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1599-1601

the great preparation which had been made. Instead of grappling at once with the strength of the rebellion, by advancing directly to the north, he made an idle march through Munster, as far as Limerick, and captured Cork and Waterford. At the end of three months, when he went against Tyrone, instead of fighting that chieftain, he concluded a truce with him, and agreed to transmit his demands to the Queen, the most important of which was, that the Catholic worship should be tolerated. When the Queen heard of these proceedings of her favourite, she sent him an angry letter, which so affected him, that he repaired immediately to England, and was on his knees at the feet of the Queen before any one was aware that he had intended to leave his government (September 29th, 1599).

82. Admistration of Lord Mountjoy; suppression of Tyrone's rebellion. Charles Blount, Lord Mountjoy, was appointed to succeed the earl. He adopted the policy of planting garrisons throughout the country; and, instead of carrying on the light and partisan warfare which had hitherto been the custom, he brought together large masses of troops to act against the insurgents. But, in spite of his exertions, Tyrone succeeded in marching from Munster, whither he had gone to consult with the rebel chiefs of the south, right through the country to his own territories in the north. The lord-deputy, however, soon surrounded Tyrone, in his castle of Dungannon, with a strong line of garrisons; and then, turning his attention to the rebels in Munster, succeeded in capturing the titular Earl of Desmond, called the Sugan Earl, or Earl of Straw. In the next year (1601), 5,000 Spaniards landed at Kinsale, and took possession of the town; Mountjoy, aided by considerable reinforcements from England, laid siege to the place; the Spaniards surrendered, and Tyrone, who Spaniards had marched to their relief, was defeated in a general expe engagement (December 24th, 1601), and the castle of Ireland. Dunboy, in which the rebels made their last stand, was taken, after a long and obstinate defence. The fall of this fortress decided the question, whether Ireland was to belong to England or Spain; and so much importance did the latter attach to its loss, that a large expedition which was then ready at Corunna to sail to Ireland, was countermanded. All parties evinced a desire for peace; Tyrone surrendered himself at Mellefont, renounced his title of O'Neil, and, in return, received a full pardon, and the restoration of all his lands and former titles held under the English crown (1602).* To

Moore's Ireland, IV., 127-144.

The

are

expelled

prevent the Spaniards from making a second descent upon Ireland, Admirals Leveson and Monson were sent to cruise off the coast of Spain. They performed many signal feats of daring, and Admiral Mansel defeated the celebrated Spinola in several actions in the channel (1602).*

V. CONCLUDING EVENTS OF THE REIGN.

83. Essex's Rebellion. When Essex unexpectedly returned from his government in Ireland, his reception by Elizabeth gave him no cause for apprehensions. But before the day was over, he was ordered to remain a prisoner in his own room; whence he was removed to the custody of the lord-keeper. He remained under arrest eight months, at the end of which he was tried before a special commission, upon whose report Elizabeth deprived him of every office which he held by patent, and condemned him to imprisonment in his own house during her pleasure (June 5th, 1600). After a short interval, she released him, but forbade him to appear at court without leave. A few days after this, a valuable patent which he held for the monopoly of sweet wines, expired; and, when he petitioned for its renewal, Elizabeth positively refused, saying, "that in order to manage an ungovernable beast, he must be

He conspires to remove the Queen's ministers.

stinted in his provender."+ This language, together with the constant refusal of access to the court, made Essex desperate, and disposed to listen to dangerous counsels. It was suggested to him that, if he forcibly removed Cecil, Cobham, and Raleigh from the court, he might recover his former ascendancy over the Queen. This idea had occurred to him in Ireland, and he now determined to act upon it. He threw aside his late habits of solitude, opened his house in the Strand to every comer, and assembled around him his dependants, and all who were dissatisfied with the Queen and her advisers. He had always been popular; and, since his return, his conduct had been vindicated in sermons from the pulpit and in pamphlets from the press; many of the clergy had gone so far as to pray for him by name in their churches; and, even in the palace, libels his enemies were found scattered on the floor, and affixed to the walls. The opposition which he had always made to the religious persecutions had made both the Puritans and the Roman Catholics his friends; his active military life had also + Jardine's Criminal Trials, I., 304.

His great
popularity.

upon

* Southey's Lives, V., 42.

1601

Cross.

attached to him many brave and devoted men, so that he soon found himself surrounded by a motley crowd of followers-Catholic priests, Puritan preachers, soldiers and sailors, citizens and apprentices, needy adventurers, and noblemen and gentlemen. At the same time, he began a correspondence with the King of Scots, representing that Cecil and his partisans were conspiring to deprive the King of the crown, and bestow it upon the Infanta. It was impossible that these proceedings should be kept secret; and, on the 7th of February, 1601, the Queen sent a messenger to observe what was doing, and then summoned Essex to appear before the council. But being persuaded that his life was in danger, he refused to obey; and next morning (which was Sunday), attended by the Earls of Rutland and Southampton, and about 300 gentlemen, he set forward to proceed to St. Paul's Cross, and, at the conclusion of the sermon, call upon the citizens to defend Essex at him against his enemies. At that moment, the lord keeper St. Paul's Egerton and other ministers came to inquire into the cause of the tumult. Essex placed them in confinement, and then rushed forth, sword in hand, shouting "For the Queen! For the Queen! a plot is laid for my life." But the citizens took no further notice of him than to cry out, "God bless your honour;" he found the streets barricaded; and at Ludgate he was stopped by a party of soldiers, between whom and his followers a sharp skirmish skirmish at ensued, in which several persons were killed. Disap- Ludgate. pointed in his hopes of being joined by the citizens, he escaped to Queenhithe, and thence proceeded by water to Essex House. He now gave way to despair. The imprisoned lords, whom he had purposed retaining as hostages for his own safety, were gone; his house was immediately invested on all sides; and he and Southampton, and the gentlemen with them, agreed to surrender upon condition that they should have a fair and speedy trial. The two earls were then committed to the Tower, and their followers to various gaols in London and Westminster.

