for which I shall have cause to thank you, and you to some good course of love and friendship be tween them if you possibly may, I bid you very heartily fare well. From London, the last of May 1587. Your very loving friend, Chr. Hatton, Canc *• As the " Peerages" do not mention the death of any child of Sir John Stanhope, afterwards Lord Stanhope, there is nothing to fix the date of the next letter, except that in his letter of the Sth of October 1587, he speaks of " untimely death having bereft him of the fruit of his youth and stay of his age." His son and successor was born in 1592; — MR. JOHN STANHOPE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATT'ON. Sir, It is God's pleasure I should be left a sorrowful and desolate father, by the death of my only child, and since it is his doing, I raust bear tbe cross thereof as quietly as he will give me grace, though nature being strong, in a weak raind, workaccording to natural passions ; which, being unfit to be spent in this place, makes me desirous to wait on you afore my going, at your good leisure ; hoping to find such continuance of your favour, as I have ever, since my first coraing hither, been partner of. In requital whereof, I can but rest yoursj and pray for tbe continuance of your healtb, with increase of all honourable comforts. Your Honour's humbly, John Stanhope.'' * Autograph in the Harleian MSS. 286, f, 112, '' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 119. r, 47.] SIR CHRISTOPHER n.\TTON. 475 MR, JOHN STANHOPE TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Since it hath pleased you soraething to relieve ray aflSicted spirits with the honourable offer of your friendly deal ing, I thought it ray part for your better remembrance, to add such notes thereunto, as, bearing a true date, may induce a readier dispatch in all good consideration. My time of attend ance hath been here about sixteen years, with extraordinary charges, and all dutiful and ordinary care, without either fee, pension, or wages, during all which time I can never reraera ber that I was so much as six weeks absent at onee, and that not past twice in all. And though I know all is but duty, and nothing worth, yet have I been ever ready to supply one place or other, to be commanded as there was cause of service, never without that faith that was fit, nor such diligence as might deserve good opinion. Her Majesty's goodness being infinite, I humbly acknowledge to have been singularly bound unto her, and do rest with the burthen of an infinite debt ; but for any portion befallen either to my preferment or profit I have never reaped any but that which yourself best knoweth of, who were the chiefest means to further in my behalf the fruit of her Majesty's gracious favour. Since which tirae (which is seven years past and raore,) believe rae, Sir, it is too true, I have both spent the last penny of that benefit, and sold I. land of inheritance, wbich was my mother's gift. Yet still in debt, but not out of heart, if untimely death had not bereft me of the fruit of my youth and stay of ray age, by whose conve nient match I might have reared something to my advantage. But it bath now pleased the Almighty to leave me wholly to her Majesty's goodness, whereof, as I never had cause to doubt, so this, my present suit, being without charge to ber Majesty, and without trouble to any, may both in part repair my ruin, and settle my mind to sorae better stay, which shall then be raost quiet, when I shall know myself fittest to serve her Majesty as I desire, contented ever with the raean estate of a well-measured mind. In the raeanwhile ray humble prayer shall never cease for her prosperous and blessed estate. 476 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1588. nor my good-will to do you any service I shall be able. From the Court at Whitehall, the eighteenth of October 1587. Your Honour's humbly, John Stanhope.* So far from Hatton having lost any part of the Queen's regard, he received a distinguished mark of her favour in April 1588, On Saint George's Day, in a Chapter of the Order of the Garter, held at Greenwich, four Knights were elected by the Companions ; but the Sovereign's pleasure was not made known until the foUowing day, the 24th, when Eobert Devereux, Earl of Essex, Thomas Butler, Earl of Ormond, President of Munster, and Sir Christopher Hatton, the Lord Chancellor, were declared Knights of the Order, Being introduced into the Chapter, the Knights Elect fell upon their knees, and were severally invested with the insignia by the Queen's own hands ; and they were instaUed on the 23rd of May, It appears, how ever, that on Saint George's day, in the preceding year, Hatton received eight, being the greatest number of votes; but, as the Queen refused to attend when the scrutiny was taken, on the pretence that she was not attired in the mantle of the Order, no election took place,'' Lord Campbell's researches have discovered an admir able speech which was made by Lord Chancellor Hatton on the elevation of Mr, Eobert Clarke, to the dignity of Sergeant-at-law, who attained that degree on the 12th of June, 1588:— " 'No man can live without Law, therefore I do exhort you, that you have good care of your duty in the caUing, and that you be a father to the poor ; that you be careful to relieve all men afflicted. You ought to be an arm to help them ; a hand to succour them. Use uprightness « Additional MSS. 15891. " History of the Order ofthe Gar ter, 4to. p. 199. ^r, 48.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 477 and foUow truth. Be free from cautel. Mix with the exercise of the law no manner of deceit. Let these things be far from your heart. Be of an undoubted reso lution. Be of good courage, and fear not to be carried away with the authority, power, or threatenings of any other. Maintain your clients' cause in aU right. Be not put to silence. As it is alleged out of the Book of Wisdom, ' Noli qucsrere fieri Judex, ne forte extimescas faciem potentis, etponas scandalum in agilitate tua.' Know no man's face. Go on with fortitude. Do it in upright ness. 'Redde cuique quod suum.'' Be not partial to yourself. Abuse not the highest gifts of God, which no doubt is great in equity. These things be the actions of nobility. He that doth these things duly, deserves high honour, and is worthy in the world to rule. Let truth be familiar with you. Eegard neither friend nor enemy. Proceed in the good work laid upon you. And the last point that I am to say to you, use diligence and careful ness. And although I have not been acquainted with the course of the Law, albeit, in my youth, I spent some time in the study thereof ; yet I find by daily experience that diligence brings to pass great things in the course and proceeding of the Law ; and contrarily negligence over throws many good causes. Let not the dignity of the Law be given to men unmeet. And I do exhort you all that are here present, not to call men to the Bar, or the Bench, that are so unmeet, I find that there are now more at the Bar in one House, than there was in all the Inns of Court, when I was a young man. He concludes by an exhortation to avoid Chancery, and to settle disputes in the Courts of Law. We sit here to help the rigour and extremities of the Law. The holy conscience of the Queen for matters of Equity in some sort, is by her Majes- 478 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1589. ty's goodness committed to me, when summum jus doth minister summam injuriam. But the Law is the inheri tance of all men. And I pray God bless you, and send you as much worship as ever had any in your calling.' "* In June 1589 Sir Christopher Hatton's nephew. Sir Wil liam Newport alias Hatton, who had taken his uncle's name, was married to Elizabeth, the daughter and heiress of Judge Gawdy. The ceremony took place at Holdenby, and was honoured with the Chancellor's presence ; but during the fes tivities news arrived of the murder of the French monarch. "Upon this news," says Mr. Gilbert Talbot, in a letter to his father, on the 1st of July 1589, " My Lord ChanceUor, who was then at Holdenby, at the marriage of his nephew, was sent for up again with aU speed, and this night he wiU be in London. He purposed to have tarried there ten or twelve days longer.'"" It was on this occasion that the foUowing trifling circumstance occurred ; and, considering the universal practice of dancing at weddings, that Hatton was not then quite fifty years old, and that it was at the marriage of his nearest relative and adopted heir, his having cast aside his judicial gravity, and joined the dancers, scarcely justifies the inference, that, " while holding the Great Seal, his highest distinction continued to be his skill in dancing, and as often as he had an opportunity he abandoned himself to this amusement," " In a letter from a Captain Allen, dated on the 17th of August 1589, to Mr. Bacon, he says, "My Lord Chan cellor's heir. Sir WiUiam Hatton, hath married Judge Gawd/s daughter and heir ; and my Lord Chancellor " "Reg. Lib. B. 1586 [15881], f. " Hunter's History of Hallamshire, 661." Lives of the Chancellors, pp. p. 91. 1 58, 159. <= Lives of the Chancellors, p. 159. ^T. 49.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 479 danced the measures at the solemnity. He left the gown in the chair, saying, ' Lie thou there, ChanceUor.'"* WhUe alluding to the ChanceUor's dancing, it is proper to notice Gray's weU-known Unes, in his " Long Story" on Stoke Pogeis, in Buckinghamshire. Eeferring to Sir Christopher Hatton, he says, " Full oft within the spacious walls. When he had fifty winters o'er him. My grave Lord Keeper led the brawls. The Seals and maces danced before him." Lord Campbell states, that Hatton had, "at Stoke Pogeis in Buckinghamshire, a country house, constructed in the true EUzabethan taste. Here, when he was Lord Chan ceUor, he several times had the honour to entertain her Majesty, and shewed that the agility and grace which had won her heart when he was a student in the Inner Temple remained Uttle abated.'"' It appears, however, that both Lord CampbeU and Gray were quite mistaken in supposing that Sir Christopher Hatton ever owned Stoke Pogeis, or ever resided there. The manor-house was re-built, in the reign of Queen EUzabeth, by Henry Earl of Huntingdon ; and Sir Edward Coke, who had married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Earl of Exeter, and second wife and widow of Sir WiUiam Hatton, the Chancellor's nephew, held it as lessee under the Crown in 1601,'' in which year he entertained the Queen there i^ and about 1621 it was granted to him by King James the First. Moreover, there is no trace of Hatton's having ever pos- > Additional MSS. 4109, fo. 352, ^ Page 164. printed in Birch's Memoirs of the " History of Buckinghamshire in Reign of Queen Elizabeth, vol, i, Lyson's Magna Britannia. p. 56. ^ Nichols's Progresses, iii. 568. 480 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1590. sessed Stoke Pogeis : it is not mentioned among the lands of which he died seised, nor among those which belonged to his nephew and heir-at-law. After Lady Coke's death, on whom the property was settled, it went to Lord Purbeck, the husband of Frances,* her only surviving child by Lord Coke ; whereas, if it had been inherited from Sir WilUam Hatton, it would have devolved upon his daughter, the Countess of Warwick, or have gone with Lord ChanceUor Hatton's estates, on the death of Sir William without issue male, to his next heir male, Sir Christopher Hatton, Lord Coke's marriage with the widow of Sir William Hatton may have given rise to the tradition that it once belonged to Lord Chancellor Hatton, and misled Gray, who has misled the author of the " Lives of the Chancellors." The preparations to repel the Spanish Armada being completed, the Queen visited the camp at Tilbury on the Sth of August ; and, though it is positively said that "the Chancellor attended her," and that " if the Spaniards had landed was ready to have fought valiantly by her side,^" the authority cited" for his having been present is scarcely weighty enough to be set against the omission of his name in all the accounts of her Majesty's visit ; and the fact that on that very day Walsingham wrote a report to Hatton of what was going on in the camp,'^ is almost conclusive evidence that he was at some distance from Tilbury. Towards the end of August, of early in September, a circumstance occurred, which has been before adverted to, » Her sister, Elizabeth, to whom = " The Critic," Ibid p, 152. the Queen was godmother in Au gust, 1599, died unmarried. — Ni- "^ Original in the Harleian MS. chols's Progresses, iii. 465. 6994, and printed in Wright's Queen '' Lord Campbell, p. 156. Elizabeth and her Times, p. 385. .ET. 48.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 481 when Hatton showed his knowledge of the constitution, a proper sense of the duties of his high office, and the firm ness to oppose the Queen's wiU if her commands were illegal. " In the very end of this life," says the learned historian of the period, Leicester " began to enter into new hope of honour and power," by endeavouring to obtain from Elizabeth the appointment of Lieutenant of England and Ireland, for which office the letters-patent were actuaUy drawn. Lord Burghley, and the Lord ChanceUor, however, interposed, and prevented their being executed ; " and the Queen in time foresaw the danger of too great a power in one man."' Further proceedings on this subject, of which Uttle is known, were prevented by the sudden death of this remarkable person, as he died suddenly on the 4th of September. By a codicil to his wiU, dated on the SOth of September 1587, the Earl of Leicester appointed Sir Christopher Hatton, his brother the Earl of Warwick, and Lord Howard of Effingham, overseers of his wUl, entreating them " to help, assist, and comfort his dear and poor disconsolate wife;" and he thus aflfectionately mentions Hatton : — " To my Lord ChanceUor, mine old dear friend, I do give one of my greatest basins and ewers gilt, with my best George and Garter, not doubting but he shall shortly enjoy the wear ing of it, and one of his armours which he gave me.'"" By the decease of Leicester, the Chancellorship of the Uni versity of Oxford became vacant, and Hatton was elected his successor," " Camden, b. in, 145, on the occasion are in the Ad- '' Sidney State Papers, i. 74, 75, ditional MS, 5845, in the British ' The speeches and proceedings Museum. I I 482 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1588. ParUament met on the 12th of November, when Mr. Serjeant Snagge was elected Speaker of the House of Com mons ; — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO MR. SERGEANT PUCKERING. Sir, I am to pray you to take the pains to repair unto this town about tbe latter end of this week, that I raay have some conference with you concerning matters of Parliaraent to this purpose; because the use of the higher House is not to meddle with any bill until there be some presented from the Commons; and so, by reason thereof, the first part of the sitting should be spent idly, or to small purpose, I thought it fit to inform myself what bills tbere were remaining since the last Parliament, of the which the Lords had good liking, but could not be passed by reason of want of time, and those I meant to offer to their Lordships till such tirae as tbere came some from the Lower House. And sending to Mr. Mason, the Clerk of the Higher House, to confer with him touching the same, I understand by hira that most of them remain in your hands ; wherefore I desire to have some speech witb you herein. Further, I have thought good to let you understand how the world goes here, touching the Speaker of the Lower House, which charge her Majesty hath now resolved to lay on Mr. Sergeant Snagge. Other matters you shall understand at our raeeting. In the raean time I commend you to the good keeping of Almighty God. From London, the 2nd of September 1588. Your assured loving friend, Chr. Hatton.* Though Parliament met on the 12th of November, it was prorogued to the 4:th of February 1589, on which day the Lord Chancellor explained the cause of its being called together, in an able speech. After stating that peace had ever been the object nearest the Queen's heart, and that neither the infant state of Scotland, the treachery of » Autograph in the Harleian MS. 6994, f. 148. MT. 48.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 483 France, the divisions of her enemies, nor the frequent solicitations of the Dutch, had provoked her to make war ; and that, while she was endeavouring to prevent hostilities with Spain, the Armadahad approached our coasts, but that the Almighty had graciously rendered their designs fruit less, and enabled her ships, though far inferior in number, to defeat and put them to flight ; he then described the subsequent fate of the Spanish fleet, and thus concluded: — "But to what end do I by this recital endeavour to raake you secure and void of fear 1 Do not you imagine, I say, that they are ardently studious of revenge, and that they wiU not employ the power, the strength, the riches of Spain, and the forces of both Kingdoms, to accomplish it t Know you not the pride, fury, and bitterness of the Spaniard against you 1 Yes, this is the great cause of summoning this Parliament ; that in this most full as sembly of the wisest and most prudent persons, caUed to gether from aU parts of this Kingdom, as far as human counsel can advise, a diligent preparation may be made, that arms and forces and money may be in readiness ; and that our navy, which is the greatest bulwark of this Kingdom, may be repaired, manned, and fitted out for all events with the utmost expedition."* In the spring of 1589, an expedition, under the joint command of " the two Generals," Sir John Norris and Sir Francis Drake, was sent against Spain ; and it is said that " the Earl of Essex, though much suspected, yet unknown t'O the Queen, made arrangements to meet the Generals on the coast of Portugal ;^ but this letter shows that Essex's * Lords' Journals, vol. i. ; and in better taste than any performance farhamentary History, vol. i. p. of his predecessors, either ecclesias- 854, Lord Campbell considers "this tical or legal," p. 153. speech of the dancing Chancellor is '' Stow, p. 751. I I 2 484 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1589, design was known to the Queen. Captains Crosse and Plott appear to have belonged to the army : — TO LORD burghley. My very good Lord, For ray opinion touching Captain Crosse, I do think that upon her Majesty's late speeches with hira, he hath received sorae particular directions frora herself, concerning the two Generals, as also touching the Earl of Essex, in which respect it seeraeth fit he should be sent unto thera. This coraraodity there will corae of it, that so her Majesty's pleasure shall be delivered to the Generals, and their desire therein also satisfied, who wish that he raight be sent, because he hath been raade thoroughly acquainted with the particular state of the array, as your Lordship may paitly perceive by the letter you require, which I send you here en closed. Now for that divers ships are appointed for the car riage of the provisions, as appeareth by Captain Plott's own note, the charge in my opinion raay well be divided between hira and Captain Crosse, wherein, nevertheless I refer rae to your Lordship's better advice, and so coraraend you to the Lord Alraighty. Frora Ely-place, the 15th of May 1589. Your Lordship's raost assured poor friend, Chr. Hatton, Canc. Postscript. — My good Lord, as I conceive the victuals for their supply cannot conveniently be sent all at one time ; and therefore the one of these gentleraen may be sent before with a part, and the rest come after -with the other.* to the earl of SHREWSBURY. My very good Lord, Being desirous to gratify my good friend Sir Richard Knightley, I make bold to entreat of your Lordship the gift of one stag and a brace of bucks, to be taken in any place in Derbyshire wheresoever you shaU'think good to appoint ; which, being raore than were convenient I should '' Original in the State Paper Office. .BT. 49.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 485 require but thus in my friend's behalf, yet will I be most wil Ung to requite this your honourable courtesy whensoever it shaU please you to command the like in any ground of raine or within ray charge. And so, ray good Lord, praying pardon herein, and always ready at your good comraandraent, I take my leave. From Holdenby, SOth July 1589. Your Lordship's poor friend, very assured, Chr. Hatton, Canc. I beseech your good Lordship to pardon this exceeding boldness, and give me leave hurably to pray you to coraraand in anything whatever I have power to do you any acceptable service, &c.* On the 2nd of September the Lord Chancellor drew up the foUowing " Memorial " of business to be transacted : — From her Majesty. Remembrances to my Lord Treasurer, the second of Sept. 1589. 1. That resolution be taken with the States ; and that pre sently, because they desire to depart. 2. That her Majesty's affairs there in the Low Countries, concerning her forces and assistance, may be thoroughly con sidered of; wherein she greatly coramendeth the opinion of Mr. Bodley. 3. That it be considered what personage of estate is fittest to be sent into Scotland, to the end that warning may be given unto him to make himself readyi 4. To speak with the Aldermen touching money. 5. Then the causes to be thoroughly dealt with concerning this last voyage, and to caU Sir John Norreys and Sir Francis Drake to answer to the articles resolutely and directly."" 6. That care be taken to disperse these seditious soldiers out of hand." * Original in the Shrewsbury Pa/- i" " Their accounts are specially to pers, Vol. " I." in the College of be hastened," &c, Arms, ¦= « L, Buckhurst," added in Lord Burghley's hand. 486 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1590, 7. Order should be taken in these countries that these sol diers, as they pass, should not outrage upon the people. 8. Itera the examination of Martin Marprelate to be tho roughly proceeded in.* Nothing of any importance relating to Hatton occurred in 1590. Parliament did not meet, and the Country was in a state of tranquiUity in her foreign and dohleStic relations. TO the earl of SHREWSBURY. My very good Lord, I have received that fair and ho nourable present which it hath pleased you to send me at the beginning of this new year ; for the which, and raany other your honourable kindnesses towards rae, as I must acknow ledge myself rauch bounden and indebted unto your Lord ship, so I assure you, that wherein I raay, and it shall please you to use me, I will not fail, by aU good endeavours, to dis charge the part of a true friend towards you ; and so, wishing your Lordship a happy beginning and ending of many years to come, I take ray leave. Frora the Court at Richnlond, 2nd January 1589 [1590]. Your good Lordship's very assured, Chr. Hatton, Canc.'' ^he following is the only letter of that year in the " Letter Book," and with its subject the Lord Chancellor had little concern : — FROM THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY TO THE CANONS OF LINCOLN. I WAS desirous that the controversy lately between Mr. Griffin, Dean of Lincoln, and you, by occasion of his two erro- ^ Autograph in the State Paper '' Original in the Shrewsbury Pa- Office. Indorsed by Lord Burghley, pers, VoL "I." in the College of "3rd Aug. 1689. A Memoriall by Arms. my Lord Chancellor." .ET. 50.