The History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 742 pages of information about The History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans.

The History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 742 pages of information about The History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans.

[Footnote 3:  On Jan 11, before the vote passed, an address was presented from the general and the council of war by seven colonels and other officers to the House of Commons, expressive of the resolution of the army to stand by the parliament:  and another to the House of Lords, expressive of their intention to preserve inviolate the rights of the peerage.  Of the latter no notice is taken in the journals of the house.—­Journ. v.  Jan. 11.  Parl.  Hist. vi. 835.]

[Sidenote a:  A.D. 1648.  Jan. 3 and Jan. 15.] [Sidenote b:  A.D. 1648.  Jan. 17.]

treaty of evacuation, and announced their intention of returning immediately to their own parliament.[1]

The king appeared to submit with patience to the[a] new restraints imposed on his freedom; and even affected an air of cheerfulness, to disguise the design which he still cherished of making his escape.  The immediate charge of his person had been intrusted to four warders of approved fidelity, who, two at a time, undertook the task in rotation.  They accompanied the captive wherever he was, at his meals, at his public devotions, during his recreation on the bowling-green, and during his walks round the walls of the castle.  He was never permitted to be alone, unless it were in the retirement of his bedchamber; and then one of the two warders was continually stationed at each of the doors which led from that apartment.  Yet in defiance of these precautions (such was the ingenuity of the king, so generous the devotion of those who sought to serve him) he found the means of maintaining a correspondence with his friends on the coast of Hampshire, and through them with the English royalists, the Scottish commissioners in Edinburgh, the queen at Paris, and the duke of York at St. James’s, who soon afterwards, in obedience to the command of[b] his father, escaped in the disguise of a female to Holland.[2]

[Footnote 1:  The vote of non-addresses passed by a majority of 141 to 92.  Journals, v.  Jan. 3.  See also Jan. 11, 15, 1648; Lords’ Journals, ix. 640, 662; Rushworth, vii. 953, 961, 965; Leicester’s Journal, 30.]

[Footnote 2:  Journals, x. 35, 76, 220.  Rushworth, vii. 984, 1002, 1067, 1109.  Clarendon, iii. 129.  One of those through whom Charles corresponded with his friends was Firebrace, who tells us that he was occasionally employed by one of the warders to watch for him at the door of the king’s bedchamber, and on such occasions gave and received papers through a small crevice in the boards.  See his account in the additions to Herbert’s Memoirs, p. 187.  The manner of the duke’s escape is related in his Life, i. 33, and Ellis, 2nd series, iii. 329.]

[Sidenote a:  A.D. 1648.  Feb. 2.] [Sidenote b:  A.D. 1648.  April. 17.]

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.