84. Trial of Essex and Southampton. On the 19th of February, Essex and Southampton were arraigned before Lord Buckhurst, as lord steward, and twenty-five other peers, among whom were Cobham, Grey, and others, their personal enemies. Seeing these men, Essex asked if he might challenge them; but the judges refused, saying that as peers gave a verdict on their honour, and not upon their oath, they could not be challenged like jurors. The indictment charged the prisoners with having imagined the deposition and death of the Queen, and was supported with great

Conduct of Bacon in this trial.

CHAP. VI.

vehemence by Yelverton, Coke, and Bacon, the crown lawyers.. The conduct of the latter, on this occasion, has been the subject of much virulent accusation, from the time of Pope, who stigmatised Bacon as "the wisest, brightest, meanest of mankind," down to our own day, when both Campbell and Macaulay have bitterly attacked the great lawyer's character. The story went, that Bacon was indebted to Essex for many favours, and that the latter, failing to obtain for his protégé office and promotion, gave him Twickenham Park, as an atonement. But Hepworth Dixon, in a work lately published,* has shown, on the authority of family documents previously unknown, that this estate was not the earl's to give, because it had belonged to the Bacons for many years; that Essex himself was indebted to both Francis Bacon and his brother Anthony; to the former, as his lawyer and political man of business, and to the latter, as his secretary; and that to repay the services of the first, Essex gave him a piece of land not worth more than £1,500, which was considerably less than a third of a year's income from the solicitorgeneral's place, which the earl had sworn to obtain for him. So that the black tale of Bacon's ingratitude to his friend and patron at this trial, is utterly without foundation; the friendship between the two had ceased long before this, and while Bacon sought the patronage of his uncle, Lord Burleigh, Essex's great opponent, the latter sought other and more obsequious associates than he had found in Bacon and his brother. It appears, however, that Bacon's tone was less virulent at this trial than that of either Coke or Yelverton; but it fell to his task to refute the earl's defence, and he performed this in such a manner as to injure very considerably the cause of Essex. After the earl's execution also, he wrote, at the Queen's command, "an account of the Earl of Essex's treasons" with such apparent zeal, that he excited public indignation, and he was obliged to apologise for his conduct, by a letter to the Earl of Devonshire, one of the firm partisans of Essex. + The unfortunate earl indignantly denied the truth of the charge brought against him, or that he had ever entertained a thought of injuring the Queen. He had taken up arms solely in defence of his life, which he affirmed was threatened by Lord Cobham and Sir Walter Raleigh; and that, as the Queen's authority had afforded no protection to the Earl of Southampton, when Lord Grey had so atrociously assaulted him in the public street, he

Essex's defence.

* The Personal History of Lord Bacon, from unpublished papers.
+ Knight's Pop. Hist., III., 289-290.

1601

considered that his only safety lay in repelling force by force. In refutation of this plea, witnesses were called in who proved that meetings had been held at Drury House, the residence of Southampton, at which it had been proposed to seize the Queen's person, and compel her to govern according to the pleasure of Essex. But the latter defended himself by saying, that these meetings were not matters which concerned him, because he had never been present. Southampton set up this defence: That though many projects had been mentioned, none had been determined Southamp

defence.

between

upon; that the meetings had no connexion with the ton's attempt to raise the city; and that the latter was entirely unpremeditated, and arose from information having been received of immediate danger to the life of Essex, and the unexpected arrival of the four councillors. During the trial, Essex was accused of having said that the kingdom was bought and sold. He vindicated the expression by stating that Cecil had said the Infanta had as good a right to the throne as any other claimant, scene on which that minister instantly started up from a private Cecil and box where he had hitherto remained unseen, and demanded Essex. proof of the earl's statement. Essex turned to his fellow-prisoner, saying he had heard it also. Cecil conjured Southampton to name the informer; the latter appealed to the court, whether he could honourably betray the secret. The court decided in the affirmative, and he named Sir Robert Knollys, comptroller of the household, and uncle to Essex. When Knollys came before the court, he explained away the statement, by saying that Cecil had said, that Doleman's tract maintained the Infanta's right. The peers declared both earls guilty of high treason. Southampton remained in the Tower till the next reign, when he was released and restored to his title and estates, Essex was privately executed in Essex is an inner court in the Tower (February 25th). It was not executed. till the axe had absolutely fallen, that the world could believe that Elizabeth would take the life of Essex. Raleigh incurred the deepest odium for his share in bringing his noble rival to the block. He had witnessed the execution from the armoury in the Tower, and soon after, was found in the presence of the Queen, who, as if nothing of painful import had occurred, was that morning amusing herself with playing on the virginals. The romantic story of the ring, which, it is said, the Queen had given to Essex, in a moment of fondness, with the intimation, "that if ever he forfeited her favour, if he sent it back to her, the sight of it would ensure her forgiveness," is too well known to be repeated

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