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 487 neous sermons made severally at divers times, might have been ended by your Ordinary, the rather to avoid the offence that might be generally taken by the publishing and public prosecuting of that question, especially seeing the Dean doth utterly renounce the error in doctrine wherewith he is charged, although I cannot but in my heart mislike the words and his manner of teaching in that point. There are controversies enough in the Church of England, and they are not well ad vised, that will either take or give more, and especially above all other, any suspicion that any should think so basely and wickedly of the immaculate Lamb of Jesus Christ ; but seeing my desire that way could take no place, I have myself, to gether with my Lord the Bishop of London, the Deans of Winchester and Paul's, Doctor Aubrey and Doctor Ban croft, taken knowledge of the matter, and thoroughly exa mined the Dean in all the articles wherewith he is charged ; and though, notwithstanding we all with one consent did and do wholly mislike, and in our consciences condemn, the raan ner of speeches used in that serraon, and do think it intole rable for any man to use the like ; yet because we find the Dean in substance of doctrine to differ from us in no point touching that article, and to promise that he will forbear here after such like kind or manner of speaking of the person of Christ, although he found the same in Luther and Calvin, and some others, whom we also in our judgments do therefore mislike ; and for that also we are assured, that when occasion shall be offered unto him, he will notify unto the world that he is no way spotted with such kind of heretical and erroneous doctrine, we have thought good to rest in that persuasion, and so to end the matter, knowing the same to be most fit and con venient for the good and quiet of the Church, which could not but suffer gi-eat ignominy if any man of his caUing should be touched with such errors ; and therefore I, upon whom these burdens do especially lie, do heartily pray you to use him brotherly and friendly, and to conceive of him, as myself do, who have had full conference with him, and do know his mind and judgment in this case, requiring you likewise that if 488 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1590. he, or any man else, shall hereafter use the like words, and so give the like offence, you advertise me with all speed thereofj that I may deal therein according to my duty. And because you shall not doubt of my opinion in tbis matter, I would have you to understand that I think Luther was in saying, was omnium maximus latro, homicida, adulter, .... and whosoever foUoweth speaking or writing so intemperately and unadvisedly, do write and speak contrary to the phrase of Scripture and to the truth, and indeed blasphemously ; for although that the Scrip ture teacheth us that Christ was reputed such a one, yet to say simply that he was so, or that he had sin, or coramitted sin, or came properly or simply to be called a sinner, no Christian raan will dare to affirm or justify. This is my reso lution, which I would have you and all men to know; and tbose that shall impugn this, or teach to tbe contrary, I will prosecute with extremity and to the extremity. And so once again praying you to seek peace and ensue it, and friendly to confer one with another before you enter into judgment or condemnation, I commit you to tbe tuition of Almighty God. From Lambeth, the 29th of June 1590. Your assured, loving friend, John Cantuar. The indorsement of the foUowing letter states that it was written by the " Lord Chancellor from Eltham, with the Lord Cobham:" — TO LORD BURGHLEY. My very GOOD Lord, We have received your honourable letters, and can well witness your endless travails, which in her Majesty's princely consideration she should reUeve you of, but it is true the affairs are in a good hand, as we aU know, and thereby her Majesty is the raore sure, and we her poor servants the better satisfied. God send you help and happi ness to your best contentraent. Surely, Sir, we have taken pains in reading LiUy's letters ; and ray Lord Cobham and I .ET. 50.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 489 rely upon this hope of Parry's, wherein we pray God he be not deceived. I hope the morrow to be at London, where, if your Lordship will coraraand rae any service, I shall be ready for you. This 15th of July 1590. Your good Lordship's raost bound, Chr. Hatton, Canc* FROM lord chancellor HATTON TO LORD BURGHLEY. My very good Lord, The times being now full of troubles, and our shipping and warriors diversely employed about repri sals, so as the trade for wines is like thereby to be very much hindered ; and that tbe law inhibiting the bringing in of wines in strangers' bottoms doth not only withdraw all strangers, and hath done of late years from that trade, but also is a fear to our Nation to lade home their wines in such strange vessels, as many times, for their better safety, tbey might and would do, if they were not subject to tbe danger of those statutes : I am therefore earnestly to pray your good Lordship that you would be pleased to write your letters to the Officers of Custom in the port of London, and to all others whom it may concern, that, during these troubles, no molestation be used, or trouble offered to any sucb as shall bring in wines in strangers' ships, contrary to the said statute, which I hope your Lordship will not think inconvenient, the time considered, and as it hath pleased you to do in the like case heretofore; and even so I bid your good Lordship right heartily farewell. From Ely place, the 20th of November 1590. Your Lordship's most bound poor friend, Chr. Hatton, Canc.'' Only one year of Hatton's life remains; and it was not marked by any important event except, to himself, the most important of all. Though his health had gra dually declined, he continued to sit in the Court of Chan cery and in the Star Chamber, On the I7th of May he wrote a letter to Lord Burghley respecting the execu- • Autograph in the State Paper Office. >> Lansdowne MSS, 65, art. 42, 490 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1591, tion of Udal, the Puritan minister, for felony, of which letter Strype' gives the following abstract: — " He re quested that the letter might be altered and drawn up speedily for Udal and the rest ; because the time of their execution, as it stood then appointed, drew near; and since there was not such haste to confer with those others, which might be done, he said, with more lei sure and advisement taken ; " and therefore, " that he thought it best for some expedition to be used in con ference with them ; and prayed his Lordship to give di rections for the speedy drawing of this letter for Udal and the rest to that purpose, that those two reverend men might confer with them, and that, if they could by good persuasions draw them to the acknowledgment of their faults, to be set down in such a submission as the Lord Anderson (Lord Chief Justice,) should draw up, then the Queen's mercy to be extended towards them ; otherwise, that they might repair by the execution of justice on them, the harm they had done in sowing sedition," Among his letters of 1591 were those to his friend. Sir Henry Unton, Ambassador Leiger at Paris, in Septem ber and October 1591, but they are now in a very im perfect condition: — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO SIR HENRY UNTON, AMBASSADOR IN FRANCE. disease since reporting it to be the yellow jaun dice. Let me for mine own quietness sake, under stand in what you are ; that in case you should need any help .... hence order may be taken for it. Nothing shall .... I can assure your Lordship, that possibly may be had * Life of Archbishop Whitgift, ii, 97, MT. 51. J SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 491 My late being at the Court, I heard nothing of your sickness ; but that since from Sir Robert Cecil, good friend, I received understanding of it, and with how much her most excellent Majesty was perple[xed] to hear thereof, what care her Highness took for [your recov]ery, and the gra cious great good opinions, conceiveth of. This I sig nify to your Lordship, that you [may take] comfort to consider her princely care over you both [for your]self (in that she esteemeth so of you) as also in [regard] of her own service, which she hopeth cannot but be exceeding well through your negotiation, wherein she hath settled an especial affiance in the whole course of the action. Sir, this want of health which so unseasonably unto you had almost brought the good Lady, your wife, to death's door. But I hope you shall receive of eacb other, and I most earnestly wish it. I have been visited myself of late with some distempera ture of body, and therefore conform the longer to write unto you[r Lordship.] But tbis must not breed any conceit in your Lordship, for you know the ground of ray affection towards you. News I have none to impart unto you; for re ceive them altogether thence as the occurrences of the world frame at this present. I will be always careful for your Lord ship as a friend in anything which may concern your benefit, honour, or reputation ; and so, dear good 1 commend you to the Almighty, who send you perfect health. From London, the 5th of September 1591. Your Lordship's most assured, true friend, Chr. Hatton.* SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO SIR HENRY UNTON. and of all other particularities enquired of so dear a friend. In hath satisfied me very well, and to my great I assure you. I must requite your Lordship, but answer at this time, being busy with a dis patch to the Court. TVIy absence from this great while by occasion of her Majesty's City hath been the only ' Autograph in the Cotton MS. Caligula, E. vm,. f. 163. 492 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1591, cause of my seldom unto you, but no want of good will my to any office to do you good, either in in the execution of your great charge, which [advance] by all the means I can, as your true [friend] as occasion shall serve. My next will give rae better opportunity to ad vertise both how things are accepted from you, and what are fit for your further proceeding, which you under stand from me in all plainness. But comfort I doubt not, as of whom we can nothing but exceeding well, by the taste of we see already. I must likewise for bear advertisement to your Lordship until my being tbis place, yielding no arguraent of matter fit know ledge, but only the discovery of certain brained persons, who fall into strange and, upon examination, are found to be men distempered [in] their wits and under standings, and are dealt with accordingly; as, namely, one Galliarde, who is carried a strong imagination that he shall be King after a short time ; and another, called Elliott, who punishable in the highest degree, of sound discourse, I must feed your Lordship for tbe present with these trifles. It may please you to accept all in good part, and ex pect amends upon better opportunity. I will not fail to do all due compliment with Sir Robert Cecil on your Lordship''s behalf.- And so thanking your Lordship for your favourable advertisement, with an earnest desire of your continuance in health even as if mine own, I recommend you to the holy protection of the Almighty. From London, tbe 18th of Sep teraber 1591. Your Lordship's most assured, true friend, Chr. Haiton.* sir christopher hatton to sir henry unton. you for the advertisement which welcome unto rae both in itself and in that it carae from your Lordship. Since coming to the Court (where I made stay ..... few days) I find that her Majesty hath hard conceit as well * Cottonian MSS. Caligula, E.vm, f, 157. .ET. 51,] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 493 towards your Lordship as for your going to the Marshal Biron, of as), seconding his Lordship's error, whereof the is grown. Her Highness, taking it for an .... that her General or Ambassador should all follow any person whatsoever otber tban of the King himself, to whom you are sent that her forces should be era- ployed in any other According to the form of the con tract, it had been far more fit for the Marshal to did upon either of you, than you upon him upon her express pleasure is, I should advise from henceforth to consider well upon of your commission, and in no wise to exceed the thereof. Howbeit, the news of the Gournay hath somewhat qualified this displeasure as her Highness bath granted to the Lord months further stay; whereof your Lordship shall receive more particular advertisement by ... . from my Her Majesty doth resemble this going of the Lord General Your Lordship and of Sir Thoraas Leighton to tbe sw . . . dance; three on a row, forwards and backwards, as journey taken to very small purpose. It therefore, ..... and may best content her Highness Some un pleasing conceit may grow which afterwards may hardly be re moved. My endeavours shall not fail, either herein or in any thing else, to do all good office, both to uphold and to in crease her Majesty's gracious opinion of your Lordship, I as sure you; and I nothing doubt of your Lordship's wise con sideration upon these points; and tbat such amends shall be made by your discreet managing of this matter as shall be a full satisfaction, and breed effect in her Highness of exceeding good liking towards you. Wherewith, my very good Lord, I bid you most heartily farewell. From London, the 4th of October 1591. Your Lordship's very assured, true friend, Chr. Hatton," Sir Christopher Hatton's last letter is that of the 5th of » Cotton MSS, Caligula, E, vm. f. 239, 494 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1591. October to the Earl of Essex, then in command of a small auxiliary force in France, advising him not to expose his person to needless danger. The brother, who is alluded to in this letter, was Walter Devereux, who was kiUed under the walls of Rouen by a musket-shot :* — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO THE EARL OF ESSEX. October 5, 1591. My very good Lord, Next after my thanks for your honourable letters I will assure your Lordship that for ray part I have not failed to use the best endeavours I could for tbe effecting of your desire, in remaining there for sorae longer tirae : but withal, I raust advertise you that ber Majesty bath been drawn thereunto with exceeding hardness; and the chief reason that raaketh ber stick in it is, tbat for she doubteth your Lordship doth not sufficiently consider tbe dishonour that ariseth unto her by the King's either dalliance or want of regard, baving not used tbe forces sent so friendly to bis aid frora so great a Prince, and under the conduct of so great a personage, in some employment of more importance all this while. Wherefore, both by ber Majesty's commandment, and also for the unfeigned good-will I bear your Lordship, I am very earnestly to advise you that you have great care for the accomplishraent of her Highness' instructions effectually, and according to her intention, in those things wherein you are to deal with the King, Furtber, my good Lord, let me be bold to warn you of a matter that many of your friends bere greatly fear, namely, that the late accident of your noble brother, who hath so valiantly and honourably spent bis life in his Prince's and C ountry's service, draw you not through grief or passion to hazard yourself over venturously. Your Lordship best knoweth that true valour consisteth rather in constant per forming of that which hath been advisedly forethought, than in an aptness or readiness of thrusting your person indiffer ently into every danger. You have many ways and many " Camden'.'i Annals, b. iv. p. 2C. .ET. 61.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 496 times made sufficient proof of your valiantness ; no man doubteth but that you have enough, if you have not overmuch; and, therefore, both in regard of the services her Majesty ex pecteth to receive from you, and in respect of the grief that would grow to the whole Realm by the loss of one of that honourable birtb, and that worth which is sufficiently known, as greater hath not been for any that hath been born therein these many and many years, I must, even before Almighty God, pray and require your Lordship to have that circum- spectness of yourself which is fit for a General of your sort. Lastly, my Lord, I hope you doubt not of the good dispositions I bear towards your Lordship, nor that out of the same there ariseth and remaineth in me a desire to do your Lordship all the service that shall lie in my poor ability to perform ; and, therefore, I shall not need to spend many words in this behalf, but witb mine earnest prayers for your good success in all your honourable actions, and after, for your safe return to the comfort of your friends and well-willers here, I leave your Lordship to God's most holy and merciful protection. From London, the 5th of October 1591. Your good Lordship's most assured and true friend, Chr, Hatton." Soon after these letters were written, Hatton was seized with hig last iUness, His mind had been greatly harassed by the Queen's insisting upon the payment of a large sum of money which he owed to the Crown from the receipt of Tenths and First-fruits,'' amounting, it is said, to 42,139^, 55,, for which, after his decease, an extent was laid on his house in Hatton Garden," Though the nature of the debt"* is expressly stated by Camden, the " Murdin's State Papers, p, 646. concealed a statute of 12,000/., taken '' Camden's Annals, b. iv. p. 34. of Sir Christopher Hatton to the use " Nichols's Progresses, iii. 123, of Sir Edward Coke, when he was andp. 503, post. your Majesty's Attorney-General, * Among the charges brought not to pay a debt of good value due against Lord Chief Justice Coke, in unto your Majesty^ nor to accept of a July 1616, he was accused of having discharge for the same. And for the while "he was in a place of trust better strengthening of the statute. 496 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1591, latest biographer* of Hatton says that it was partly created by the loans which she had advanced to him on his " bonds and statute merchant," when he first attracted her notice,'' " It brake his heart," says Fuller, " that the Queen (which seldom gave boons and never forgave due debts) rigor ously demanded the payment of some arrears, which Sir Christopher did not hope to have remitted, but did only desire to be forborn. Failing herein in his expectation, it went to his heart, and cast him into a mortal disease,'"' The following letter was, it has been supposed, sent by him to the Queen on this occasion; but, as it is without date, and as he often incurred her temporary displeasure, it may have been, and probably was, written long before. " Your Turk " was, no doubt, one of her courtiers : — SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON TO THE QUEEN. If the wounds of the thought were not most dangerous of all without speedy dressing, I should not now trouble your Majesty with the lines of ray coraplaint. And if whatsoever carae frora you were not either very gracious or grievous to rae, what you said would not sink so deeply in ray bosora. My profession hath been, is, and ever shall be to your Ma jesty, all duty within order, all reverent love without raea sure, and all truth without blarae; insorauch as, when I shall not be found such to your Highness as Ceesar sought to have his wdfe to hiraself, not only without sin, but also not there was likewise a bond taken of indenture, whereof Sir Christopher 6000/., with sureties to the same ef- Hatton's part was found but the feet. So that Sir Christopher Hatton other was not found. That he was lay charged, under the penalty of privy to the penning of it, inserted 18,000/., not to pay the debt, nor words with his own hand, and that agree to any surrender, discharge, or Mr, Walter and Mr. Bridgman, his release, nor any ways to assent there- own counsel, were witnesses there unto." That this offence was aggra- unto."— Life of Sir Edward Coke in vated by the denial and protestation the "BiographiaBritannioa "Vol II made of late by the Lord Chief Jus- p. 690. ' tice, that he was not privy to the » Lord Campbell, pp 165 156 condition of the defeasance, whereas '' Vide, p. 5 ante ' the statute was taken to himself by "^ Worthies 'ii 165 .-ET. 49.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 497 to be suspected, I wish my spirit divided from my body as his spouse was frora his bed. And therefore, upon yesternight's words, I ara driven to say to your Majesty, either to satisfy wrong conceit, or to answer false report, that if the speech you used of your Turk did ever pass ray pen or lips to any creature out of your Highness' hearing but to ray Lord of Burghley, (with whora 1 have talked both of the man and the matter,) I desire no less condemnation than as a traitor, and no more pardon than his punishraent. And further, if ever I either spake or sent to the arabassadors of France, Spain, or Scotland, or have accompanied, to my knowledge, any that confers with thera, I do renounce all good frora your Majesty in earth, and all grace frora God in heaven. Which assurance if your Highness think not sufiicient, upon the knees of ray heart I hurably crave at your Majesty's hands, not so rauch for ray satisfaction as your own surety, make the perfectest trial hereof. For if upon such occasions it shaU please your Majesty to sift the chaff frora the wheat, the corn of your commonwealth would be raore pure, and mixt grains would less infect the sinews of your surety; which God raost strengthen to your Majesty's best and long est preservation.* When the Queen was informed of Hatton's danger, her old affection for him, as on a former occasion, revived,'' Though she "visited and comforted him,"'' on the llth of November,^ yet " having once cast him down with a word, she could not raise him up again," According to Fuller, she brought, " as some say, cordial broths unto him with her own hands, but aU would not do. Thus no puUeys can draw up a heart once cast down, though a Queen herself set her hand thereunto,'" Sir Christopher * Copy in the Harleian MSS. "= Worthies, ii. 165, Lord Camp- 993, f. 75. bell puts Fidler's remark into Hat- '' Vide, p. 22, ante. ton's mouth, and thus amplifies Ful- ¦= Camden's Annals, B. iv. p. 34. ler's account of his decease, without ' Nichols's Progresses, in. 122. citing any authority whatever ;— " In K K 498 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1591. Hatton died at his house in Ely Place, on Friday, the 20th of November 1591, in the fifty-first year of his age.^ Though his death has been ascribed to the Queen's conduct, the statement is very doubtful. His health had long been impaired, and he died pf diabetes,'' a dis ease almost always mortal, and to which his constitution seems to have long had a tendency." Sir Christopher Hatton was buried with great state in Saint Paul's Cathedral. The corpse was preceded by one hundred poor people who had gowns and caps given them ; and more than three hundred gentlemen and yeomen, in gowns, cloaks, and coats, as well as the Lords of the Council attended, besides four score of the Queen's guard."* A splendid monument' was erected to his me mory by his nephew and heir. Sir WiUiam Hatton, Lord Chancellor Hatton appears to have been sincerely lamented. Camden describes him so well, as "a man of pious nature, great pity towards the poor, singular bounty to students of learning, (for which those of Oxford chose him Chancellor of that University) and who in the •execution of that most weighty office of Lord Chancellor of England could comfort himself with the conscience of a Trinity Term, it was pubhcly ob- pulleys will draw up a heart once cast served that he had lost his gaiety and down, though a Queen herself should good looks. He did not rally during set her hand thereunto.'" — p. 154. the long vacation, and when Michael- " Monumental Inscription, — Lord mas Term came round he was con- Campbell says erroneously that Hat- fined to his bed. His sad condition ton was in the 54th year of his age. being related to Elizabeth, all her '" Camden, p. 34. former fondness for him revived, and " Vide p. 23, ante. she herself hurried to his house in '' Stow, p. 763. Ely place, with cordial broths, in " An Engraving of Sir Christopher the hope of restoring him. These Hatton's Monument, and a copy of she warmed, and offered him with the inscription upon it, is given in her own hand, while he lay in bed, Dugdale's History of St. Paul's. The adding many soothing expressions, inscription will be found in the ap- and bidding him live for her sake. pendix, ' But,' he said, ' all will not do. No .ET. 51.