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LIBRARY OF
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY CONDUCTED BY
JARED SPARKS.
VOL. IV.
NEW YORK: HARPER
& BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE.
LIVES
ANTHONY WAY N E A.ND
SIR
HENRY VANE
NEW YORK: HARPER
& BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, FRANKLIN 6QTJABE.
CONTENTS.
LIFE OF ANTHONY WAYNE, Br JOHN ARMSTRONG.
Page
LIFE OF SIR HENRY VANE,
BY CHARLES WENTWORTH UPHAM.
87
Preface
CHAPTER
I.
...
Introduction
CHAPTER Sir
Henry Vane.
Connexions.
to
91
II.
His Parentage and Family Early Travels
Education.
on the Continent.
Removal
80
Puritan Sentiments.
America.
07
JON
VI
TF.
NTS
CHAFFER
.
III.
Chosen GoverReception in MuscatMusette. nor. - Slatt tif r
keys to his private secretary, then at Whitehall, and wrote to me, that I should take from the secretary those keys, that
opened
his
evidences of his
up
his
boxes where
his writings
lands were, to
the end
and the that
I
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
192
might cause an assurance to be perfected, which concerned my wife and having perused tnose and evidences, despatched what depended there;
upon,
was
I
in a
had the curiosity to desire to see what red velvet cabinet^ which stood with the
other boxes.
I
thereupon required the key of still want-
that cabinet from the secretary, as if I
ed somewhat towards the business
my
father
had
Having gotten the key, I found amongst other papers, that mentioned by Mr. Pym, which made that impression on me, that I thought myself bound in conscience to communicate it to directed.
some person of better judgment than myself, who might be more able to prevent the mischiefs and so I showed it to Mr. threatened therein ;
and, being confirmed by him that the seasonable discovery thereof might do no less than
Pym,
preserve the kingdom, consented that he should take a copy thereof; which to my knowledge he did faithfully
;
and thereupon
I
laid
the proper place again, in the red " net
in
A.fter
the
having
whole
father,
and
thus
the original velvet cab-
ingenuously acknowledged he turned towards his
transaction,
said, in conclusion,
"
I
than
know
that this
ruin in the
my prove good opinion of my father but, having been provoked by the tenderness of my conscience to-
discovery
will
little
less ;
wards our
common
parent,
the country, to tres-
HENRY VANE.
SIR pass
against
compassion littie
my from
natural this
193
hope to find House, though I have but father, I
hopes of pardon elsewhere."
Henry Vane, the
Sir
habitual expression
now
elder,
and general
air
rose.
wore
His
t.ie
appearance of uncommon sternness and severity, and on this occasion he exhibited more than was usual of the
same dark and frowning
aspect.
He
was evidently very much wrought upon by the disclosures that had been made. He felt that his
own honor was one of
his
implicated in the publication by family of a secret document, which
he had held doubly sacred because its discovery would prove fatal to a personal foe. He thus '
commenced
his
misfortune
now
is
much amazed,
address.
The
discovered to me.
finding
interrogatories, as
(
ground of my I have been
by such some discov-
myself pressed
made me
suspect
ery to be made, by some person as conversant in the counsels as myself. I am now satisfied to whom I owe my misfortunes; in which I arn sure It is true, the guilty person will bear his share. being in the north with the King, and that unfortunate son of mine having married a virtuous
gentlewoman (daughter of a worthy member now present), to whom there was somewhat in justice and honor due, which was not I
in
sent
my
keys
to
my secretary,
sufficiently settled,
(not well
what box the material writings VOL.
TV.
