The Holinshed Project

Holinshed Project Home

The Texts
1587

Previous | Next

Compare 1577 edition: 1 2 In this meane season, the lord Windsor,Assistants to the ladie Marie. sir Ed|mund Peckham, sir Robert Drurie, and sir Edward Hastings, raised the commoners of the shire of Buckingham; vnto whome sir Iohn Williams, which afterward was lord Williams of Thame, EEBO page image 1087 and sir Leonard Chamberleine, with the cheefe pow|er of Oxfordshire. And out of Northamptonshire came sir Thomas Tresham, and a great number of gentlemen out of diuerse parts, whose names were too long to rehearse. These capteins with their com|panies being thus assembled in warlike manner, marched forward towards Norffolke to the aid of the ladie Marie, and the further they went, the more their power increased.

¶About this time six ships well manned, that were appointed to lie before Yarmouth, Abr. Fl. ex I.S pag. 1062. and to haue taken the ladie Marie if she had fled that waie, were by force of weather driuen into the hauen, where one maister Ierningham was raising power on the la|die Maries behalfe, who hearing therof, came thither. Whervpon the capteins tooke a bote and went to the ships, but the sailers and souldiers asked master Ier|ningham what he would haue,Aid by wind and wether for quéene Marie that was bent against hir. and whether he would haue their capteins or no, and he said yea. Marrie said they, ye shall haue them or we will throw them into the bottome of the sea. But the capteins said foorthwith, that they would serue quéene Marie wil|linglie, and so brought foorth their men, and conueied with them their great ordinance. Of the comming of these ships the ladie Marie was woonderfull ioi|ous, & afterward doubted little the dukes puissance: but when newes thereof was brought to the tower, each man there began to draw backward: and ouer that, word of a greater mischeefe was brought to the tower: that is to saie, that the noblemens tenants refused to serue their lords against quéene Marie.

The duke of Northumber|land writeth for more suc|cours.The duke thought long for his succors, and wrote somewhat sharplie to the councell at the tower in that behalfe, as well for lacke of men as munition, but a slender answer had he againe. And from that time forward, certeine of the councell, to wit, the erle of Penbroke, and sir Thomas Cheineie lord war|den, and other, sought to get out of the tower to con|sult in London, but could not. On the sixtéenth of Iulie, being sundaie, doctor Ridleie bishop of Lon|don,Doctor Rid|leie persua|deth the peo|ple in the title of queene Iane, &c. by commandement of the councell, preached at Paules crosse, where he vehementlie persuaded the people in the title of the ladie Iane, late proclamed quéene, and inueied earnestlie against the title of la|die Marie, &c. The same sixteenth of Iulie, the lord treasuror was gone out of the tower to his house in London at night, and foorthwith about seauen of the clocke the gates of the tower vpon a sudden were shut vp, and the keies borne vp to the ladie Iane, which was for feare of some packing in the lord trea|suror: but he was fetched againe to the tower about twelue of the clocke in the night.]

Previous | Next