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, 499 right wiU to do equity."" In a fragment of a letter from Mr, Fortescue to Sir Henry Unton, written on the first of December, ten days after his death, he speaks of the death of their good friend the Lord ChanceUor, " which must be most grievous to him," and alludes to Hatton's " broken estate and great debts," '' Upon the character of Hatton it is not necessary to make many remarks, since it has been now so fully deve loped. That his talents were little inferior to those of the greatest of his contemporaries will scarcely be de nied ; and, however inadequate he may have been to per form aU the duties of Lord Chancellor, few will agree that in that station " his highest distinction continued to be his skUl in dancing."' He was of opinion that " in the cause of religion neither searing nor cutting was to be used,""* and he accordingly often interceded to preserve his ene mies, the Puritans, and his supposed friends, the Catho Ucs, from persecution. It is difficult to understand for what reasons he was suspected of being favourable to the ancient faith, and stiU less of having secretly professed the CathoUc religion. His correspondence shows that he was the refuge alike of Puritan and Catholic ; and that the distressed, whether arising from offences against the State, from having incurred the Queen's displeasure, or from sickness or poverty, always appealed with confidence to his humanity and goodness. His love of Uterature was well known; and, as Church yard's letters, and the numerous dedications of books to him show, he did not merely " affect to be a protector of learned men,'" — a crime, however, with which no modern * Camden, B. iv. 34. ' Lord Campbell, ii. 159. '' Cotton MSS. Caligula, E. vm. •> Camden, b. iv. p. 34. f. 180. ' Lord Campbell. K K 2 500 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF [1591. Chancellor is likely to be reproached. Of Hatton's own erudition and acquirements there is certainly little other evidence than the high opinion entertained of him by the wisest and best of his contemporaries, and by his own let ters and speeches. The imaginary " scapegrace student of the Temple," and the imaginary " plucked" member of the University, to whom, with the same flight of imagination it is said, the University would not grant a degree," was -accurate in his knowledge, could, at least, write his own language without flippancy, and maintained a correspond ence with some of the most learned men of his age. Ockland,'' in his description of the characters of EUzabeth's Ministers, says of Hatton, — " Splendidus Hatton, Ille Satelitii regalis ductor, ovanti Pectore, Msecenas studiosis, maximus altor Et fautor verae virtutis, munificusque." A far more grateful literary compliment was however paid to Hatton than the dedications of obscure writers, in the foUowing sonnet of Spenser : — TO THE R. H, SIR C, HATTON, LORD HIGH CHANCELLOR OF ENGLAND. Those prudent heads, that with their counsels wise Whilom the pillars of th' earth did sustain ; And taught ambitious Rome to tyrannise. And in the neck of all the world to reign. Oft from those grave affairs were wont abstain, With the sweet lady-muses for to play. So Ennius, the elder Africain ; So Maro oft did Csesar's cares allay. I Lord Campbell. characters of all that Queen's erent , Christopher Ockland's Ecprivap- Ministers. Strype's Annlls ed Oxnn via, or Elizabetha, wi-itten in elegant 1824, vol. III, pt. l. p. 234 " Latin Hfrnin. VPrSP anA n<^n^nIV„'r^n- 1 • • !*• Latin Heroic verse, and containing .ET. 51.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 501 So you, great Lord ! that with your couusel sway The burden of this kingdom mightily ; With like delights sometinies may eke delay The rugged brow of careful policy ; And to these idle rhymes lend little space. Which, for their title's sake, may find more grace. Very few personal anecdotes of Hatton have been pre served. He is reported to have once said of Elizabeth that the Queen did fish for men's souls, and had so sweet a bait that no one could escape her net work." Haring ton relates that on one occasion the Queen appeared dis pleased, and that on Hatton's leaving her presence with an iU countenance, he puUed him aside by the girdle, and said, privately, " If you have any suit to-day, I pray you put it aside, the sun doth not shine; 'tis this accursed Spanish business, so I wiU not adventure her Highness's choler, lest she should collar me also.'"" From this pun it has been gravely inferred that the Queen once actually " coUared Hatton before the whole Court," and the letter before given' is said to have been written to try and "appease her," on that occasion,"* though, as has been before observed, tbere is not the sUghtest evidence to show when it was written. A happier witticism is, however, recorded of Hatton. " In Chancery, one time when the counsel of the parties set forth the boundaries of the land in question, by the plot; and the counsel of one part said, 'We lie on this side, my Lord;' and the counsel of the other part said, ' And we Ue on this side :' the Lord Chan cellor Hatton stood up and said, ' If you lie on both sides, whom wiU you have me to believe 1"" * Nugse Antique. '' Lord Campbell, ii. 162. b ly^ p i7(3_ " Bacon's Apothegms, ed. Mon- Vide page 589, ante. tagu, 367. 502 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF [1591. Sir Christopher Hatton did not leave a WiU, He had settled his estates upon his nephew Sir William Newport, alias Hatton, and the heirs male of his body ; failing which, on his Godson, and collateral heir-male Sir Christopher Hatton." Sir William suc ceeded accordingly to Holdenby and Kirby, and all the ChanceUor's other property. He married first in June 1589, Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Sir Francis Gawdy, Justice of the King's Bench, by whom he had a daughter, Frances, who was born in 1589, and in Feb ruary 1605, became the wife of Robert Eich, second Earl of Warwick. Sir William Hatton's second wife was Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Cecil, first Earl of Exeter, by whom he had an only child, who died an infant. He died on the 12th of March 1597, and his widow became the second wife of Sir Edward Coke, the celebrated Lord Chief Justice of England, by whom she had two daughters, Elizabeth who died unmarried, and Frances who married John ViUiers, Viscount Purbeck. The quarrels of Lord Coke and his wife have rendered the name of Lady Hat ton famous in the history of her time. On the death of Sir WiUiam Hatton without male issue, in 1597, Benefield and the Newport estates descended to his two daughters and co-heiresses ; but Holdenby and the other Hatton estates passed under the Lord Chancellor's settlement to Sir Christopher Hatton, abovementioned. He obtained an Act of Parliament in 1605, to enable him to sell part of those lands ; and in February, 1608, he conveyed Hol denby to Trustees, for the use of the King for life, with remainder to Charles Duke of York, in tail male. One of = Baker's History of Northamp- Kent, younger brother of William tonshire, p. 195. Sir Christopher Hatton of Holdenby, father of the Hatton was the grandson and neir Lord Chancellor. of John Hatton of Gravesend in .ET, 51.] SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. 503 the conditions of the sale was, that the King should grant to Sir William Hatton, all his Majesty's interest and rever sion in any of the lands of the late Lord Chancellor, by virtue of any extent issued for the debts due by him to the late Queen, provided that the residue of the said debt should be paid off by 1500/, yearly, on the days appointed in an instrument made by the late Queen for securing pay ment of the debt. The King further agreed to grant the custody of Holdenby house and park, with a fee of forty marks to Lady Elizabeth, widow of Sir William Hatton, and then the wife of Lord Chief Justice Coke, for her Ufe, with the building called the Dairy House, belonging to the Mansion House for her lodging," The present representatives of Lord Chancellor Hatton are the heirs of the three daughters and co-heirs of Robert Rich, third Earl of Warwick, son and heir of Frances Countess of Warwick, the only child of his nephew Sir William New port, alias Hatton ; namely : — 1. Lady Anne Rich, who married Thomas Barrington, Esq., son and heir-apparent of Sir John Barrington, Bart,, and who is now represented by William Lowndes, Esquire, of Chesham, and WUliam Selby Lowndes, Esquire, of Whaddon, in the County of Bucks, ^ Baker's History of Northamp- cellor Hatton's estate; because, aftcr tonshire, p, 195, ' Lord Campbell Sir William Hatton's death, it de- says, (p. 165) that, by his marriage volved upon his heir male, Sir Cliris- with Lady Hatton, "Lord Coke got topher Hatton, Christopher Hatton possession of Hatton's estate ; " and was not the heii at law ofthe Chan- that, " Christopher Hatton, who, by cellor, but his heir of entail ; he was a collateral branch, was the heir at ennobled by Charles the First in law of the Lord Chancellor, was en- 1643, and not by James the First : nobled in the reign of James I., by he was created Baron Hatton of the titles of Viscount Gretton and Kirby, and not Viscount Gretton or Baron of Kirby, in the county of Baron Kirby ; and it was his son Northampton." Every one of these who was created a Viscount in 1682, statements is erroneous. Lord Coke by the title of Viscount Hatton of never got possession of Lord Chan- Gretton,and not as Viscount Gretton. 504 THE LIFE AND TIMES OF HATTON, [1591, 2, Lady Mary Rich, who married Sir Henry St, John, and had an only child, Henry, the famous Viscount Bolingbroke, who died without issue in 1751, 3. Lady Essex Rich, who was the first wife of Daniel, second Earl of Nottingham and sixth Earl of Winchel sea, and whose present representatives are the Duke of Devonshire and the Earl of Thanet. The Earl of Nottingham and Winchelsea married secondly, Anne, only daughter of Christopher second Lord and first Viscount Hatton of Kirby, son of Christopher first Lord Hatton, and grandson of the Sir Christopher Hatton, who inherited the Chancellor's estates in 1597, The Honourable Edward Hatton, a younger son of this marriage assumed the name of Hatton, and succeeded to Kirby, and was grandfather of George WiUiam Finch Hat ton, the present Earl of Winchelsea and Nottingham. APPENDIX. MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, Your sharp letters, proceeding as it should seem from an intemperate humour of ill speaking, do raake rae much marvel to see you changed so greatly as you are from the man whom I have heretofore known you. The right colours of a gentleman's coat arms are the virtues of the mind wherewith he is clothed ; but such are your actions to tbe show of tbe world, and so fully fraught with malice, as howsoever your body be derived from the loins of your ancestors, which I confess were gentlemen of good fame and memory, (yet is your mind) which ought to be the habitation of virtue, and the image of God, through the force of reason so far from the true merit and reputation of a gentleman, as to be plain with you, I can hardly think you worthy of so good a title. I hold him not to be deemed a man of any account, who, besides the reverend commemoration of his parents' deserts, hath nothing of his own worthy of the title and commendation of the per sonage which he sustaineth. Such a gentleman was Catiline, in pre-eminence of blood and nobility of stock, but yet most innoble for his vice, and for degenerating from the worthiness and heroical virtues of his ancestors. Anthonius was said to challenge great nobility from bis bouse, but his friends told him it was external, and appertaining to those which were dead. Tully gloried in that he was noble by his own desert, and builded not bis honour upon the raerits of dead men, as Sallust did. Iphicrates being upbraided by Herraodius for app". 3 A n THE LIFE AND TIMES OF that he was the son of Cordo, a base parent, answered, my house taketh beginning from rae, but thine taketh her end in thyself. When the Lacedemonians bragged that they had de rived their nobleness from Hercules, Lycurgus would often times tell thera that their brags would nothing avail them, ex cept they did those things whereby Hercules became so noble. Even so must I boldly say to you, ray good friend, that unless you add some egregious desert of your own to increase the glory of your house, by tbe example of the worthy actions of your ancestors, you shall but live still in obscurity, without all good fame, as the son of tbe earth, come from an unknown generation though men know you, througb the ancient blood and industry of your parents' virtues, to be a gentleman. It is not the producing forth of the ancient statues, nor smoky images, neither yet tbe authentic coat armour, or torn and rotten guidons of your worthy ancestors, now dead and con sumed to ashes, which can suppress either the foreign hostility of the invading enemy, or pacify the civil sedition (if any were stirred up at this present) against your Prince and country, nam genus et proavos et qua non fecimus ipsi, vix ea nostra voce. It is not the vain jactation or boast of authentic stock (if virtues fail) which can relieve the need of common peril, or make you truly worthy of the reputation of a gentle man. To spend the day in surfeit and delicacy ; to sit in purple upon theatres, to go clothed in silk, your feet attired witb golden spurs, your fingers full of gems, a hawk on your fist, to be perfuraed with sweet ointraent, and to lead a long train of idle attendants after you, are not the notes of nobility, but the marks of effeminacy, than which nothing can be more contrary, or ought to be further removed from true generosity. Thus rauch I haye been bold to write unto you, because (when I friendly admonished you of some tbings which methought touched you to take care of) you sent me word, with some show of offence, that you were a gentleman ; such snarling at every raan's manners (to be plain with you,) when you find they square not to your own appetite, is neither commendable nor comely, I gave you my poor advice for the best, and I meant SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, Ui you no harm, but did rather expect thanks indeed at your hands for my good will, than any such unthankful and unkind acceptation of my well meaning towards you, I know well enough the antiquity of your stock, and the descent of your virtuous parents, yet must I say to you, as I have done often, that your large revenues and ample possessions be but as nurses of vice, and provocations of much evils, (notwithstand ing the worthiness of your ancestors) unless yourself, the pos sessor of the same, have also your portion in valour and virtue, as without the which your gentility in truth is but a veil of licentiousness, a cloak of sloth, and a vizard of cow ardice, from the which, I beseech God everraore defend you, to whose gracious favour I commit you. From my lodging in Cornhill, the 20th of Noveraber 1586. Your plain true friend, Samuel Cox." MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, Among many other your good friends, who do wish you all comfort and relaxation of your present grief, there is none I assure you that bewaileth raore heartily the late unfor tunate loss, and untimely death of your dear son, than myself, as one whom I have ever loved much, for the raany virtues and valuable parts which were in him. But seeing God for some secret causes best known to himself, hath now taken him from you, as more fit for him than for us, and more worthy of his Heavenly kingdom, than of tbis earthly man sion, (a place in truth not of dwelling but of burial,) I hope you will in your wisdom patiently accept of his divine plea sure, and attribute all to his goodness. So vain and variable (we see) is the joy of this world, and so transitory the state and condition of man's life, that when we think ourselves farthest from death we are nearest our end, and while we be speaking, this flower witbereth: as passengers by sea we are all carried away in tbe sbip and feel not how, being many times at our journey's end before we be aware ; as well the " Additional MSS. 15891, 3 A 2 iv THE LIFE AND TIMES OF dainty gallant young man, as the rough and wrinkled old man fadeth away suddenly and consumeth to nothing : most happy therefore is he, whose course in his lifetime is safe and straight through virtue, as your son's was, which ought now after his death to be your greatest' comfort: he had long opened his earthly slumbering eyes before his end, to behold and think upon God's eternal Heaven . he condemned all transitory and worldly vanities as vapours of no continuance, which must now be tbe only joy to reUeve your sorrowful over loving heart. Whereunto wishing always as to myself, I commit you to the merciful favour ofthe Almighty, who ever comfort you with his goodness. From my lodging in Cornhill, the 17th of December 1586. Your assured poor friend, Samuel Cox,* MR. SAMUEL COX Sir, I ara sorry to hear tbat your pain is so grievous and violent as I understand it is. The iliac passion is ever accom panied with such kind of gripings, but being once corae to tbe uttermost degree of extremity, the raalice of it commonly assuageth and is of small continuance. One contrary spring eth frora the end of another; and as extrerae joy coramonly is the beginning of sorrow, so intolerable and violent grief is raany times the beginning of consolation and pleasure, Tbat whicb comforteth me most is your physician''s opinion that you are free from all danger, though your own conceit, through your sudden sounding and often fainting much abatetb the hope of your health and will not let you believe it. Take corafort, I pray you, in the goodness of God and in the mani fold virtues of your life, and let not any vain dread of sudden death possess you; easily are the credulous brought into hope and the timorous into fear ; and fear itself is the one- half of all our worldly miseries : conceive not timorously the worst because your sickness taketh you usually with a trance; think with yourself that your pain is the less and passeth over Additional MSS, 15891. SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, V as it were with our breathing ; it is sooner come than felt, and presently depriveth you of all force of understanding, which, to a man that hath the fear of God before his eyes, should be no discomfort, though it be sudden, I have ever known you studious in all godly zeal and true religion ; you have ever Uved in such sort, tbat howsoever it shall please God to dis pose of your body, yet shall nothing happen so suddenly or unlooked for to your mind but that it shall always be pre pared by the duty of Christian faith to receive God's mercy. We read that Caesar in his later time was often subject to sudden faintings as now you are ; and being present at a dis putation where it was debated what kind, of death was most easy and least painful, he answered at the length, (to conclude the controversy) that to the virtuous minded man, sudden death was most commodious, as void of all bitter pangs and passions which comraonly accompanieth the patient that liveth long and grievously tormented with sickness. Though you be not of Caesar's mind, yet let not your courage and comfort in sickness be less than his, seeing you are a Christian as he was not; and your disease is as his was, whereof beseeching God to deliver you I end with as many hearty prayers for your restitution of health as your piety of life and raanifold virtues deserve, which I coramend to the gracious and fatherly blessings of the Almighty. From the Court at Richraond the 17th of December 1586. Your assuredly bounden poor friend, Sajiuel Cox.* MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, I have lately received your very long letter, more bit terly written to offend your poor friend, than is fit to proceed from any man of religion and modesty, whereof you seem to make profession. Among other matters therein you charge me somewhat sharply with ray disliking of Puritans, in that I should say they were pietatis simulatores potius quam cultores, men nourishing popularity under a shew of piety, and working * Additional MSS. 15891. vi THE LIFE AND TIMES OF confusion under the colour of perfection. I cannot deny what I have said, though I protest I spake it not with any intent to offend you : and to recant my opinion I may not, for (seeing you are a sectary brought up in that scbool) I take it to be as far from error as yours is from truth. But yet, if I have spoken anything which is not justifiable in learning and rea son I will always willingly submit myself to the correction of a better judgment, errare possum, hereticus esse nolo : and I will rather sit on the ground with little ease than rise and fall with great danger. The author of strife, saith Solomon, is as one that openeth the waters. I pray you, what are your preci sians? If any raan be contentious, saith St. Paul, (speaking of external things) we bave no such custom, nor tbe Churches of God: how then can you excuse your Puritans ? that where soever they corae do raise contention and kindle the fire of discord, that without any consultation first bad with the Church, are bold to broach new fancies among the people of their own devising, that take from Princes their due author ity in ecclesiastical raatters, that bring into contempt such as be in authority, and make the ignorant subject lofty and arro gant : is not this a sowing of darnell where the Ught of the word is revealed ? and a laying of grievous stumbling-blocks to stop the passage of the Gospel ? Is it tolerable think you in these.perilous times to dream of alteration and to disturb the peace of the Church with new contentions of external things nothing pertinent to faith and salvation, when the Pope is so vigilantly watchful in every corner to leap in at every little breach to seek our confusion. If my disallowing hereof have moved you to think amiss of me, I ara sorry any such raatter should procure rae your ill-will; but seeing it is for the truth's sake, I will hope you will not stop your ears against it, nor think sinisterly of him that hath ever in truth and plain ness unfeignedly loved you. And so, I coramit you to God. From Whitehall the 20th July 1587. Your very plain poor friend, Sam. Cox. SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. vli MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, Your servant coming lately forth of the country in formed me of an inclosure which you have made not mauy days since, to your great increase of benefit, which I was right glad to hear of. Nevertheless, remembering how well I have ever loved you, and how it standeth not with the duty of a friend to cover with any mask of flattery, or other deceitful colour of plausibility, the imperfections of him whom I affect so dearly as yourself, I could not choose but open the plain wonted meaning of my well-wishing and good-will towards you in these few lines which I have written unto you, not so mueh to please you, (though haply in policy another man would think it fit I should do so for mine own good,) but plainly and faithfully to advise you, in the sincerity of my love, what is meetest for you to regard in this matter, for the particular re spect of your own reputation and credit. If in turning your land to pasture, which bath been accustoraably occupied in tillage, you have first considered your public duty to your natural Country, before you descended into the private care of your own commodity, it is tolerable and lawful to do that which you have done : if not, be not offended with me, I pray you, (for bitter medicines may profit, though they please not,) if I be bold to tell you tbat it were better you had no land than you should so abuse it; no private possessions, than so to pervert them to the public desolation of your country. I need not show you what enormities rise in the Comraonwealth by such raanner of enclosures. You know as well as I how they engender idleness, tbe ground all were : how they enfeeble and impair tbe defence and strength of our Country, by reducing multitudes of people living honestly by their lawful labours, to the nuraber of two or three idle herdsmen. You are not ignorant how Churches are destroyed, and the service of God in many places thrown down to the ground, the Patrons and Curates wickedly wronged, and all by tbe decay of husbandry, one of the greatest commodities of our Country. If, therefore, it pleased viii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF you to lay these things wisely before your eyes, as considera tions worthy to be called to council before you entered to make your enclosure, no doubt it will prosper and succeed well, as a building laid upon a sure foundation : if not, per suade yourself the ground-work was naught, and, therefore, must needs shortly perish, and bring with it more increase of late repentance than of honest benefit ; whereof, the best will be this, the justice of the law will pronounce judgment against you: her Majesty, or next immediate Lord of the fee, sball possess half the value of the issues of your land so inclosed : the whole Country which once dearly loved you for your well living, will now justly hate you for your lucre ; and the end will be nothing else but loss of reputation witb your friends, and increase of defamation among your enemies, from wbich God ever keep you by his "gracious goodness, to whose blessed favour I heartily coramend you. From my lodging in Corn- hiU, the 19tb of October 1587. Your faithful assured friend, Samuel Cox. MR. SAMUEL cox TO ...,.,., . Sir, Your news of the hostile preparaticms in Spain are somewhat strange unto me, but yet not such as can make rae fearfully think that they tend to the invasion of England, as raany men conceive. I was in good hope tbat our troubles had been now at an end, and that the peace so generally spoken of would have concluded ere tbis time our lingering and languishing wars; but I perceive tbe King keepeth his old wont, and, like a greedy horse-leech, will not let go the skin till he be full of blood, delighting rather with the wilful mariner, to sail still in the tempestuous broad sea, than with the wise pilot to withdraw himself after storms into tbe calra and quiet haven. So Scotland stand firm and sure unto us, I ara of opinion we