13
1
iy,)
knowing and direct-
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
194
ed him to suffer
my
son to look after those evi-
and by this occasion, ; seems those papers were examined and perused which have begot this trouble." After relating a dences that were necessary
it
few more
particulars, Sir
bis
and
grief,
Henry of
disapprobation
again expressed the disclosure
made by his son, and resumed his seat. The House was in the mean time a scene
of the
most extraordinary and thrilling interest ; the distressing collision between the father and son ; the strange
manner
in
which the evidence had been
originally obtained ; the sudden and unexpected solution of the mystery, which had hung over the
testimony of
Vane
;
and the
given to that fatal testimony,
fearful confirmation
all
together produced an intense excitement through the whole assembly. The reader will judge for himself of the con
duct
of the younger
Vane.
While
it
may be
regarded as an indiscreet and unauthorized indul" red velgence of curiosity to have opened the vet cabinet,"
many,
be
it is probable that .it \* ill :aot, by considered an unpardonab e offence,
for a son and representative and heir to have used the keys, which had been intrusted to a secretaBut that which the father most condemned, ry.
which there probably would be the greatest uncertainty and difference of opinion, was the communication of the paper to Mr. Pym and
On
about
this point
he did not act without
reflection
S1RHENRY VANE.
195
and cautious reluctance; and, whatever others may think to have been his duty, it is evident that his
own conscience
entirely
If such advice
done.
and one of the most powerful
favorite minister,
and active men
approved of what he had were given by the King's
in
the government, it is certain, not be considered safe for
that the country could
a
moment,
until
it
had been brought
to
light.
The House
passed a formal vote justifying the conduct of the younger Vane, and expressing its opinion, that it ought not to incur the displeasure of his father. But the feelings of the latter could not be assuaged by votes, and
we
are informed
away, before a reconciliation was effected with his son. This was the that a long period passed
public transaction in which Sir Henry Vane, the elder, took a conspicuous and active part. last
The now
testimony, whose curious history I have was decisive of Strafford's fate, and
related,
his judges that he had given traitorous counsels to the King. The only way in which his friends could meet it was by pretending that the
satisfied
was
whole plot.
d
fiction,
Such, indeed,
is
a
deliberately
contrived
the view Clarendon en
deavors to insinuate into the minds of his readers.
But
ination. sition,
cannot stand the test of a fair examwas altogether too monstrous a suppoand in such utter violation of what was it
It
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
196
known
of the characters of Pyra and of both the Vanes, that their bitterest enemy hardly ventured
do more than insinuate
to
timony was
Besides, the tes-
it.
keeping with the charactei of Strafford, was substantially corroborated by the in perfect
member
only
of the council,
who
could have been
Clarendon admits, expected to confirm it, the manner and appearv;as fully sustained by ance of the parties during the painful and exciting and, as
scene, in which
it
was brought out
at
the
trial
of
Strafford.* It
is
a remarkable circumstance that the
pathies of
many
persons,
who
sym
are themselves the
friends of liberty, are still given, in a great measure, to those characters in the annals of the mother country, who were the most violent
ardent
*
The above account
The
of the circumstances of Straf-
almost wholly drawn from Clarendon. assertors of liberty in every age of the world have
ford's
trial
is
been subjected, in their fame, to writers whose prejuwere strongly engaged to misrepresent them. Such especially is the case with Vane and his contempodices
rary fellow patriots.
It is truly
wonderful that their glory
has not been
permanently eclipsed. Providence, in a most extraordinary manner, has provided the means by which calumny can be refuted, error corrected, truth vindicated, and justice done. Although Clarendon endeavors to give an impression unfavorable to the Vanes in relating the facts connected with their testimony in this trial, I am persuaded that a careful reader would
HENRY VANE.
SIR
197
opposers of republican principles ; while the suffering martyrs in the cause of freedom are disregarded, or permitted to rest under calumny and reproach. Strafford
has
probable, ever becomes us to examine is
it
admirers,
among republicans. It little more carefully the actions and characters of men, before we yield to them our love and sympathy.