shall not need to fear the Spanish brags. It is not here that they mean to land, where they shall have neither faction to back them, nor haven to harbour tbem ; but in Scotland, rather, where they shall have both tbese wants plentifuUy supplied, and wbere their weak, sea-beaten, sick SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. ix soldiers may bave quiet landing and good cherishing till they may be able and fit to assail their enemies. The Frenchraen did so (if you remember,) in King Edward the Sixth's time, who, attempting to land their forces at Hythe, were all scat tered and discomfited, by good fortune, at their first arrival. They found no faction armed in England to receive their fo reign forces at their landing, and therefore they repaired with their power into Scotland, hoping by that means to invade England, both witb success and facility ; and so will tbey do now, in my opinion, wanting confederates here to succour them in the execution of their malice against us If they should attempt to invade us alone of themselves, they must look for uo other fortune than they met with in King Henry the Eighth's time, twice in Sussex and once in the Isle of Wight, where, offering to make certain incursions witb their galleys and gaUiasis, they were all overthrown and discomfited, though we had wars, even at the same instant also, with the Scots, which gave thera great opportunity and advantage against us. I do not remember that there bath been any sea conflict of moment at any time between the Englishmen and Spaniards, unless it were once in King Richard the Second's time, who, understanding of a great fleet that should go out of Spain into Flanders, sent and set forth a navy with all speed to meet with them, with whom, entering into battle, it fortuned that the EngUshraen and their ships were all scattered and overthrown ; and other than this precedent of sea-fight between us and thera I cannot caU to memory, but examples are rife and frequent of sea-battles between the Frenchmen and us, though, in truth, ever fearfuUy foreseeing how perilous a train, and what hazard of ill-success an invasion raight draw with it, they have seldom attempted at any time to invade us. It is true that, in King Richard the Second's time, the French gal- leysdestroyed and burntdivers towns upon the EngUsh coasts, as Rye, Hastings, Portsmouth, and Gravesend ; but they did it not by a settled invasion, but by a sudden incursion, and departed withaU possible speed as soon as they had done tbat they came for. At anoUier tirae they burnt Plyraouth and many towns in the X THB LIFB AND TIMES OF Isle of Wight in the same manner; but they did it by stealth, and fled iraraediately. In the civil war wbich King Henry the Fourth had waged with Owen Glendower, the Frenchmen in vaded England with a hundred and forty ships, and landed twelve thousand raen in Milford Haven, to aid Owen Glen dower : but the end of their enterprise was raiserable ; for the Lord Barkley burnt divers of their sbips as they lay at road in tbe haven, and the rest escaped by fleeing and retiring thera selves into Brittany. King Edward the Fourth, making war at tbe entreaty of the Duke of Burgundy against the French King, invaded France with five hundred sbips; but the French men never attempted, for all that, to invade England. So, likewise, in the great wars which King Henry tbe Fifth made against the French King, the Englishmen invaded France, and at the battle of Harfleur sunk five hundred French vessels, almost the whole navy of Franee ; but the Frenchmen had pa tience with this overthrow, and never sought any revenge by invading England. The Scots, in truth, took their opportunity in the meanwhile to exercise their mahce upon us, but tbe Duke of Exeter, the King's uncle, and the Archbishop of York, having raised a power to march against tbem, made them re tire themselves into Scotland with shame, and to repent their rashness. So that, for mine own poor opinion, the state of England being naturaUy strong by the opportunity of the scite and sea as it is, we need not greatly fear the peril of any foreign inva sion, so we be true and faithful within ourselves ; for unless we be divided by faction or evil sedition, it will be a most diffi cult and dangerous enterprise for any stranger to invade us, much more, in bis invasion, to have the upper hand over us. In King Henry the Third's time, Lewis, the Dauphin of France, invaded England with seven hundred ships. He pos sessed all the east part of it; he had the sea open to pass to and fro at his commandment; he had divers fortresses and strongholds in his possession, whereby to entertain a defensive war. The City of London and the Tower had submitted themselves to his mercy; the Barons had crowned hira Kin<^; the Warden ofthe Cinque Ports, who kept the Keys of Eng- SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xi land under his girdle, confederated with him as one at his de votion. He had maintained wars the space of three years in England, and Henry the Third, his enemy, being but a child, and unfit, for the imbecility of his youth, to wrestle with so po tent a Prince in wars, all which helps and benefits of fortune and force notwithstanding, when the nobility of the realm be gan once to forsake him, he was glad to raake peace with King Henry, and to renounce all his interest and title in the Crown, together with all such possessions, castles, and holds as in three years' space he had recovered into his hands. So did Robert Duke of Normandy, another invader in the time of King Henry the First. The .... had called him in to make him a King ; he landed at Portsmouth quietly, with a great power of men ; he had raany great helps to advance himself to the title and fortune of a King; but in the end, though he bad reduced a good part of the realm under his sub jection, yet was he forced to offer conditions of peace, and was contented to avoid the country : and as neither of both these last Princes had invaded England but by the aid and confede racy of the Barons, so were they both forced to flee and abandon their enterprise as soon as they saw themselves forsaken of the nobility, which, in respect of our present fear of trouble, is not unworthy of observation. I could tell you, that the King of Norway invaded England while WiUiam Rufus was absent, and occupied in the wars of Normandy; but to what purpose? The Welshmen called him in, and thought the King hiraself were absent; yet did the Earls of Chester aud Shrewsbury give him battle, and overthrew him with great honour and victory: whereby we may easily perceive how hard an enterprise it is to invade England, and to what infinite perils the invader is sub ject that maketh any sucb attempt. He must be first sure of a faction, readily prepared and armed to receive him, of the in habitants of the country, whom, if he be not able to bridle and command with forces of his own, and to overrule them as he shall see occasion, let him trust to it he shall never be assured of his new-conquered estate: on the other side, if his own ..... power be so great as may move fear or offence to the XII THE LIFB AND TIMES OF people which called him in, it is to be thought they will jea lously suspect that Prince's greatness, and abate it by all the timely raeans they may, to avert from themselves and children the fearful yoke of servitude which must needs fall upon them by suffering such dreadful raultitudes of foreign forces to oc cupy and possess their country. But it is more than time to make an end of my tedious scribbling ; wherein as I raust ear nestly pray your patience not to confirm, but without offence to tolerate only my poor opinion, so would I be glad you would be pleased to examine it thoroughly in your grave judgment, and to vouchsafe me sorae few lines frora yourself, in answer thereof, as your leisure shall serve you. With reference to your own discretion and best opportunity, I commit you to tbe gracious direction of the Almighty. From Fulbrook and Westhall Hill, the 2nd of Nov. 1587. Your very assured friend, S. Cox. MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, If your evil speeches did not proceed raore of spleen than of judgment, I should hardly digest your petulancy, and I could answer you if I listed, that seeing you speak what you should not, you raust be content to hear what you would not : but I will rather bear injury and be patientiy silent, than co piously eloquent, as you are, in this kind of immoderate railing rhetoric. I will only say thus rauch unto you ; if the laws were duly executed as they should be, if virtue were not trod den down and vice advanced ; if perfidy had not place and preferraent before piety ; if public authority were not con temptible and little regarded ; if magistrates in their offices were not coramonly vendible and corrupted, so wicked a man as yourself, in your words so venomously slanderous, in your deeds so hatefully impious, and in the whole action of your life so foully infamous,, could never be suffered to live and in sult as you do in all lawless liberty. If you had not raade shipwreck of all sharae, you would bave forborne, in coramon humanity, to have spoken so unreverently of my Lord as you did. It had beeu your duty to have known him to be a man SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, xiii that is your superior, and to have used him with reverence fit and due to his place, but when you have said all that you can, and that malice hath left nothing unsearched that raay nourish the vein of her humour, yet shall you not find him to be any of those that have raised sumptuous buildings ex sanguine et miseriis civium, or that do maintain the domestic pomp and magnificence of their own houses, with the laraentable spoils and rapines of the poor subject, which sorae men do, not un known to yourself, with no small touch and imputation to their credits. My Lord, your brother is a noble personage, much beloved for his gentleness, and openly praised of all men for his wisdom, he is one whom I have ever honoured greatly, but I could never be so fortunate as to be worthy of his favour. I am none of those in truth that cause hira as other men do, these mighty personages fall down and worship them, and offer up incense unto them as to hallowed altars. If I could, I might peradventure bave tasted as liberally of his goodness, as I now feel deeply his undeserved displeasure ; but I hope in the end he will look upon my poor merit and service with the eye of justice, and give to yourself, and sucb other bold and thick skinned faces tbe reward due to pickthanks and backbiters : and so I end for this time, wishing you more grace to make you acceptable to God, and more gratitude to use your friends more kindly than you do in your slanderous un kind speeches. Your over wronged poor friend, S. Cox. MR. SAMUEL COX TO LADY May it please your Ladyship, My desire hath been ever great to do your Ladyship some acceptable service, in part of requital and satisfaction of tbe many singular favours which you have often vouchsafed to show rae. But such hath my hard hap been, and still is to tbis day, that where I owe most in all humbleness of duty, there am I least able and most un worthy to perform, or show myself such as I ought to be ; which I humbly beseech your Ladyship to excuse, not as a wUful fault, (for I would willingly redress it if I knew well xiv THE LIFB AND TIMES OF how,) but as an imperfection of necessity, which (will I or no,) I must needs obey. Meeting by chance with this gentleman, and inquiring of your Ladyship's health, he told me that which I was most sorry to hear, and would be glad (by any service I could do you,) to remedy, if it lay in my Uttle power. I under stood by him, that your Ladyship hath been lately so shrewdly shaken with a fever, that it is strange to see so goodly and beautiful a lady altered and estranged so much, in so short a space, from the wonted excellence of beauty which heretofore raade you so perfect, rare, and peerless, in comparison of all other ladies. This is but to make you call to memory (my most honourable good Lady,) how brittle a foundation the gentlewomen build on, that ground all their glory upon beauty; a thing naturaUy flitting, and no more permanent than the time itself that cometh with it ; a transitory accident of the body, not able to continue, seeing the body and all, by course of nature, must pass away at the length like a shadow. It was truly said of tbe philosopher to tbe noble Lady Cornelia, that among all tbe qualities which pass away with this mortal body, none is more swift than beauty ; which, so soon as it hath showed itself as a pleasant flower, it vanisbeth even in the sight of them that wonder at it, and most commend it. It is quickly nipt with the least frost, and beaten down with every small wind, and either suddenly pinched off with the nail of some enemy's hand, or overthrown witb the heel of some sickness passing by: neither doth it bring so much delight when it cometh, as it procureth grief when it departeth. Domitian, tbe Emperor, wrote unto a friend of his, whom he esteemed a paragon of beauty, that there was nothing more acceptable than beauty, nor more brittle ; no gift of nature more glittering for tbe time, and less durable in respect of the end ; resting only upon the uppermost part of the party which possesseth it, covering raany filthy and horrible things, flattering and de luding the senses with a simple and slight overcasting of tbe naked skin. Whatsoever they be, therefore. Madam, that are de lighted with its vanity, they carry a veil before their eyes, a snare before their feet, and bird-lime upon their wings, which SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. XV will not easily suffer them to discern the truth, or follow vir tue, much less erect their minds to the contemplation of hea venly happiness. If the comeliness and colour of your Lady ship's face be changed with a few fits of a fever, in so short a time, you may easily conjecture what it would be with conti nual sickness and access of old age. Give me leave to be bold with you, my honourable good Lady, in telling you the truth. Those yellow locks of yours shall fall away, and such as remain shall wax hoary; the scaly wrinkles sball plough the loathsome furrows upon your tender cheeks and glistering forehead; a sorrowful cloud shall cover the cheerful beams and shining stars of your beautiful eyes ; rotten raggedness shall consume and fret away the smooth and white ivory of your fair teeth, not changing them only in colour, but disordering them also in place ; your straight neck and well-proportioned shoulders shall wax crooked, your smooth throat curled, and you shall think those dry hands and crooked feet were never your own. Such an enemy hath she always at home that carrieth beauty in her face : a misspender of time ; an occasion of pain and trouble ; a plentiful matter to minister peril; a maintainer of lust and unclean affection, if she have not tbe singular fear and grace of God before her eyes. If your Ladyship do Uve, these things will come upon you almost sooner than it can be spoken ; and if it please you now to believe rae, you shall tben less wonder to see how you are transformed. As the beauty and joy, there fore, of the body is but vain and transitory, so must I greatly commend your Ladyship (reputing it of so small price,) in that you do so worthily apply yourself to exercise the beauty of the mind ; a thing far more precious, pleasant, and sure than the other, consisting, likewise, of semblable laws and comeli ness of order, with apt and due disposition of the parts ; a treasure whicb neither length of time shall consume, nor sickness extinguish, nor death itself overthrow. To let pass to speak of other. Spurina was renowned, not for her natural beauty's sake, but for her procured deformity. Her virtue made her truly fortunate ; her beauty therein was most excel lent and acceptable, even as your Ladyship's is. As your grace xvi THB LIFE AND TIMES OF of beauty is joined with virtue, it is an ornament not unplea sant to sight, though short and frail ; otherwise, it is but as a burthien to the owner's mind, and an unlucky sign of sorrowful deceit ; frora the which God everraore preserve your Ladyship, and give you the fulness of His heavenly grace and beauty, to make you eternally happy and fair in His eyes and blessed favour. Your Ladyship's raost bounden at coraraandraent, Samuel Cox. mr. samuel cox to Sir, 1 tbank you rauch for your late letter, advertising me of the apprehension of the fisherman. I do not doubt but that he will be made discover some things that may greatly import the quiet state and safety of the realm,, if he be well and thoroughly sifted. Truly, Sir, these foreign fishermen, under colour of fishing, do rauch harra, and are notable spies for strange Princes to work us privily great raischief. They secretly sound and search our channels, our deeps, our shoals, banks, and bars along the sea coasts : tbey run up into our havens, our creeks, our bays, and into our very roads. They take the best raarks for tbe avoid of danger, they try the safest land ings, and become perfecter in the knowledge of our sea coasts than our own masters and pilots, whieh even in peace bringeth great peril, but in time of war double danger. It is injury enougb, and raore than tolerable, that her Majesty suffereth at tbeir hands to be deprived yearly of so many hundred thou sand pounds as she is, by abusing her rich fishing upon her sea coasts, and, if ancient records be true, tbe Low Countries do not make so little yearly as 490,000Z. sterling only by the herring wbich they take in the seas appropriate to her Ma jesty's dominions, a great mass of treasure, and a commodity which few Princes would lose, that migbt have so good right to it as her Majesty hath : at the least, she raigbt in honour and justice require the tenth, though of her gracious goodness she would grant the stranger the rest. Seeing they receive greater benefit, and with less charge by the sea than the poor labouring husbandman doth within the land, by the tilth of SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Xvii the earth, what reason is there (especially taking their fish within her Majesty's peculiar seas and sea coasta) that they should be wholly exerapt of all tithing? The tenth is a duty. Sir, as you know, which every raan oweth to God in token of his thankfulness for those benefits which it pleaseth him to give us ; and seeing God and nature hath established the royalty of our British seas and coasts in her Majesty, there is just cause in my opinion that they should yield her the tenth, as well in respect of God's part, to whom all tithe is due, as also for a grateful acknowledging of the great commodities which they receive within the royal sea limits of her High ness' dominions. It is a hard thing when ourselves, being beaten firom our own fishings and fishing places, must be glad to buy our own commodities of strangers, a matter against all reason, conscience, law, and good civil policy. But Sir, pardon me, I beseech you, that I am so bold to run into so large a field and discourse of this matter, it is a thing, I know, that many men have spoken of in highest places, and conld have no redress locutores permulti, pauci sunt agentes. Yet, Sir, let it not offend you that I, poor fisherman, do lay my hook also among others to catch the fish which hath been so long hoped for. I am glad to understand that her Majesty hath entertained that worthy preacher to attend on her High ness in Court whom you so highly commend. I know the man well, and have been long acquainted with hira ; he is, in truth, an honest, zealous minister, full of God's spirit, a man brought up in righteousness, ready to all good works ; I would in God we had more such labourers in his holy vineyard. We have many that preach unto us in the lamb's weeds, but are inwardly ravening wolves : many, that witb tbeir premeditated painted orations thrust out the Pope at the fore gate, but re ceive him in again by tbe example of their lewd lives at the privy postern. God frame their hearts to embrace his word, and to follow it ! for the godliness and virtue of Prince and Prelate is a great help to universal holiness ; and if these be remiss and unclean, the rest (finding open the gate of licen tious liberty) run headlong by throngs into the imraeasurable APP". 3 B xvm THE LIFE AND TIMES OF field of errors, sects, and blasphemies. From the which God ever preserve us, to whose gracious favour I commend you. From London, the 18th of April 1588. Your assured friend, Samuel Cox. mr. samuel cox to his cousin and namesake. My GOOD Cousin, You are now called, as I hear, from your private pleasant studies, wherein you might safely take delight without danger, to the public office and function of an Ambas sador, which you sball hardly execute without peril. Many raen, for vain glory sake,have unadvisedly desired sueh places, which afterward, instead of reputation, have justly yielded thera ruin and repentance ; but I assure myself, good Cousin, tbat you are -none of those ; and I beseech God rather keep you from the office than call you to it for any such reward. I do not doubt but tbat the very name of an arabassador is enough to make you fear the place, and to show you what the office importeth, and requireth in sufficiency at his hands that must discbarge the same. In aneient times past Princes were so exquisite in the choice of their Ambassadors, that they em ployed no raan in that function but such as had integrity, learning, and wisdom; how you find yourself, good Cousin, furnished with these perfections I refer to your own judgment. They were always men publicly noted for their virtues, and were called legati a legendo, because they made a public lec ture ; and so likewise they bear the name of orators, for that they were, or should be, eloquent, that is, learnedly able, by tbe help of long experience, to deliver all raatters committed to their charge in apt and good words. Sucb an arabassador was that noble Cyneas, for King Pyrrhus, of whom it is writ ten that omnium animos facunda et diserta oratione sic quoquo vellet pelliciebat, ut Pyrrhus ejus opera, plures sese urbes re cepisse, quam catafractorum viribus et impetu, sapenumero glori- aretur. Demosthenes was such another ; highly commended for his learning and eloquence, and openly praised of all raen for his wisdora. But, Cousin, the exceUence of those tiraes and persons is not to be stained with the comparison of this SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xix ignorant, barren age of ours. Their ambassadors were all grave, wise orators, and such as had been fathers of long and great experience : ours in respect of theirs (I am sorry to say it) are little better at tbis day than grammarians and sophis ters, qui verborum fiosculis, nuUa rerum scientia pollent, and therefore forbidden by the law in truth to be ambassadors, though the weakness of the time do for necessity sake allow them. I speak not tbis as one thinking you unworthy of the place, for I know the contrary, but only to show you what an ambassador ought to be, that will worthily discharge such an office; and yet, to be plain with you, I had rather you went without it than had it if you might conveniently avoid it, as I am persuaded you might if you would humbly seek to be freed of it. Titus Manlius Torquatus (if I forget not tbe story), having an infirmity in bis eyes when he was chosen Consul, refused for that cause to take it upon him, alleging tbat there was no reason that the fortune and state of others should be committed to his care that had no eyes to see or foresee what was fittest for himself. The Senate well accepted of his rea son, and spared him the election ; and so I think her Majesty would do, you having as just cause of excuse as he had, if you would seek it, on your knees, at your Prince's gracious bands, as he did. You see yourself feeble and sickly, and an ambassador's office requireth a strong body; he mustbe up early and down late, watch long and with little ease, make many sudden and painful journeys, and those accompanied also with divers and sundry perils, for the King's service, which asketh a body of sound health, not crazed and subject to many infirmities as yours is. More tban that, where the law prescribeth that he should be five-and-twenty years old at the least that should be called to be a Prince's Ambassador, you know your years are not yet so many, and therefore as yet unmeet to be so employed. Your poverty, besides, (which is a dangerous temptation, if God should not the better guide you with bis grace,) might be some reason in this case to move her Majesty to think you unfit for the place. It is not un known to her high wisdora that foreign Princes used raany 3 b 2 XX THE LIFE AND TIMES OF times to lay their hooks baited with rich presents to catch am bassadors withal that are poor and needy ; and though it be known well enough that no man can corrupt you with gifts, nor possibly allure you with any unbonest lucre, yet is it perilous that an ambassador should ob facultatum inopiam, tur- piter quceritare victum ; which your indigent estate raigbt be apt enough to force you unto, if her Highness (before she called you to this place) should not bountifully supply your great want; which, if she sbould do on tbe other side according to the measure of your necessity, your service might happily be over dear to her, especially in these frugal tiraes wben rewards are so scant, even where they are best deserved. But, Cousin, I will say no more to you, as you know the coraraonwealth's sore, so am I sure that you understand your own grief best, and are best able to use best means to cure it. To be short, I will only wish you such a course in fortune as may be safest, both here and elsewhere for yourself, and not thought fraudu lent in your absence to your many poor creditors, who, now with open gorge, are ready everywhere to exclaim on you, for that they say you have sought this preferment as a place of immunity and privilege, of purpose to defraud them of their debts ; and some of them stick not to allege for themselves, that so deep a debtor by the justice of the law ought not to be employed in any such public office ; and that, ei qui are alieno obstructus est, legatione hiter dicitur. I would be glad, my good Cousin, that I were able either to say or do anything to free your shoulders from the burden of so weighty a charge ; but being an unfit instrument to deal in so great a cause, I rerait the use of these and such other reasons wholly to the consi deration of your own judgraent, resting ever as faithfully yours as you have justly bound rae. From my lodging in Cornhill, the 20th of April 1588, Your very fast true friend and kinsraan, Sam, Cox, MR. SAMUEL COX THE YOUNGER TO MR. SAMUEL COX. Sir, Among so many notable benefits, whereby you have made me very liberally and deeply beholden to you, there SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Xxi hath been nothing more beneficial to me I confess in my life time, than your grave and friendly advice, always readily given me, in all times of my need, both for my commodity and com fort. I cannot deny but that the office of an Arabassador (according to your opinion,) is in some sort accompanied with many perils, for that was the reason indeed why the law at the first, (considering to what dangers ambassadors are daily subject unto) did grant them such large and honourable pri vileges: and I remember, that Cneius Octavius, being sent ambassador by the Romans to King Antiochus, was slain at Laodicea by a lewd abject fellow of no account, for which cause the Romans made war against the King : so were Tullius Clinius, Lucius Roscius, Spurius Manlius, and Caius Flaminius, all Roman ambassadors, cruelly put to death by Tolominus, King of the Fidenates and of the Veientes, The Sibaritse also executed thirty ambassadors sent to thera by the Crotoniatae, and caused thera to be tbrown out of the gates of the city, and laid as a rueful spectacle before the walls un buried, which are examples, I must needs say, very mani festly proving that ambassadors live not without peril. Yet, Sir, let me desire you also to reraeraber withal, tbe care that tbe law hath taken to provide for their safeties : which saith, that legatus totaque ejus familia et comitatus, est inter hostium tela sacrosancta et inviolabilis. If any man do offer an ambassa dor, or any of his train, any manner of violence to the touch or violation of the honourable prerogative which the law of nations hath given him, as a guard to defend him from all hurt and injury, qui eam violaverit aut pulsaverit, traditione ac deditione pkctendus est. If he or any of his train, were but stricken only, not hurt, and much less slain, yet, for this pre sumption and inhumanity, tbe law maketh the ambassador judge and revenger of his own cause and injury. We read, therefore, tbat Lucius Minutius and Lucius Manlius, for striking the ambassadors of Carthage, in a general and public council and assembly of the people, were forthwith delivered to the ambassadors themselves, to be punished for their offence, as they sbould think good. Quintus Fabius and xxii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF Cervius Apronius, were served in like sort, for the Uke vio lence offered to the arabassadors of the ApoUonians : so that, considering how strong a defence an ambassador's privilege is unto him in peril, and that he carrieth evermore the justice of the law, yea, rather the sword of punishment about with him, wheresoever he goeth, to correct and revenge all sucb wrongs as any man shall dare to proffer him, I see not (if I were worthy of the place, as I am not,) why I should fear more to be an ambassador abroad for tbe public service of my country, (having those regal liberties to defend me,) than a private man at home without them, to follow and attend raine own particular causes. One privilege among the rest encourageth me as much as anything else to take the office upon rae, and it is this, that for three years' space after my time of legation expired, the law doth freely exempt and spare rae from all public services. Nam qui legatione functus est, as you know better than I can tell you, intra triennium ad aliud publicum negotium compelli non potest. Beside this, it will be some restraint to bridle raine enemies' malice, who (having now, in the flame of their rage, coraraenced raany wrongful suits against rae, in hope, by their indirect practices, to consume me by the misery of the same) shall be commanded by ber Majesty to surcease their suits, and the judges to forbear to give judgment until my return; in wbich mean while I shall win the benefit of time to relieve me of their grievous and un just vexations: which, otherwise, without this privilege ofher Majesty's service, might peradventure be ray utter undoing. Omnibus, saith the law, qui reipublicce causa absunt, jure civili conceditur, ut quamdiu suo munere funguntur judiciorum aleam subire non cogantur : which favour among the rest (though I be raost unworthy) 1 hope ber Majesty, in her gracious goodness will not deny me. I could extenuate by many reasons the perils which you object to see so great in the exercise of this office, if I thought it fit in so small a matter to trouble you any longer. But, Sir, to what purpose ? I could put you in raind of raany women (who in the irabeciUty of their sex, being naturaUy fearful to incur dangers,) have, notwithstand- SIR CHRISTOPHER HAITON, XXIII ing, taken upon them to be ambassadors in great and weighty causes : but to what end should I labour tanquam Phormio, to teach Hannibal the stratagems of war ? You know that the thirty Sabine virgins were sent as ambassadors to the Romans to entreat for peace, and tbe Princes of when they would celebrate the Olympic games, used commonly to send women of honourable quality as their public ambassadors, to solemnize the same. You may remember also, that Volumnia and Vatuiria, most modest and virtuous matrons, were sent as ambassadors unto Coriolanus. And the senate of Rome sent the Vestal virgins, by the advice and persuasion of Aulius Vitellius, unto Vespasianus the Emperor, to beseech him to incline to peace : whereby you may perceive, that, if women, by nature weak, by want of wisdora imperfect, and by the frailty of their sex timorous, have discharged these high offices without fear of peril, and without those singular per fections which you think needful in ambassadors, tbere is no such great cause as you pretend in respect of danger, to dis suade any man from the exercise of tbe same. Pardon rae, therefore, I beseech you, Sir, if for ray country's cause I sub mit myself willingly to the fortune of this place, what misfor tune soever do befal me. We are all bound by God's word, not for fear Uke men pleasers, but for conscience sake like chris tians, to serve him truly, to obey our Prince faithfully, and to travail in our vocation, like subjects, honestly : and seeing the Prince, who is God's ordinance, hath commanded rae to this service, I should think not to do it, were to leave my true duty, to fall from my faith, and rashly to judge her Majesty unjust and cruel in her commandments, whom all men have ever found most just and gracious. And so I commit you to God. From my lodging in Cornhill, the 27th of April 1588. Your very assured friend. S. Cox. Sir, Your fear of foreign invasion by strangers' power is much greater in my opinion, tban you bave just cause to con ceive, if you would with light of understanding look well into the present strength and state of England, as it standeth at xxiv THE LIFE AND TIMES OF this day. If Pericles said to the Athenians, who had not by many degrees so large and absolute dorainion of the sea as her Majesty, magnum est potiri mari, si insulani essemus, inex- pugnabiles essemus, what raay her Majesty say of England, and how much are we bound to thank God, that it is not only an island, but the best fortified island, with shipping, men, muni tion, this day in all Christendom. I am glad to hear that the Lords of her Majesty's privy council have providentially taken such order as you advertise rae they have, to prevent the misery which is like generally to fall upon us, through tbe scarcity and want of corn. Yet can 1 not a little marvel, how this great lack should arise, considering the late seasonable and fruitful years which we have had. All dearth groweth either of ordinary causes natural, takiug effect according to the pre-destined plat of the whole world's economy ; or of ex traordinary means of God's sending : as for natural impedi ments, either by excessive moisture or abundant heat, or how soever else, they bave not been such as can give any man just cause to think that tbey have been the raotives of this universal steriUty : neither hath God taken the blessings and fruit ofthe earth frora us, by any extraordinary mean of his heavenly divine power, so that this want which we feel must needs be altogether fraudulent, and falsely pretended in my opinion, by some caterpillars and ravening wolves, who have either purely stolen and conveyed away our corn and victual to the enemy, whereby tbey have procured this dearth, or else have made tbe Commons believe, in times of great abundance, that there was great scarcity and want of things, wbich they have done only to advance their own private gains, an abuse too common in these days, and unfit to be suffered. I have many times wished tbat we were well acquainted here in England with the secret of Nuremberg, in reserving and keeping their corn sweet and unputrefied many years together, as in those parts they do. In these perilous times of scarcity, it were a most necessary thing for our relief, and worthy to be put in practice. It is thought that the fertility of England is such, if men do but use their coramon industry, that it is plentifully and SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. XXV wholesomely able, one year with another, to victual and feed twice as many more as it doth : so tbat if the surplusage were by good order reserved within the realm, and some part of it every year laid up in store, no doubt we might enjoy con tinued plenty, or at least sufficiency of all manner of needful victuals, at competent and reasonable prices. But, Sir, leaving these sores and griefs of commonwealth to the skilful judg ment of such as understand them better than myself, I end in some haste as you see with ray earnest intreaty, that you will pardon my boldness. From the Court at Greenwich, the 2nd of May 1588. Your assured friend, S, C. MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, My brother Mardin taketh it unkindly, that you re proach him so often as you do with his fatber's late offence, and myself (to be plain with you) if his case were mine, would be loath to hear of a fault so often, that had so much discomfitted or grieved the offender. Christ was born for us all, and yet himself, touching his humanity, carae of some evil disposed ancestors, though his person were sacred and unspotted, and solely and singularly holy. But being God and man he wiped away (which we cannot do) that stain of iniquity with the most divine and omnipotent power of his Deity, and was only pure and perfect. Tbamar committed a fault with her husband's father ^ and Judas the patriarch lay incestuously with bis son's wife : and yet this adulterous seed (through the incomparable bounty of God) enjoyed the Royal sceptre. We may not therefore disdain, or reproach any man for the frailty of his ancestors, for what is he, whose house and blood (if it were well sifted) carrieth not with it, in some sort or other, the spots of humanity and of Adam's fall. Christus est heri et hodie et usque in secula futurus, he was the son of Adam, as well as of David ; the publicans and sinners sat with him at his table, as well as his disciples, he died for those that were dead before him, as well as for those which lived after him, and though some of us be raore sinners than others, yet may we all go hand in hand together in that Baby- XXVI THE LIFE AND TIMES OF lonical captivity of sin, and no man can say but be is an exile frora God, and a banished man from Heaven and his own Coun try, through the bondage and punishments of sin, unless it please God to manumit him by his raercy, and restore him again as a lost sheep to everlasting liberty. But Sir, here I will make an end, and pray you to pardon rae that am so sud denly of a prater become a preacher of divinity, to one that is raore able to teach me, than I am able to learn. From West- ballhill, the lltb of May 1589, Your well affected poor friend. S, Cox, MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, I ara requested to desire your favour in the behalf of an old soldier, now lately pressed (as I hear) to go to tbese new wars. I beseech you, Sir, be as good to him as you raay, and reraember his long absence already for bis Country's cause from his wife and children. It is a privilege due, as you know, to old soldiers, not to be constrained, but to serve vo luntarily; nee quem militem veterem invitum ducendijus est, sed voluntarium. If any home forces or urban bands be levied to re raain within the Realm (as comraonly there are in such peri lous times to raeet with intestine tumults if any shall happen) this raan is as fit as any I know to be eraployed in such a service. I arn glad it pleaseth her Majesty to send a power into Spain to prevent their coming hither. It was tbe coun cil of Sulpitius the consul to the people of Rome, in the wars intended by the Romans against the Macedonians. Macedo nia potius quam Italia bellum habeat, hostium urbes agrique ferro atque igni vastentur ; and we may as truly say as they, Expecti jam sumus foris nobis quam domi foeliciora potentiora- que arma esse. You remember tbe story better than I. If the Romans had sent forth their armies to succour Sagunt, when the Carthaginians besieged it, they had diverted the war in Spain, which afterward Hannibal brought into Italy, and . . the second war with the Carthaginians, when experi ence and their former careless cunctation had raade him wise too late, they sent their armies into the enemy's country to SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, XXVII keep their own home from foreign spoil. And I could wish, Sir, before the going forth of the army, that there raight be some solemn public thanks given to God, used generally throughout the realm, both by prayer and preaching; no doubt he looked for such a sacrifice at our hands ; and it were needful, and more than needful for the expiation of our foul and heavy sins : even the pagans in like troubles solebant ma joribus kostiis rem divinam facei'e. The Romans did it after their superstitious blind raanner in all their wars, especially in those which they made against Philip, King of Macedonia. If they did it to their false painted iraages, shall not we do it to our ever living true God against the King of Spain ? As for the late Scottish road into England it makes rae remeraber Amilear's case toward the Roraans. This Car thaginian captain, contrary to the league, seduced certain French subjects to stir rebellion against the Romans, even as Bonner hath done lately, being a Scot, against England. The Carthaginians could not get Amilcar, for if they could, they had delivered him unto them ; but they banished hira for his offence and confiscated his goods, wbich is as much in this case as her Majesty can require at the King's hands in satisfaction of justice. And so. Sir, I leave any longer to trouble you, wishing I were able in any sort to requite your manifold and undeserved courtesies. Frora Westhallhill the 12th of May 1589. Your beholding poor friend, S. Cox. A LETTER TO HIS FRIEND THAT HAD GIVEN MONEY FOR AN OFFICE. Sir, It is an ordinary custom among friends to congratu late with one another upon any advancement or increase of good fortune, and so should I do and would do most willinglv with you for your late preferraent, were it not that I hear that you have rather purchased it with raoney than deserved it by virtue. To desire any office as a man is tolerable, but to solicit or sue for it as an ambitious seeker thereof is uncomely and hately. Whatsoever is procured by unlawful means is XXVUI THE LIFE AND TIMES OF unlawful, and having obtained your office, (being a place of justice) by unjust and corrupt solicitation doth more justly give me cause to condole than congratulate with you for your preferment. Seldom or never prospereth the magistrate that buyeth his office, nor the commonwealth that tolerateth any such enormity. The wise raan is admitted to give council for his judgment ; the learned man for his much reading ; and the old man for his experience : if for any of these respects you had been admitted to your office, men would then have reve renced you for your virtue, where now they do yield it you but only for your place. He that sits to judge many, must expect in reason that raany will judge him: therefore assure yourself, however men may fear your authority, they will afford you little love unless you deserve it. He that hath liberty, with little knowledge how to use it, is as a ship with out a pilot ; and be tbat hath integrity without desert is sepulchre ; I may not say as a dye in purple. The surest estate is that which is most remote from envy. Before you were a magistrate you lived in safety, what you will or shall do now I know not ; only this I know, that in mine own opinion, it is better to contemplate with the poor philosopher than to practise government with the rich rulers. And so praying your patience to judge the best of my boldness, I wish you all joy and good desert in the late increase of your new good fortune. From Westhallhill tbe 7th of July 1589. Your very assured plain poor friend, Sam, Cox. MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, I am sorry to perceive your offence conceived against me for little or no cause, if I be not deceived ; but my hope is, that in the end you will have patience to bear the truth, as no doubt you have wisdom to resist all such as are apt without cause to reprove other men of error. Many raen love to warm themselves with the wool of other men''s sheep, and to accuse others unjustly, to the end themselves raay in show seera, though not in deed, worthily blameless. But, Sir, I beseech SIR CHRISTOPHER H.VTTON. XXIX you do not, as many times ill judges do, pardon the crow and punish the dove, neither be over hasty to give ear to in formers, for they that so do must needs have guilt. The proverb is I find to . . . true in mine own case. 1 have been as careful as raight be possible not to offend you. I have many tiraes made a curtesy to ne cessity because I would not displease you ; I bave ever desired to love you, more for your virtue than to fear you for your authority, and yet can other men tbat reverence you with their lips, wben their hearts are far from you, find more favour at your hands than myself, that ara more willing than any man to enjoy your good opinion, and inferior to none in the honest course of true friendship to deserve it. But, Sir, in nocency in peril is a strong defence, which is all the comfort I have in the accusation whicb you lay to my charge ; and so hoping that you will hear patiently and judge justly, and that you will not over credulously give ear to informers, who as wasps among bees, rather Uve to sting than to gather honey, I end most dutifully obedient to all your commandments, as one more ready to stoop and to kneel with the camel when he is to take his burden, than frowardly with tbe stubborn Pharisee to justify myself in any of my actions that do any way offend you. And so I most humbly take my leave. From Westhall hill, the 7th of July 1589. Your Honour's at commandraent, Sam. Cox. MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, Your yesterday's letter reprehending me in some sort for my sharpness against the use of playa I received this day by your brother Mr. Lewin, for the whicb I heartily thank you, especially for your friendly care and regard which I find in them, to satisfy me in some points which I stood in doubt of; I must confess unto you I am somewhat scrupulous for the tolerating of tbese stage-plays which are now adays without respect of person, time, or place, so much used and allowed among us. They were pastimes, very odious to tbe ancient Fathers, and first instituted in the beginning for the honour xxx THE LIFE AND TIMES OF of idols: and (being commonly fuU of vile and unbonest words, interraingled with rauch lightness, lack of gravity, and comeUness,) I see no cause in my poor opinion why they should not rather be suppressed than suffered ; forbidden as hurtful than borne withal as meet exercises in any Christian regiraent. This raade Chrysostom say, tbat the Devil builded stages in cities, and first invented plays to delude tbe people ; that they contained tbe wicked acts and whoredom of the Pagan false Gods, grievously wounding the consciences of good men, and many ways kindling the flame of hateful lust in such as were addicted to frequent them. And David himself crieth out, saying turn away raine eyes, O Lord ! tbat tbey behold not vanity : Can there be any greater vanity tban these dangerous schools of licentious liberty, whereunto more people resort tban to sermons or prayers? Can any corruption be raore perilous or intolerable (especially in these latter tiraes, in whicb by teaching we ought to araend) than to nourish the people in idleness (which is your .... advice) and not com pel the loiterer to labour, who bringeth infaray and slander to the Coraraonwealth? What greater deformity can there be in any well reformed state than to see the folly of a few fools bring divers wise men out of their wits ? To see the gates of Magistrates open for the one and shut up against tbe other? To see rich men give more to a player for a song which he shall sing in one hour, than to their faithful servants for serving them a whole year? To see infinite numbers of poor people go a begging about the streets for penury, when players and parasites wax rich by juggling and jesting? It is said that tbe great and noble temple of Diana was built by the Amazons with the only money and riches taken from a player, and that the very pagans theraselves did laraent it, even in the tirae of blindness and ignorance, how rauch raore raay we Christians (enjoying the benefit of the Gospel) bewail the miseries of these times wherein we see raore bouses built for tbese lewd asserablies than for preaching or praying: alios mores hcec atas, aliam vitam postulat: It was wondered at that two parasites gave raore raoney to King Cadraus toward the build- SIR CHRISTOPHER H.