Warburton, who was not inclined
more than common tion of
an arbitary
severity spirit,
to look with
upon the manifesta-
" His says of Strafford,
ambition, pride, and appetite for revenge, were all exorbitant. His parts were of the first rate, and these
solely directed
passions.
to
What wonder
the gratification then,
of his
when men found
him in the station of prime minister, they should never think themselves safe while he continued " And Clarendon himself, his friend and there ? admits that he was of " a nature too partisan,
elate
and arrogant," and says, that " of
all his
pas-
gather, even from his account, very much such a view of the transaction, as I have given. Hallam (in his Constitutional History," Vol. II. p. 208,} says, that there can be little reason to question the
testimony given by the elder Vane
;
and, in a note, affirms
and Usher, and Juxon, the Bishop of London, as well as Northumberland, corroborated it. He cites as his authority for this assertion, Rushworth's Abridgment, that Bristol
Vol. IV. pp. 455, 559, 586,
and
Baillie, p. 284.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
193 sions,
his
pride was most predominant ; which a ill fortune might have cor-
moderate exercise of
and which was, by the rected and reformed hand of Heaven, strangely punished by bringing his destruction upon him by two things that he ;
uost despised the people and Sir Harry Vane."
SIR
HENRY VANE.
CHAPTER
199
IX,
Age in the Time of His reHis religious Character. Clarendon's Account of ligious Principles. them. Burners. Hume's. Mackintosh's
Religion the Spirit of the
Vane.
Vane a Calvin-
Opinion of Vane's Writings.
Tolerant towards all Sects.
ist.
from his Writings on of the Fall of Man. in
Toleration.
Delate on Episcopacy
Vane's
1641.
Selections
His Views Assembly of
Speech.
Divines.
FROM
the time of the Reformation until the re-
Second, when libertinism
storation of Charles the
the infidelity became the order of the day, on the Continent sentiment in and ruling England was RELIGION. This was the power which moved
and
all
other
powers.
manifestations
One
of
its
most remarkable
was the colonization of America
by the Puritans.
But
its
play, as a predominating
last
and
and brightest
visible
power
dis-
in the
of state, was the struggle which resulted the establishment of the Commonwealth in
affairs
in
England.
The
tone and character of a theological
controversy prevailed throughout all its stages To be a statesman in those days, it was neces
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
200
Speeches in Parliament sary to be a theologian. were pregnant with the learning of the schools of The precedents cited were drawn from divinity. Fathers
the
;
the
texts of Scripture
upon were House of Lords
relied
arguments
and, from the
;
the obscurest stations in society, the topics of and conversation were of a religious
to
discussion
In this respect, the contest of the Par-
character.
liament and people with Charles the First takes rank above all other political revolutions on record
;
when thoroughly and
and,
amined,
impartially
be found to transcend them
will
in
exthe
dignity of the topics debated, and the importance of the principles at issue.
In writing the history of an eminent leader in is of essential moment to it
such a revolution, ascertain
and
illustrate
his religious character.
It
no small
part of the distinction of Sir Henry in an age when religion was the great Vane, that, political principle, he excelled all his associates
is
and
contemporaries in his theological acquirements, and in the spiritual advancement of his
character.
From
his
early
mind and heart were devoted
youth,
his
Gospel, the cause of the church, and the of piety.
Of
his religion, as a
upon
his soul
self with
freedom
ing
and ;
whole
to the truths of the spirit
personal principle, operathis life, I
for,
on
this
can express mypoint, there will
HENRY VANE.
blR be none
dispute me.
to
his faith, his ardent
^01
His sincerity,
hi*
zeal,
and uniform piety, were seen
and
acknowledged by all they shone, with a and serene radiance, through his whole steady and were concentrated with a lustre which life, ;
compelled the admiration, nay the veneration, of all men, even of his bitterest enemies, on the scene of
When
glorious death.
his
I
look over
names which men have long catalogue called great, and see so many of them written in the
of
illuminated by the pure and of virtue and piety, the reader will pardon me, nay, he will join me, in expressing the delight I experience in contemplating the blood, and
heavenly
so few
light
statesman, whose chosen
character of a
pursuit
was the acquisition of divine truth whose most earnest and powerful efforts were devoted to its ;
diffusion
;
whose
and innocence
abode of the
life
was adorned
whose
;
spirit
of prayer
with holiness
was the constant
heart ;
and whose mind
was kept bright and clear by the rays of the Sun of Righteousness.