\TTON. XXXi ing of the famous city of Thebes (which bad a hundred gates unto it) than all his subjects did besides: and is it not as strange and much more lamentable in these days that (pro fessing Christ as we do) we should suffer men to make profes sions and occupations of plays all the year long, whereby to enrich idle loiterers with plenty, while many of our poor brethren lie pitifully gasping in the streets ready to starve and die of penury ? In my poor opinion tbe building of Thebes with the parasites' ill-gotten cannot be more detest able, nor the more miserably wicked in this if we raust needs tolerate these spectacles of folly for the vain recreation of tbe people. I could wish that players would use themselves now adays, as in ancient former times they have done, wbich was only to exercise their inter ludes in the time of Christmas, beginning to play in the holi days and continuing until twelfth tide, or at the furthest until Ashwednesday, of which players I find tbree sorts of people : the first, such as were in wages with the King and played before him some time at Hallowmass, and then in the later hoUdays until twelfthtide, and after that, only in Shrovetide ; and these men had other trades to live of, and seldom or never played abroad at any other times of the whole year. The second sort were such as pertained to noblemen, and were or dinary servants in their house, and only for Christmas times used such plays, without making profession to be players to go abroad for gain, for in such cases they were subject to the statute against retainers. The third sort were certain artisans in good towns and great parishes, as shoemakers, tailors, and such like, tbat used to play either in their town- halls, or some tirae in churches, to make the people raerry; where it was lawful for all persons to corae without exacting any raoney for tbeir access, baving only soraewhat gathered of the richer sort by the churchwardens for their apparel and otber necessaries, in which raanner if our players now adays used their sports and pastimes (not making their playing an occupation of idleness all tbe whole year, but an occupation only at certain festival times of rest when tbe people are free xxxn THE LIFE AND TIMES OF from labour,) in my opinion they should less offend God in playing, and the magistrate for granting them a raoderate kind of Uberty. And so, praying pardon of you for ray troubling. of you so longwith a raatter of so idle and playing a subject, I comraend you to God's raerciful and richest blessings. From Westhallhill the 15th of January 1590. Your very true friend, Samuel Cox. MR. SAMUEL COX TO MRS. E- It is much against my will, good Mrs. E., and I beseech you think so, that I have been forced all this while to forbear in any sort to visit you; but seeing the cause comes from above, and not from any careless thoughts of raine own, my hope is, you will be favourably pleased not to interpret ray long silence unkindly ; how often I have wished you well, and how dearly I love you, were but in vain to tell you. Such tales need not but wbere the truth is not known ; but if mere cogitations were spirits, and could flee through the air invi sibly, as undoubtedly spirits do, I dare say to you boldly, you had had more messengers from me ere this time than you could have well devised matters to have sent them. Let it suffice then, I beseech you, good Mrs. E., tbat these few lines do faithfully assure you (though they come but slowly) that he which wrote thera affected you soundly, and raeaneth as sin cerely towards you as any friend you have living. Excuse me, I humbly pray you, if I seem too rude a scholar to you in this unaccustomed style of writing. You may see it is not my profession to make love, and my years (as you know) require other cares ; neither ara I skilful in truth in these kind of fanciful studies ; and yet seeing raen in my case, know what we wish, but not what is wisdora; and love (as the proverb is) knoweth no laws, give rae leave for once to be of his opinion, that thought it not fit for a lover to make any conscience of idle ceremonies. There was a law among the Lacedaemonians that he which loved youthfully at forty should lose the Uberty of a citizen tiU fifty : do but reraeraber it, and then think, I be seech you, how far I hazard rayself for your sake, tbat am SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. XXxiii content for the love of your favour not only to incur the peril of law, but also to abandon the sweetness of mine own liberty, the most precious possession that God can give me ; but in truth what would I not, nay what should I not do, for so rare a virgin, sueh a virgin especially whose eyes (all men see) are but as Ughts of modesty, whose ears Usten after nothing but piety, whose thoughts savour nothing but chastity, whose vir tues are such as need no other means to publish her praise than the merit of her own integrity ? I could say more if I would, but that I know you covet not to hear your own com mendation, which is none of the least of your virtues. Well, good Mrs. E,, you see you have that you deserve, I mean my love, though happily not that you desire, raore virtue in rae to be worthy of your favour, Iraagine I ara not the worst, though I be not the best, and then, I dare assure you, the golden Indies shall not better content you for their riches, than the plain well wishing of so poor a friend for bis fidelity; for so I will be, and so I must be, unless I should do you injury, God bless you, good Mrs, E , and give you the effect of your best desires, and me his favour, and yours to make me happy here and elsewhere for ever. Frora W , the . . of May 1590. Your very true friend, Sam. Cox. DR. seames to MR. SAMUEL COX. Sir, I have talked with our Miller wbom I find, as before, resolute (if he can choose) not to marry, and if he be con strained, not to love : and in such a case what I should say I know not. When marriages that should be comforts are turned to dislikes, then the law, propter nimiam sevitiam, or the like, granteth separation a thoro et mensa. As I do not weU see how it may be broken off, so I do not conceive how it may be comfortable to either party, in which respect I think it not amiss (if it raay possibly be done) that he sbould dotare et dimittere, which, in sorae reasonable sort, though his ability be but sraall, he may peradventure be brought unto ; and yet hitherto I cannot find that he will yield to anything, being already persuaded that the witnesses will not swear App«, 3 C xxxiv THE LIFB AND TIMES OF that which tbey have said. I have occasion myself to be ab sent in the term, and in the raean space to be much at Ox ford. If the parties should, by comraon consent, refer it to some indifferent friends, we might be eased, and tbe thing I bope weU ended ; but if it be to be dealt in while I reraain here, I wUl either be glad to see you here at a Scholars' Cora raons, or raeet you wbere you sball appoint. And so, with my very hearty coramendations, I coramit you to God, From Kingharae tbe 22nd of AprU 1594. Your assured loving friend, W, Seames. WRITTEN BY MR. SAMUEL COX FOR A FRIEND. Sir, I beseech you pardon rae, if being possessed witb some passion by reason of my grief, I do not so fully answer your letters and the effect of your desire as sbould become rae. I know you can conceive, and will easily consider in your wis dom, bow heavy a cross it is to the father, to see bis child, by wilfulness and want of grace, cast away and ruined ; of wbom be expected greatest comfort and obedience. Cbildren are bound by a natural band of piety, to honour and obey tbeir parents, to whom, if they owe humanity and thankfulness in anything, it is chiefly requisite in so neces,sary a tbing as marriage ; wherein tbey ought not to deal without their pa rents' knowledge and consents, to wbom botb by tbe law of God, and by the light of nature, it appertaineth most proper ly, to have care to determine of tbeir children's raarriages. But ray daughter, who was the chiefest cause of ray care and ray greatest hope of corafort, having taken upon her this weighty vow of raarriage, directly contrary to my mind, as wilfully bent in the frowardness of her heart to disobey me, and violently as it were, to carry me into my grave with tears, hath contemptuously trodden under foot all humanity and duty, both to God and to rae ber poor father, to whora she was raore bound to be thankful, for tbe manifold heavy cares which I have taken for ber well doing than I can easily raention. I concur not in opinion with those who tbink the parent's con sents in these cases to be more convenient than necessary. It SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. XXXV is a perilous gap of liberty opened to this and such otber un godly matches, which in many ancient coraraon weals, have been deemed so odious, as sucb contracts have not been only frustrated and disannulled, but the disobedient cbildren and persons so offending bave been severely punished. Adam himseff did not chuse Eve to be his wife, it was God bis father, that brought her unto him : no more did Isaac, but his father Abraham sent his servants to his kindred, to provide one for him. So did Isaac send Jacob unto Mesopotamia, to the end he might there make choice of a convenient match for him. . After this foUowed the law given of God, by Moses, that children should honour and obey their parents. But, Sir, to what end should I trouble him with these exaraples, whose wisdom knoweth them mucb better tban I am able to imagine, I beseech you pardon my presumption, and let the zealous love of a father to his child excuse this boldness of mine to so honourable a personage as yourself: unto whom, though fewer words might suffice in respect of your grave judgment, yet, being uttered in sorrow and grief, they may humbly (I hope) impetrate favour and pardon of you. Your assured true friend. UNKNOWN, TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, So great a hope have I in my long trial of your raer ciful disposition, as it eraboldeneth rae to tie your leisure to an unpleasant but needful repetition of Mr. Gifford's great extreraities, which have banished all hope if they be not, through your goodness, raitigated before the Parliaraent, that tirae yielding Uttle leisure or leave for such unregarded suits. It is your Honour's wisdom that can best determine my hura ble petition; therefore, reposing my only hope alonely in your accustomed favour, and laying at your feet our great mishaps, I forbear any longer to trouble you. Your Honour's raost bounden. 3 0 2 xxxvi THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THOMAS CHURCHYARD TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON." Sir, The duty I owe you, the friendship found, and ray desire to continue in your favour, raakes rae watch occasion to write and seek such raatter as raay be deUghtful for the worthy person to whora I send it. I have presuraed to show you a piece of the honourable entertainraent that Monsieur and his princely corapany hath here received. I rerait the circurastances to this bearer, but cannot orait rayself to tell you how glad I ara to see the people's affection to follow ray Lord of Leicester, as it doeth, by raeans of his wonted courtesy. I dare boldly assure you he hath lighted such a candle, botb for hospitality and noble train, to all this country, that few or none can show the like, or corae any thing near hira. The raarvellous dearth of victual, the greedy nature of this people, and the hardness of aU good things to be gotten, raaketh his honourable dealing shine the raore, and seera in a raanner wonderful; the covetous cruelty ofthe coramon sort, by their eager biting at gold, being such as it were enough to eclipse the brightness of a Prince's bounty. The prices of all things are so extremely unreasonable, as I ara persuaded a King's purse would scarcely reach with ease to the perforraance of that which we find his Lordship hath with great good fame and coraraendation raost nobly discharged. You raay think it strange that I dwell so long upon so sraall a raatter ; but if you were here to behold it in substance, you would pardon ray pen, and think it worthy of a larger discourse. For ray own part, I ara but a looker-on, and a weU-wisher to those whora of right I reverence, and desire to serve in all faithful duty ; but yet is there no raan that for the honour of his Country is raore glad than I to see this spectacle of true honour and virtue in our Nation so far shadowing all others that would contend to corae near it. Now I have betaken rayself to this course of service, ray desire is here to leave ray bones, the rather because I see ray country hath no grave for a Church yard. In furtherance of my intention herein, I must intreat boldly, as I am wont, the raediation of your goodness by SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. XXXvii writing a word or two to ray Lord of Leicester, to prefer rae to the battle, to the breach, or to sorae noble Seignior whose service raay help me to find that which I have long sought for, and could never with contentation obtain. The last re ward of a soldier is death ; this do I desire, as a man that have raade choice, though unworthy, of that profession. I seek no farra, I sue for no pension, nor I love not to live as an alras- raan : I covet to die like a Soldier and a true Subject, as loath to live any longer in raisery, when I see the world waxeth weary of ray weU-doing. If I raay entreat a few lines frora you, I shall conceive good hope to obtain ray request ; if not, I shaU doubt I ara forgotten there, where virtue hath most bound rae to bestow ray love and service. God increase your good fame, and raake you happy in His grace and all other prosperit)' ! Your Honour's so bound in duty, Thomas Churchyard. mr. samuel cox to sir henry lee. Sir, I had not thought that ray mild and meek manner of writing unto you could have possibly deserved so unkind an answer as you sent me by your servant Beaumond ; rauch less that so sraall a matter could draw you so quickly to forsake your friend, who batb ever so faithfully loved you ; neither can I easily believe (whatsoever it please you to write,) that, hav ing loved a man once with discretion, you will hastily leave or lose him without cause ; for I pray you. Sir, admit the worst. I presume you made me a promise, and you say you did not. Shall this be sufficient to raake you reject your friend, or to wish you had left him five years sooner? Truly, Sirj I am sorry to hear it; and I must conceive so well of Sir H, Lee, both for his particular kind raerits to myself, for his wisdom generally in the choice of bis friends, and for the constancy of his love and good usage to all men, that, though there were a rauch greater cause tban tbis, it could hardly raake bira con temn or condemn bis poor friend so lightly. I have heard of a bird, called Ephemeres, in Scythia, that is bred to-day and dead to-morrow. I beseech you, Sir, let our friendship live xxxviii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF longer ; let it not flee and fleet away so suddenly to give raen cause to think us rautable. You are a gentleman whom I have long loved too dearly to lose so lightly, if I may be so happy as to hold you, I have raade choice to live near you, for the special regard which I bear to your virtue, and (though I speak it to yourself,) I have not been a little proud of the comfort of so singular a friend, and so good a neighbour. It was the least part of ray thought to offend you ; and, seeing I have paid the money, let not hira that is beaten make the amends. I assure you. Sir, if you knew all, and what shift I was forced to make upon the sudden to serve your turn, I am persuaded you would sooner thank me than think me worthy of blame for my labour : but I will tell you more when I speak with you, in wbich raeanwhile I will ever love you, and pray you to do so by rae till I deserve tbe contrary, which I will never do by dealing with you unjustly, though, by misconstruction, you raay take rae unkindly. And so I corarait you to God. Frora my lodging in Cornhill, the 2nd of Nov. 1587. Your assured poor friend to comraand, Samuel Cox. FROM monsieur DE LA NOUE, 16th FEBRUARY 1588 TO SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Sir, Being by occasion eorae hither to Frankfort, to confer with Monsieur de Legure, he shewed me a letter of Monsieur Buzenvall, wherein he writeth tbat some of my good Lords and friends in England, were of opinion that I sbould be tbere shortly, because they had written unto me to that effect. But I received no sueh letters, neither from my Lord of Leicester, nor you, to whom I acknowledge myself to be much beholding, and to be altogether at your disposition. And thougb they had come to my hands, yet eould I hardly have done that you desired, by reason of a piece of business, which is fallen upon rae, and concerneth the weU-doing ofa great raany wherewith I am entertained, and cannot but embrace it, as well for my credit as my duty sake; and this it is. Sir. The Duke of Bouillon, who is lately dead at Geneva, (finding himseU near the point of his departure,) requested me as earnestly as a man SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xxxix might do, aud so did likewise other of my friends, that I would take into my care the towns he holdeth in sovereignty, over which he gave me full power and authority, together with the tutelage of his sister, whom he appointed his heir. And whereas since his decease, the Duke of Lorrain hath laid siege to Jametts, and threateneth also Sedan; the inhabitants of the town understanding of the Duke's will, have requested me to assist them in this tirae of need, which I have resolved to do, seeing that, thereby I shall not break any point of ray promises, and the King if he weigh well the matter, cannot justly mislike of my doing, being to no other end but to con firm the places under and to preserve the towns against the practices and attempts of the Spaniard. So tak ing myself to have a lawful calling in tbis action, I am upon my return to Geneva, raeaning from thence to advertise the King, how much it importeth him to impeach the attempts of those who without any right or title seek to possess them, and afterwards to restore them to the sarae state, by way of truce, or peace, wherein they were, before tbe Duke's decease ; and I think his Majesty will hearken thereunto, and that the mat ter may, by way of negociation, being well handled, be brought to good pass, to the profit and surety of the said towns; and if I can so end my business, (which I make no great doubt of,) then shall I be more at liberty to acquit myself towards my other friends whom I bold in no less recoraraenda tion, and thereof I will not fail to send you word. This siege whereof I have spoken, is but of the effects of the victory, which those of the league bave gotten, whereof they do not forget to prosecute the fruits that are easiest to be gathered. And to speak the truth, tbey bave used singular diligence, upon the general amazement which tbe unexpected fall of this great giant hath wrought, to show tbeir power, as well for the increase of their reputation, as to make tbe world believe that the same force, which had beaten it down, was likewise ready to scourge tbose which had set it up. So they came within five leagues of Geneva, and put it in sorae fear; frora thence they were extending along by the frontiers of the Canton xl THE LIFE AND TIMES OF of ... . who thereupon took arras a good countenance. They in BarUl, were put in great alarra, after ward they staid in the county of Mountebilliard, wbere they burned and spoiled all they raet with, to the loss of above 2,000,000 crowns redouning who thereupon retiring hiraself in a great fright to the Duke of Wirtemberg, they both levied raen, out of band, for redress of that inso lency. The town of Strasburgh, seeing such neighbours drawn towards thera, began to doubt tbe worst, and put thera selves in readiness. The Duke Casimer, seeing them so near bira, was in doubt to be visited in the Palatinates, and if they had cast themselves into it, all that part whicb is beyond the river of Rhone, had been their prey ; and last of all, as I have said, they have settled themselves before Cedan aud Jametts, having left all the borders of the Rhone amazed and affrighted with their audaciousness and celerity ; and as I have beard tbis raanner of prosecuting their victory, hath wrought an apprehension in the inward parts of Germany ; at the sarae time was I at Hidelberg, and, considering with myself the sraallness of their forces, being not above four thousand men, ill paid, ill led, and brought rather to raake a brag, than any great effect, I could not but raarvel, or rather laugh, to see what a terror they had wrought in those, who, being disunited, improvident, and unprepared against the accidents of this troublesome tirae, have escaped danger rather by the secret providence of God, than by the greatness of their own raeans wherein tbey abound using therein, but when it is The Duke Casimer, upon this occasion, assembled certain Lansquenets and Rayters, but it was after the storra was past, and I think that now he shall have no use of them. If they of this country would make their profit of tbese insolencies, (wbich are sensible and visible arguments of the comraon danger tbat threateneth them,) they would join with an other, in courage and fidelity, as well for their own defence as to repress the bravery of this league, which hath raade so much ado in all Christendora. I know no better way how to join together all these ragged and unpo- SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xli lished stones, and to be the mortar of the whole building, tban the Queen's Majesty of England, if she might be well dealt withal, to be tbe instrument thereof: for the great honour which she hath gotten by daring alone to lay hands on him that was tearing in pieces both France and the Low Countries, hath brought her such credit and reputation, that her advice would prevail much in these parts, to induce tbem to make a like union for tbe defence of our cause, as our eneraies have done to assail us; and, in ray opinion, the time is now very seasonable, to deal with them, while the terror is yet alive in their minds, of these late dangers ; which, when it shall be overpast, they will hear without understanding, and see with out perceiving, and falling back again to their own accustomed security, will leave time to the conquerors either to weaken by force or abuse by subtlety, those who do oppose theraselves to their ambitious attempts. And if your treaty succeed not well, you and your confederates will be constrained to seek such an union to the end, that, after so great expences and travail lost, you may be backed and sustained by assistance frora hence, and it is not to be doubted, but that our adversaries, what show soever they make, have their necessities and are not so lusty, but tbat another fresb assault, well-grounded, and well- led, may make tbem shake and conform themselves to agree ment, Sorae bave caused bruits to be cast abroad here, but I know not from whence it cometh, that the King of Navarre made so slender account of the Dutch army, that partly it was the cause of the overthrow thereof; but he is greatly wronged by that slander, which I perceive doth by little and little wax cold; for he hazarded his own life to make himself a way to come to them ; and it may be justly said, that courageous Prince is to tbose of his party, instead of a mighty bulwark to stop the swing and fury of tbis persecution, be is of an invin cible stomach, and spareth not bis own wealth, whicb he be stoweth bountifully, after the manner of Alexander, to make him way to greater things, retaining for himself only hopes, as the other did, but tbat tbey are grounded upon a better foun dation, and bave respect to an object of far greater worth. He xlii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF might easily preserve that which he hath, but his mind cannot be restrained within such bounds, but seeketh by force to do vengeance on the authors of all tbose evils, and to compel . . .... to be of this Kingdom, to the accom plishment of which purpose he hath need of assistance from abroad, which, joined with the small means he hath within the realm, may altogether be able to frame a new body, and to do some notable effect this year, which would greatly amaze the eneray, where otherwise he will be bold and audacious, if, either by negligence or disabiUty there should not be sorae tbing atterapted against hira. If there be good ministers em ployed in this matter, it may be brought to good pass, as Monsieur Legure shall be better able to conjecture, and will advertise you, otherwise it will be but a grief to spend our money, to bring honour and credit to those which are the authors of our troubles, as it hath bappened this last year. And now I pray you give rae leave to speak a word of your negotiation of peace, which, when I think upon it, breedeth sorae doubts in my head, to see that those whom you have pre served from destruction, should give you occasion (by their suspicions, fearful and offensive pertinents) to hearken to this treaty, you and they not being soundly united together. The Spaniard will fear your holding together, and despise you being divided ; and there is no doubt, but they are very cunning in treaties ; for on the one side, with the ostentation of his great preparations he will engender a fear, and on the other side preach pretence of obUvion of things past, with observing his promise in small matters, and pleasant title and hope of a peace he shall easily raake an irapression of that which every raan longeth for; for my own part I love no wars, and I think they only ought to be referred to this end, to deliver men from greater mischiefs, and that (by obtaining that which a raan striveth for,) he may be assured to enjoy the con ditions he hath purchased. The Queen's Majesty of England hath begun tbis action with great honour, having showed her self to be provident, in preventing tbe danger that was ready to fall upon her head, and magnanimous in sustaining an SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xliii honest cause ready to be overthrown ; and as many have in admiration, her perseverance, so it resteth to get out of it with like reputation, providing in such sort for her safety and theirs, whom she hath hitherto defended; and Ukewise for their well-doing, that, if they shew themselves worthy of that favour, she may leave engraven both in their hearts the remerabrance of her great deserts ; and in the enemy's minds an opinion that the unity and allegiance between her and them can never be dissolved, whieh is to be accounted so rauch the stronger, as it shall be less in tbeir power to break it. I pray God give you wisdom to conduct well tbis matter, being so full of difficulties, to be brought to a good end ; for if he do not accompany us, vrith his grace, as well in matters of peace as of war, both will re struction as it hath hap pened in our Dutch army, in the dissipation whereof, and in many other accidents, we might and ought to observe that the purposes of God are far other than tbe purposes of men ; for where the glorious entry thereof struck terror into the hearts of our adversaries, and gave courage to our friends to sing an untimely triumph, we have suddenly seen it thrown down even lower than the earth; and on the other side the King of Navarre, accompanied witb a handful of men, and in a manner fleeing from bis adversary, obtained a famous victory. That mighty King, and that great Captain, who tumbled at their feet so many goodly cities, and saw himself round beset with monuments of conquest, hath been checked in tbe raidst of his course, and by whom, but by a magnanimous Princess ? The King of Poland, wbo wanted nothing of the Kingdom but to sit in the throne, hath been disgraced and taken pri soner by a Chancellor of small experience in matters of war. What should we tbink of your Sir Francis Drake, who hath been the scourge of that proud nation, and done shame to them at home in their own bosoms ! and here in our country of France a raean gentleman of Dauphiny commandeth in the field and groweth greater where as our Princes, oftentimes with loss, have been fain to shut themselves within towns. And besides it may be noted that the diligence and xliv THE LIFE AND TIMES OF good success of poor Skynk doth soraetiraes cross the enter prize of the greatest soldiers. By all wbich effects we ought to perceive, that God, by sraall and slender raeans, will abate the pride of great and haughty persons, whicb set theraselves against His will, and he will have to himself the honour of our deliverance, for that we are so apt to steal it frora bim to our selves, whensoever any good hap lighteth upon us ; and for ray part it maketh me hope well of the affairs of the Church to see God hold tbis kind of proceeding, for it is his manner of doing, and now that he beginneth to beat down the proud ones, it is to be looked for that he will advance those that are held in contempt,* MR. SAMUEL COX TO Sir, I understand that you are lately married, which is now the special cause that makes me bold to trouble you, being moved only to write these few lines unto you, that you might see how your poor well wishing friend congratulatetb with you for your happy marriage. You are both of you very young, and have in all likelihood raany years to enjoy the corapany and comfort of each other. God keep you both from discom fort, tbat have so long to live linked in the society of marriage together, I understand you conceived unkindly of your father, tbat he would not suffer you to marry sooner. If you knew what it were for awife of fifteen years, anda husband of seventeen to entertain the charge and governraent of a family, you would say your father were cruel in marrying you so soon, and your self unadvised in entering so hastily into so weighty a charge. The Athenians were comraanded by Solon not to match them selves in marriage before they were twenty years old. Lycurgus made a law among the Lacedemonians, that no man should marry before he had accomplished the age of five and twenty years. Prometheus forbade the Egyptians to raarry before thirty, and yet you think rauch to stay till seventeen years expired. There are certain laws and conditions in marriage, whereunto the husband is bound, as soon as be hath betaken himself to a ' Additional MSS. 15891, f. 169. SIR CHRISTOPHER II.\TTON, xlv wife, as to be modest in manners, gentle in conversation, faithful in things coramitted to your trust, wise in counsel, provident for your faraily, sober in speech, careful of your children's education, and such a one as must always bave truth and honesty as the object of coraraendation to guide and direct all your actions. If being but seventeen years old, you be furnished with these virtues, you are fit for raarriage, if not, assure yourself more experience had been meet for you, be fore you had undertaken so heavy a burden, Plato would not have the children of his Commonwealth to marry before they had understanding and discretion to govern so great a charge, but having wisdom to guide them, he thought marriage to be a second Paradise, and a very hell when good government wanted in the parties married. I must commend one thing in your marriage as an argument of good judgment in you: tbat is, the equality between you and your wife in blood, in birth, and in state. No disparity, which raany times bringeth with it perpetual captivity ; but serablable and like conditions, which engender perfect love and good liking with freedom : which I beseech God ever make most happy and comfortable unto you, as no doubt he will the rather, for that you lovingly followed therein your good father's advice and direction, whose assent in such cases is necessary for him to give, and as dutiful for you to crave. Among the Lacedaemonians, he was disinherited that raatched without his parents' licence, and among the Grecians he received sharp correction. God make you his, and guide you with his heavenly wisdom, that you raay per fectly know hira in the goodness of his raercy, and be ever here and elsewhere eternally happy. Your assured friend and kinsman, Samuel Cox. MR. SAMUEL COX TO MRS, E . Good Mrs. E. . . . , I have sent this bearer to inquire of your healtb, as desirous by others to hear how you do, seeing I cannot be admitted to see you myself. I bave been many times at your bouse to visit you. I have earnestly entreated the favour to speak with you. I have sought you in the zeal xlvi THE LIFE AND TIMES OF of my honest love, with the best affection that so poor a friend can yield you. But what shall I say ? Mistress E., my dearest love, is not at home; or she is siek, and may not be seen; or so busy as she will not spare any idle time to spend in visita tion with so unwelcome a guest. What discomfort these un kind answerless answers bave given rae, I may not be bold to tell you ; nor what grief I conceive of these undeserved dis graces, I take them but as worldly accidents, necessary some times to check our sudden joys, and I will swallow them, as I may, like bitter pills, in hope tbey raay in the end prove more wholesome than loathsome. But yet, my sweet Mrs. E., let me beseech you to forbear in this sort any more to grieve me ; know that I profess, as your poor friend, to love you. Bestow these crosses upon those (if any be,) tbat bate you, and not upon him that seeketh, by true affeetion, to enjoy you. Think with yourself, if you loved me as 1 do you, what thorns you would find then to tread on ; what provocations of dislike, if good-will were not already well grounded ; leave thera as . . . . . . those that deserve them, and vouchsafe me more comfort that am carefully desirous, by all due means of good-will, to please you. So shall you ever bind me most faithfully to love you, and God, I hope, sball bless us both the better, and bid the banns in a happy hour, which I beseech him to send quickly and speedily to bis gracious good pleasure, and both our coraforts ; to whose favourable tuition I corarait you. Your most bound faithful poor friend, S. C. MR. SAMUEL COX TO MRS. E . Good Mrs. E., 1 received lately a letter by the hands of my servant, but from whom I know not, for I find no subscrip tion under it, and lacking tbe appearance of some star, or, at least, the skill of some Persian astrologer, to tell me in what region the child was born, I can neither worship it as I would, nor present the rayrrh and frankincense due to the birth of so sweet a creature as I should. Born it is; but whether at Bethlehera or Judaea, or at Capernaura in Gahlee, I cannot show you. I like the aspect and countenance of it exceed- SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xlvii ingly. If you know the mother, I signify her narae unto me in a line or two her no harm, I assure you, but happily love the child the better for the mother's sake; neither need you fear Herod's cruel proclamation for the destruction of children. It is Samuel, no Herod, that desires to see it At tbe foot of the letter there was written (as I take it,) a certain Hebrew character, or else some hidden enchant ment, fitter to be sent to a necromancer to conjure, than to a friend to read ; and surely, if it were put in a circle, I believe it would prove some notable spirit that wrote it ; for so I raust conceive, both by the witty and pithy inditing of it, I imagine it came from sorae gentleworaan, for it was full of courtesy ; but uncourteously concluded, by the lack of a narae. Yet must I think myself beholding to her, because she meant kindly towards me ; for the which, let rae entreat you, good Mrs. E., to tbank her if you chance to see her, and desire ber not to think it strange if I put that spirit in a circle that she sent me to conjure. I will command it not to hurt ber. And so, with her own manner of subscription, I comraend rae to you. Wishing you as well as he that best loveth you, your true friend, Nobody, MR. SAMUEL COX TO MRS, E . Good Mrs , a gentleman, loth to have his name known, hath wiUed rae to send my servant to see how you do. What he is you raust conjecture yourself; for I am warned I may in no wise tell you. When I found bim so scrupulous, I asked tbe reason. He answered rae, tbat a gentlewoman lately taught him, tbat wisdom in matter of love never to subscribe his name, which (saith he,) since I bave ever observed. I told him, for mine own part, honest love needed no such secrecy ; truth seeketh no corners, and virtue should not be asharaed to show her face ; and though that gentlewoman would not write her name the first time for raodesty, yet the second time, no doubt, she would think it needless to use any such curiosity. Thus 1 was glad to excuse her, whatsoever she was ; and I would do as mucb for you, if you should happen at any time xlviii THE LIFB AND TIMES OF to coramit so modest an error. Only this moveth me not a little, that such a gentlewoman's letter written without a name must now make rae to be nameless in this paper, by his com mandment, whom she so offended ; and so must I ever be till she make him amends by another letter, wherein he may see her hand and name subscribed. Your fast friend, Sam, C. MR. SAMUEL COX TO Mr. T,, I bave received your letter, and though I have no cause to thank you for your news (as you say yourself,) yet the remembrance of old friendship, that hath been of long tirae between us, raakes rae take anything kindly that eoraes from one who I think meaneth honestly. Touching the matter you write of, I must deal plainly with you, and 1 hope I may do so without your offence ; as I have sorae cause to raislike it for ray own private, haviug but one poor thing to live on, which I have bought and over-bought once or twice already, even to my utter ruin and undoing, and yet cannot enjoy it quietly for statute and other incumbrances; so am I sorry, in regard of the public, that any such thing should be set abroach, as tbis is, that might in any respect, in these dangerous days espe cially, give any the least occasion that may be to raove so loving and obedient a people as her Majesty hath, and justly deserveth to have, to any raanner of discontentraent, as I fear this will, that toucheth so many, (for all cannot be wise,) if it be not very temperately and mildly handled ; which, for ray own part, I do nothing doubt of, considering the most honour able and grave Coramissioners that are to deal in it. I have heard it said, and not without great reason, tbat tbe law rather suffereth a raischief tban au inconvenience : that is, it rather tolerateth a wrong done to sorae one singular person only, tban a hurt popularly grievous and offensive to many ; and though I wish with all faithful humiUty and lowliness of duty, as much good to ray most sacred dread Sovereign Princess, both for opulency of riches, and all other worldly feUcity, as the com mendation, or rather admiration of her divine virtues and raost SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. xlix merciful government doth justly raerit; yet I would to God in this matter (I speak Uke a fool,) it would please tbose good sides of hers, I mean those worthy Counsellors which her Highness hath about her, to observe in this point, as they do in everything else most justly, the wisdom of the law, and rather heed what is good for raany, than what is hurtful to one only, that it raigbt be said, the Prince, as well as the law, rather suffereth a mischief, and is content to endure that is a hurt unto herself alone, tban bring upon her people, by avoiding such particular mischief, a general inconvenience grievous to many ; and then do doubt this untimely tossing and tumbling up of raen's estates : this ransacking of old titles, and raking up, as it were, dead raen's bones out of their graves, which by her Majesty's peaceful blessed reign have long lain asleep in their quiet possessed lands, would not now be so favourably suffered. The Emperor Vespasian was called the jewel of the world, and the darling of mankind, for his singu lar deserts of probity, piety, and pity, towards his poor people ; but was there ever any Vespasian, or other Caesar whatsoever, of more singular merit to their subjects, than our gracious Sovereign Lady is to hers ? No truly, she passeth thera all, both in mercy for pardoning, and in raodesty and mildness for governing ; she spareth, commonly, when she may spill, she stayeth when she may strike, and we see daily that she saveth with mercy, when she might, if she would, destroy with justice; which makes me poor wretch think assuredly, that if her Majesty knew how many men are like to be hurt and utterly ruined in tbis case, some by ancient warranties whicb have been made in tbe sale of tbese lands to others ; some by sta tute, sorae by recognizances, and some by infinite suits of law that must needs depend upon the sequel of this raatter, I ara persuaded her Majesty would rather lose, and forego her bene fit, and say as that God of mercy said (whose image she is,) igvMsce illis, quia nesciunt quid fecerunt, they purchased lands which they knew not to be mortgaged, and therefore they sball have no harm by it, tban any way take the advantage and increase of gain, that the law, I confess, and the pre-erainence .ppx 3 D 1 THE LIFB AND TIMES OF of her Royal prerogative in tbis case giveth her. Men say, the ignorance of the fact raay excuse, though the ignorance of tbe law cannot ; and yet I have beard the learned are of opinion that in some cases tbe ignorance of the law raay excuse, and if ever it did, or may excuse, either for fact or for law, or if it may be termed true innocency, which hath no intent or cogita tion to offend, then surely, they that were not born wben the land was mortgaged, and have bought it since without any knowledge of fact or law, that might in any sort prejudice them in their purchases, ought in all reason and conscience to be favoured and justly excused, botb for their innocency and igno rance, that never heard, nor knew anything till now, after tbe happy reign of so many Princes, why tbey should not peacea bly and quietly possess their inheritances; and yet, I confess it becometh us all, whatsoever we bave, to lay it down at the feet of her Majesty's raercy, if she bave either cause to use it, or will be pleased to coramand it, and much better we were to do so, than trust to the courtesy of tbe law, tbat saith caveat emptor, or impeach your Prince's prerogative, which is nothing in effect, if, we take it absolutely, but licet si libet, if I be not mucb deceived. To make an end, I have but a piece of a poor manor to live upon, and God knows indeed but a very small por tion. I have sold a great part of it to supply my wants, tbe rest hath been extended for debt ever since I bought it, till within tbis year or two, and I owe yet, I protest unto you, above a thousand pounds upon interest, which the rent of Fulbrook will not discharge. I have served ber Majesty first under her Am bassador Mr. Dale, in France, and then under her Vice-Chara berlain Sir Christopher Hatton, as a poor scribe in Court twenty years together, without any raanner of recompense, whicb I think no man can say, tbat hath served so long. Now, if my desert, which I confess is very small, be worthy of anything ; or if my unfortunate estate raay move any coraraiseration in the eyes of those that are the Coramissioners, I hope, and will humbly sue that they will spare rae frora the coraposition whicb you speak of. If not, I am but a beggar, as I was before, and so I must by tbis means even desperately continue still, and will thank SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. li God for it, even as well as he that hath the philosopher's stone to play withall, whicb I assure you I would not desire, (for the best gold is but worldly dross,) but only to enable rae to serve my Prince and Country ; and so, meaning very shortly to speak with you at London, I forbear at this time any longer to trou ble you. From Fulbrook, the same day that I received yours, being the 29th of April 1599. Your old fellow and friend most assuredly, S. Cockx. A LETTER WRITTEN TO THE LOWER HOUSE OF THE PARLIA MENT BY KING JAMES, TOUCHING THE MATTER OF UNION, WHICH THEY IMPUGNED. You see with what clearness and sincerity I have behaved myself in this errand, even through all the progress thereof, though I will not say too little regarded by you, but I may justly say not so wiUingly embraced by you as tbe worthiness of the matter doth well deserve. I protest to God tbe fruits thereof will chiefly tend to your own weal and prosperity, and increase of strength and greatness. Nothing can stay you from hearkening unto it but jealousy or distrust, either of me the propounder, or of the matter by me propounded. If of me, then do you botb me and yourselves an infinite wrong, my conscience bearing me record that I ever deserved the contrary at your hands ; but if you distrust me of the matter itself, then you distrust nothing but your own wisdoms and honesty, for as I have given over wrangling upon words vrith you, so crave I no conclusion to be taken at this time herein, but only a com mission, that it raay be disputed and considered upon, and re ported unto you, and tben will you be your own cooks to dress it as you list : so that, as I have already said, since the conclu sion hereof can never be without your own assents, if ye be true to yourselves, no man can deceive you in it. Let not yourselves, therefore, be transported witb your curiosity of a few giddy heads, for it is in you now to make the choice, either by yield ing to the providence of God, and erabracing of that which be hath cast in your raouths, to procure the prosperity and in crease of greatness to rae and raine, you and yours, and by 3d 2 lii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF the way-taking of that partition wall, which already by God's Providence in ray blood is rent asunder, to establish my throne and your body poUtic in a perpetual flourishing peace, or else contemning God's benefits, so freely offered unto us, to spit and blaspheme in bis face, by preferring war before peace, trouble before quietness, hatred before love, weakness before greatness, and division before union, to sow tbe seed of discord to all our posterities, to dishonour your King, to make rae and you a proverb of reproach in the raouths of all strangers and eneraies to this nation and envyers of ray greatness, and our next labour to be to take up new garrisons for the borders and to raake new fortifications there, sed meliora spero. I hope that God, in his choice and free will of you, will not suffer you with old Adara to choose the worst, and so to procure the de facing of tbis earthly paradise ; but, by the contrary, that be shall inspire you so as, with the second Adara, ye shall pro duce peace, and so beautify this our earthly kingdora herewith, as it may represent and be an earnest penny unto us of that eternal peace in that spiritual kingdom wbich is prepared for tbe perpetual residence of all bis chosen children. THE EARL OF ESSEX TO LORD KEEPER EGERTON. My very GOOD Lord, There is not tbe man this day living, whora I would sooner raake a judge of any question that did concern me, than yourself ; yet, you must give me leave to tell you, that in some causes, I raust appeal from all earthly judges, and if in any, tben surely in this, when tbe highest judge on earth hath imposed upon rae, the heaviest punishment, without trial or hearing. Since then I must either answer your Lord ship's arguments, or forsake raine own defence ; I will enforce ray aching head to do rae service for one hour. I raust first deny ray discontentraent (which was forced,) to be any humor ous discontentment, and in tbat it was unseasonable, or is too long continuing, your Lordship should rather condole with me tban expostulate. Natural seasons are expected here below, but violent and unseasonable storras corae from above. There is no tempest to the passionate indignation of a Prince SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, Vm nor yet at any time so unseasonable, as wben it lighteth on those that do expect a harvest of their careful and painful endeavours; he that is once wounded raust feel sraart, till his wound be cured, or the part senseless be cut off, I expect not her Majesty's heart, being obdurate ; and be without sense I cannot, being made of flesh and blood ; but then you raay say I may aim at the end ; I do more than aim, for I see an end of all ray fortunes, and have felt an end to all ray desires. In this course do 1 anything for my enemies ? When I was pre sent I found them absolute, and therefore I had rather they should triuraph alone, than have rae attendant on tbeir chari ots. Or do I leave my friends ? When I was a courtier, I could yield no fruit of my love to them ; now I am an hermit they shall bear no envy for tbeir love to me ; or do I forsake myself because I enjoy myself? ordo I overthrow my fortune because I build not a fortune of paper walls, whicb every puff of wind bloweth down ? or do I ruin mine honour, because I leave fol lowing the pursuit, or wearing the false raark of the shadow of honour ? do I give courage or comfort to the foreign enemies, because I reserve rayself to encounter tbem, or because I kept my heart from baseness, though I cannot keep ray fortune frora declining ? No, no, I give every one of these considerations his due weight, and the more I weigh them, tbe more I find myself justified frora offending in any of them. As for the two last objections that I forsake my country when it hath most need of me, and fail in the indissoluble duty which I owe to ray Sovereign, I answer, that if my country had at this time any need of my public service, ber Majesty tbat governeth it would not have driven rae to a private life ; I ara tied to ray country by two bands, one public to discharge carefully and painfully and industriously the trust that is coramitted unto me ; and the other privately to sacrifice ray life and carcase, wbich hath been nourished in it. Of the first I ara free, by being dis missed by ber Majesty ; of the other nothing can free me but death, and therefore no occasion of performance shaU offer itself but I wiU raeet it half way. The indissoluble duty which I owe unto her Majesty, is only the duty of allegiance which liv THE LIFE AND TIMES OF never can nor sball fail in me; the duty of attendance is no indissoluble duty; I owe unto her Majesty the service of an Earl and of a Marshal of England. I have been content to do the service of clerk, but can never serve her as a villain nor a slave; but yet you say I must weigh the tirae, so I do, for now I see the storm come, I have put myself in harbour. Seneca saith, we must give way to fortune ; I know that Fortune is both blind and strange, and therefore 1 go as far out of her way as I can. You say the reraedy is not to strive; I neither strive nor seek remedy; — but I must yield you say and submit; I can never yield rayself to be guilty, nor this iraprisonraent lately laid upon rae to be just ; I owe so rauch to the author of truth, as I can never yield truth to be falsehood, nor false hood to be truth. Have I given cause you ask, and take a scandal ? No, I gave no cause to take up so rauch as Firabria his coraplaint, for 1 did totum telum corpore recipere, I patiently bear and sensibly feel that, that I then received, when this scandal was given me, — nay, when the vilest of all indignities were done unto me, doth religion force me to sue ? Doth God require it? Is it impiety not to do it? Why cannot Princes err? Cannot subjects receive wrong? Is any earthly power or autbority infinite ? Pardon me, pardon me, my good Lord, I can never subscribe to these prin ciples. Let Solomon's fool laugh wben he is stricken ; let those that raean to raake their profit of Prince's faults, shew to have no sense of Prince's injuries; let thera ac knowledge an infinite absoluteness on earth, that do not believe in an absolute Infinite in heaven : as for rae I have received wrong; I feel it: my cause is good, I kuow it; and whatsoever come, all the power on earth can never shew raore strength and constancy in oppressing than I can shew in suffering whatsoever shall or can be imposed upon rae. Your Lordship, in the beginning of your letter, raaketh yourself a looker-on and rae a player of raine own game, for you raay see raore than I, but you raust give rae leave to tell you in the end of mine, that since you but see, and I do suffer, I raust of necessity feel more than you ; I must crave your Lordship's SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, Iv patience to give him that hath crabbed fortune leave to use a crabbed style; but whatsoever ray style is, there is no heart more humble or more affected to your Lordship than is that of mine. Your Lordship's poor friend, Essex, lord keeper egerton TO THE EARL OF ESSEX. My very GOOD Lord, It is often seen, that a stander-by seeth more than he that playeth the garae ; and for the raost part, every raan in bis own cause standeth in his own light, and seeth not so clearly as he should : your Lordship bath dealt in other men's causes and in great and weighty affairs with great judgment and wisdom, now your own is in hand you are not to contemn or refuse the advice of any that love you, how simple soever. In this order I range rayself ; of those that love you none more simple, and yet none tbat loveth you with raore true and honest affection, wbich shall plead my excuse if you shall either raistake or misconstrue my words or meaning; but in your Lordship's whole wisdom I neither doubt nor suspect the one nor the other : I will not presume to advise you, but will shoot my bolt, and tell you what I think. The beginning and long continuance of tbis unseasonable discontentment you have seen and proved, by whicb you may aim at the end if you hold still this course, whicb hitherto you find to be worse and worse ; and the longer you go the further out of your way, there is little hope the end will be better ; you are not yet so far gone but you may well return ; the return is safe, the progress dangerous and desperate. In tbis course you hold ; if you have any enemies, you do that for them which they could never do for themselves; your friends, you leave open to scorn and contempt : you forsake yourself, overthrow your fortunes, and ruin your honour and re putation ; you give that comfort and courage to tbe foreign ene mies — as greater tbey cannot have, for what can be more wel come or more pleasing news unto them tban to bear that her raajesty and the realra are mairaed of so worthy a raember, who hath so often and so valiantly quailed and daunted them? you forsake your country wben it hath most need of your Ivi THE LIFE AND TIMES OF counsel and help; and lastly, you fail in your indissoluble duty which you owe unto your most gracious Sovereign, — a duty imposed upon you, not by nature and policy only, but by religious and sacred bond, wherein the divine majesty of Al mighty God batb, by the rule of Christianity, obliged you. For the four first, your constant resolution raay perhaps raove you to esteem thera as light, but being well weighed, they are not light or little to be regarded : and for the two last it raay be, tbat the cleanness of your inward conscience raay seera to content yourself, but tbat is not enough. These duties stand not in conteraplation or inward meditation, and cannot be per formed but by external actions, and where that faileth the substance faileth. This being your preseiit estate and condi tion what is to be done ? what is the remedy ? My good Lord, I lack judgraent and wisdora to advise you, but I will never lack any honest true heart to wish you well, nor, being warranted by a good conscience, will fear to speak what I tbink. I bave begun plainly, be not offended if I proceed so, bene cedit qui cedit tempori : and Seneca saith, lex si nocentem punit cedendum est justitia : si innocentem, cedendum est fortunes. The raedicine and remedy is not to contend and strive, but hurably to yield and subrait. Have you given eause and yet take a scandal unto you ? then all is too little that you can do to raake satisfaction ; is cause of scandal given you ? yet let occasion, policy, duty, and religion enforce you to yield, sue and subrait to your Sovereign, between whora and you there can be no proportion of duty, wben God requireth it as a prin cipal duty and service to hiraself, and when it is evident that great good may ensue thereof to your friends, to yourself and country, and to your Sovereign, and extreme harra to the con trary ; tbere can be no dishonour or hurt to yield, but in not doing thereof, dishonour and impiety. The difficulty, my Lord, is to conquer yourself, which is the height of true va lour and fortitude, whereunto your honourable actions have ever tended, do it in this and GodwiU be pleased; her Ma jesty, I doubt not, well satisfied ; your country will take good, and your friends corafort by it, and yourself; I mention you SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, IvU the last, for I know tbat of all tbese you esteera yourself least that shall receive honour ; and your eneraies (if you have any) shall be disappointed of their hope : I have deUvered what I think siraply and plainly ; I leave you to determine according to your wisdom ; if I have erred, it is error amoris, not amor erroris : confer and accept it I beseech you as I meant it, not as an advice but as an opinion, to be allowed or cancelled at your pleasure. If I might have conveniently bave conferred with yourself in person, I would not have troubled you with so many idle blots : whatsoever you judge of this mine opinion, yet my desire is to further all good means that may tend to your good. And so, wishing you all honorable happiness, I rest your Lordship's most ready and faithful, though unable poor friend. address OF THE CATHOLICS OF ENGLAND TO JAMES I. Most puissant and orient Monarch, Such are the rare perfections and admirable gifts of wisdom, prudence, valour, and justice, wherewith the bountiful hand of God's divine Ma jesty hath endued your Majesty, as in the depth of your provi dent judgraent we doubt not but you foresee what concerneth both the spiritual and teraporal govemraent of all your king doras and dominions. Notwithstanding your Grace's raost afflicted subjects and devoted servants, the Catholics of Eng land, partly to prevent sinister inforraations which haply raay possess your forced ears before our answer be heard, partly as men overwhelmed with persecution for our consciences, we are enforced to have speedy recourse, in hope of present re dress from your Highness, and to present these humble Unes unto your royal person to plead for us some coraraiseration and favour. Alas ! what allegiance or duty how many noble men and worthy gentlemen, most zealous in the Catbolic religion, have endured ! Some loss of lands and livings ; some exile, others iraprisonraent; some the effusion of blood and life for the advanceraent of your blessed raother's right unto the sceptre of Albion. Nay ; what finger did ever ache but Ca tholics' for your present title and dorainion ? How many fled to Iviii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF your Court, offering themselves as hostages for their friends to live and die in your Grace's quarrel, if ever adversary had op posed himself against the equity of your cause : if this they attempted witb their Prince's disgrace to obtain your Majesty's grace ; what will they do now ? What will they not do to hve without disgrace in your Grace's favour? The main of this realra, setting petty sects aside, consisteth of four parts,^ Protestants, who have domineered all the forraer Queen's days ; Puritans, who have crept in apace among them ; Athe ists, or Politicians, who were bred upon tbeir brawls and con tentions in matters of faith ; and Catholics, who, as tbey are opposite to all, so are they detested of all, because error was ever an enemy to truth. Hardly all or any two of the first tbree can be suppressed; and, therefore, we beseech your Majesty to yield us as much favour as others of contrary religion to that which shall be publicly professed in England shall obtain at our hands ; for if our fault be like, or less, or none at all, in equity our punishraent ought to be like, or less, or none at all. The gates, arches, and pyramids of France proclaimed the King Pater patiice et pacis restitutor, because tbat kingdom, well nigh torn in pieces witb cruel wars, and made a prey to foreign foes, was, by bis provident wisdora and valour, ac- quieted in itself, and hostile strangers expelled ; the which he principally effected by conditioning to tolerate thera of an ad verse religion to that which was openly professed. Question less, (dread Sovereign,) the Kingdora of England, by cruel persecution of Catholics, hath been alraost odious to all Chris tian nations ; trade, and traffic, is exceedingly decayed ; wars and blood hath seldora ceased ; subsidies and taxes, never so many ; discontented rainds innuraerable : all which your Ma jesty's princely countenance to your hurable suppliants, the afflicted Catholics, will easily redress, especially at this your Highness' first ingress. " Si loquatur ad eos verba levia erunt tibi servi cunctis diebus," said the sage Councillors of Solomon to Roboam ; for enlargeraent after affliction resembleth a plea sant gale after a storm ; very vehement, and a benefit in dis tress, doubleth the value thereof. How grateful will it be to SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Ux all Catholic Princes abroad, and honourable to your Majesty, to understand how Queen Elizabeth's severity is changed to your royal clemency ; and tbat the lenity of a raan re-edified that which the misinformed anger of a woman destroyed ; that the Lion rampant is passant, whereas the passant had been rampant ! How acceptable shall your Highness' subjects be to all CathoUc countries, who now almost are abhorred of all, when they shall perceive that your Highness prepareth not pits and prisons for the professors of their faith, but admitteth them temples and altars for tbe use of their religion. Then shall we see with eyes, and touch with our fingers, that happy benediction in Esaye, in this land, that swords are changed into ploughshares, and lances into scythes ; and all nations will say Aj sunt semen cui benedixit Dominus. We request no raore favour at your Grace's bands than that we raay securely follow and profess that Catholic religion which all your happy predeces sors professed, frora Donaldus' first converted soul, to your Ma jesty's peerless mother, last martyred ; a religion so venerable for antiquity, majestical for amplitude, constant for continu ance, irreprehensible for doctrine, inducing to all kind of virtue and piety, dissuading from all sins and wickedness ; a religion believed by all primitive pastors, established by all academical councUs, upheld by all ancient doctors, raaintained by the first and last Christian Eraperors, recorded almost alone in all Ec clesiastical histories, sealed with the blood of raillions of mar tyrs, adorned witb tbe virtues of so raany Confessors, beautified with the purities of thousands of virgins, so conforraable to na tural sense and reason ; and, finally, so agreeable to tbe sacred text of God's word and gospel. The free use of this religion we request, if not in public churches, at least in private houses ; if not with approbation, yet witb toleration, without moles tation. Assure, your Grace, that howsoever some Protestants or Puritans, incited by moral honesty of life, or incited by in stinct of nature, or for fear of some temporal punishment, pre tend obedience to your Highness' laws, yet certainly and ho nestly Catholics, for conscience, observe thera; for they, defending that Prince's precepts and statutes, oblige no sub- lx THE LIFE AND TIMES OF jects, under the penalty of will little care in con science to transgress them wbich principally is torraented with the guilt of sin. But Catholics, confessing raerit in obtaining and severity in transgressing, cannot but in soul be religiously for the least prevarication thereof. Wherefore, raost merciful Sovereign, we, your long afflicted subjects, in all du tiful submission, protest before the Majesty of God and all his holy angels, as loyal obedience, and as iraraaculate allegiance unto your Grace as ever did faithful subjects in Scotland or England unto your Highness' progenitors; and, indeed, as sin cerely with our goods and Uves to serve you as ever did the loyalist Israelites King David, or the trustiest legions the Ro raan Eraperors, And tbus, expecting your Majesty's cus tomary favour and gracious bounty, we rest your devote sup pliants. Coraraitting your Majesty to Hira whose bands do raanage the hearts of Kings, and with reciprocal raercy will re quite the raerciful, your sacred Majesty's most devote sup pliants. The Catholics of England. ARCHBISHOP HUTTON TO LORD CRANBORNE. Salutem in Christo, I bave received a letter from your Lordship and others of his Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, containing two points. First, that tbe Puritans be proceeded against according to law, except they conform them selves. Secondly, that good care be had unto greedy patrons; that none be admitted in their places but such as are conform able and otberways worthy for tbeir virtue and learning. I bave written to tbe Bishops of this province, and, in their ab sence, to their Chancellors, to have a special care of this ser vice; and therewith have sent copies of your Honour's letters, and will take present order within raine own diocese. I wish, with all ray heart, that the like order were given, not only to all Bishops, but to all Magistrates and Justices of tbe Peace, to proceed against Papists and Recusants, who of late, partly by this round dealing against tbe Puritans, and by sorae ex traordinary favour, are grown raighty in number, courage, and insolency. The Puritans, whose fantastical zeal I raislike. SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Ixi though they differ in ceremonies and accidents, yet they agree with us in substance of religion ; and I think all, or most of them, do love his Majesty and the present State, and I hope will yield to conformity : but tbe Papists are opposite and con trary in very raany substantial points of religion, and cannot but wish the Pope's authority and religion to be established, I assure your Honour it is high tirae to look unto thera. Very many of them are gone from all places to London, and some are come down to tbis country in great jollity, almost triumph antly. But as his Majesty bath been brought up in the Gospel, and understandeth religion exceeding well, so will he no doubt protect, maintain, and advance it, even to the end. If tbe Gospel should fail, and Popery prevail, it would be laid and imputed principaUy to you great Councillors, who either pro cure or yield to grant toleration to sorae of thera. Good ray Lord Cranbourn, let rae put you in mind tbat you were born and brought up in true religion. Your wise father was a worthy instrument to banish superstition, and to advance the Gospel. Imitate him in this service especially. As for other things, though I confess I ara not to deal in State matters, yet, as one that honoureth and loveth his most excellent Majesty with all ray heart, I wish less wasting of the treasure of the realm, and more moderation to be used of the lawful exercise of hunting, both tbat tbe poor men's corn raay be less spoiled, and other his Majesty's subjects raore spared. The Papists give it forth, that they hope the Ecclesiastical coraraission shall be no raore renewed ; indeed, it stayeth very long, consi dering the great want thereof. I pray your Honour further it. Sir John Bennett will attend your Lordship's pleasure. Thus beseeching God to bless you with his raanifold graces, that you raay as long serve his raost excellent Majesty as your raost wise father did serve raost worthy Queen EUzabeth, I bid your Lordship most heartily fareweU. From Bishopthorpe, the Sth of December 1604. Ixii THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE KING or MOROCCO TO THE KING OF ENGLAND, DELI VERED 5th NOV. 1637. When these our letters shall be happy to come to your Ma jesty's sight, I wish the spirit of the righteous God may so di rect the powers of your mind, that you raay joyfully embrace the raessenger I send, presenting to you the means of exalting the Majesty of God and your own renown araongst raen. The regal power allotted to our charge raakes us first common ser vants to our Creator ; then of these whom we govern the peo ple: so that, in observing tbe duty we owe to our God, we deliver blessings to the world ; and in providing for the public good of our States, we magnify tbe honour of God like the ce lestial bodies, that thougb tbey bave much serve only to yield benefits to the world. It is the excellency of our office to be the instruments whereby great happinesses are de livered to the nations. Pardon me ; this is not to instruct, for I know I speak to one of a clearer and quicker sight than ray self: but I speak tbis because God hath pleased to grant me happy victory on some part of those rebelling pirates that have so long molested the peaceful trade of Europe, and have pre sent further occasion to root out the gaieration of these that have been so pernicious to the good of our nations. I mean, that since it hath pleased God to be so auspicious to our be ginning in the conquest of Sallee, we migbt join and proceed witb hope of like success of war against Tunis, Argier, and other places, and the receptacles for tbe inhuman villanies of those that abhor rule and government herein ; whilst we extirpate the corruptions and raalignant spirits of the world, we shall glorify the great God, and perform a duty that will shine as glorious as the sun and moon, which all the earth will also adore and reverence ; a work wbich sball ascend sweet as the perfume of tbe raost precious odour in the nostrils of the Lord ; a work grateful and bappy to raen ; a work, whose raemory sball be reverenced as long as there sball be any tbat delight to read the accounts of heroic and magnani mous spirits, — that shall last as long as tbere are remaining SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Ixiii amongst men that love and honour the piety and virtue of noble minds. Tbis account I here wilUngly present to you, whose pious virtues are equal to the dignity of your power, that we, wbo are both servants to tbe great and mighty God, may, hand in hand, triumph in tbe glory which this action presents us. Now, because the islands which you govern have been ever famous for the unconquered strength of tbeir ship ping, I have sent these my trusty servants and Ambassadors to know whether, in your princely wisdom, you shall think fit to assist me with such forces by sea as shall be answerable to those I provide by land, wbich, if you please to grant, I doubt not but the Lord of Hosts will protect and assist those that fight in so glorious a cause. Nor ought you to think this strange, that I, who so much reverence an accord of nations, should first exhort to a war. Your great Prophet, Christ Jesus, was tbe Lion of the tribe of Judah, as well as the Lord and Giver of peace, which may signify to you, that he who is a lover and maintainer of peace raust appear witb the terror of the sword, and, wading through seas of blood, raust arrive to tranquillity. This raade your father James, of glorious me raory, so happily renowned amongst all nations. It was the noble farae of your princely virtue which resoundeth even to the uttermost corners of the earth, that persuaded me to inte rest you to partake of that blessing wherein I boast myself most happy, I wish God may heap the richest of his blessings on you, increase your happiness with your days, and hereafter perpetuate tbe greatness of your name in all ages. INSCRIPTION ON THE TOMB OF SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON, KNIGHT OF THE GARTER, AND LORD HIGH CHANCELLOR OF ENGLAND. Sacrum memoriae D. Chr. Hattoni, Guil. fil. Joh. nepotis, antiquiss. Hattonorum gente oriundi ; Regise Majestatis D. Blizabethse ex nobilibus stipatoribus L. vici ; Sacra- tioris Camerse Generosornm unius ; Prsetorianorum Militum Ducis ; Regii procamerarii ; Sanctions Consilii Senatoris ; summi Anglise ae Oxon. Acad. Cancellarii : Ordinis nobiliss. San. Georgiani de Periscelide Equitis. Maximo Principis omniumq; bonorum mserore (ciim LI annos coelebs vixisset) 20 Novembris anno 1691, in aedibus suis Holburnse pie fato functi. Guil. Hattonus, Eques auratus, ejus ex sorore nepos, adoptione filius, ac haeres moestissimus, pietatis ergo, Posuit. ON ANOTHER PART OF THE SAME TOMB. Quae vero, quae digna tuis virtutibus (Heros) Constituent monumenta tui 1 si qualia debet Posteritas, si quanta tibi prudentia, justi Quantus amor, si quanta fuit facundia linguae, Et decus et pulchro veniens in corpore virtus, Illaq; niunificae semper tibi copia dextrae : Deniq; quanta fuit magna tibi gratia quondam Principis, ^que tuis quse creverat inclita factis Gloria, tanta tibi statuant Monumenta Nepotes, Ipsa tuos caperet vix tota Britannia Manes. ON A TABLET AFFIXED TO A COLUMN NEAR THE SAME MONUMENT. Stay and behold the mirror of a dead man's house. Whose lively Person would have made thee stay and wonder : Look, and withal learn to know how to live and die renowned For never can clean life and famous Herses sunder. SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Ixv Hatton lies here, unto whose name Hugh Lupus gave (Lupus the sister's sonne of William Conquerour) For Nigel his dear servant's sake worship and land : Lo there the Spring ; look here the honour of his ancestry. When Nature molded him her thoughts were most on Mars, And all the Heavens to make him goodly were agreeing ; Thence was he valiant, active, strong, and passing comely. And God did grace his mind and spirit with gifts excelling. Nature commends her workmanship to Fortune's charge. Fortune presents him to the Court and Queen, Queen Eliz. (O God's dear handmaid) his most miracle ; Now hearken. Reader, — raretie not heard or seen, — This blessed Queen, mirror of all that Albion rul'd. Gave favour to his faith and precepts to his hopefull time ; First trained him in the stately band of Pensioners. Behold how humble hearts make easie steps to clime. High carriage, honest life, heart ever loyall. Diligence, delight in duty, God doth reward : So did this worthy Queen, in her just thoughts of him. And for her safety, make him Captain of her Guard. Now doth she prune this vine, and from her sacred breast. Lessons his Life, makes wise his heart for her great Councells, And so Vice- Chamberlein, where forreign Prince's ey's Might well admire her choyce wherein she most excells. So sweetly temp'red was his soul with vertuous balme. Religious, just to God, and Caesar in each thing ; That he aspired to the highest Subject's seat. Lord ChanceUour (measure and conscience of a holy King), Robe, Collar, Garter, dead figures of great Honour, Alms-deeds with Faith, honest in word, franke in dispence ; The Poor's friend, not popular ; the Churches pillar. This Tomb shews th' one ; th' Heavens shrine the other. Franciscus Florus ad memoriam heri sui defuncti, luctusq' sui solatium, Posuit. Anno Domini 1693." * Dugdale's History of St. Paul's, by Ellis, p. 56. 3 E INDEX. Abehgavenny, Katharine, daughter of George Lord, 95. Abington, Edward, 444. Adams, Theophilus, 239, 252, Admiral, the Lord, 333, 461, Alasco, Albertus, Baron of Lasco, Pala tine of Saradia, 324, Alen