But daily
his
life,
religious character, as will
be best
illustrated
it
shone
by
in
his
tracing the
I proceed therefore to the history of that life. examination of his religious views and principles,
And what
here, again, his
respecting
I shall
enemies him,
and
and
adopt the plan of quoting calumniators have said
then,
after
presenting
the
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
202 actual
own
truth to the reader, leave
hun
to
form
his
conclusions.
Anthony Wood's view of
his
religious
charac-
has already been presented. Clarendon gives the following account. " Vane was a man not ter
be
to
described
which he had
in
by any character of religion ; swallowed some of the fancies
and extravagances of every sect or
faction,
and
was become (which cannot be expressed by any other language then was peculiar to the time) a
man
above ordinances^ unlimited or unrestrained
bounds prescribed to other men, of his perfection. He was a perfect without enthusiast, and, doubt, did believe him-
by any
rules or
by reason
self inspired
;
which so
far
corrupted
his reason
and understanding (which, in all matters without the verge of religion, was superior to that of most
men), that he did, at some time, believe he was the person deputed to reign over the saints upon earth for a thousand years." Clarendon, in another place, expresses his wonder, that in Sir " that clearHenry's writings there was none of ness and ratiocination, in which, in discourse, he used much to excel the best of the company he kept."
Burnet thus describes him set
up a form of
religion
;
in a
" For though he of his own, way
yet it consisted rather in a withdrawing from all other forms, than in any new or particular opir-
SIR ions 01 forms
;
called Seekers,
HENRY VANE.
203
from which he and his party were and seemed to wait for some new
and clearer manifestations. In these meetings he preached and prayed often himself, but with so peculiar a darkness, that, though I have sometimes taken pains to see
if I
could find out his
works, yet I could never reach it. His friends told me, he leaned to Origen's notion of an universal salvation of all, both of devils
meaning
in
his
and the damned, and
to the doctrine of preexist-
ence." after expressing an enthusiastic admiof Vane's dying deportment, thus speaks
Hume, ration
" This man, so celeparliamentary talents, and for his
of his religious writings. brated for his
capacity in business, has left some writings behind him. They treat, all of them, of religious sub-
and are absolutely unintelligible. No traces of eloquence or even of common sense appear in
jects,
them." Nothing
is
more curious than the
entirely dif-
which discerning and discriminating minds sometimes take of the same subject. In " The North American Review " for ferent views,
October, (Mr. Alexander H. Everett) a conversation held between Sir James
1832, the relates
editor
Mackintosh and himself, that occasion
Sir
Calvinists, says
;
at
London,
in
1817.
On
James, speaking of the En.jr^sh " Sir Henry Vane was one of
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
204
the most profound minds inferior,
are
perhaps,
to
theological, are
that ever
existed, not
His works, which extremely rare, and display
Bacon.
astonishing powers. They are remarkable as conthe first direct assertion of the taining liberty of
conscience."
Thus we
which to the " mind of Hume were absolutely unintelligible," and exhibited " no traces of eloquence or com-
mon
see, that the writings,
sense," in the estimation of Mackintosh dis-
;c astonishing powers," and entitled their played author to the superlative praise of being " one " of the most profound minds that ever existed !
In such a case, tial
we must each
exercise an impar-
and independent discernment, and judge
ourselves what
The
is
for
right.
alleged obscurity in
Vane's writings was
occasioned in part by a cause which Clarendon " The subexpresses in the following manner. ject matter of
them was of
so delicate a nature,
that they required another kind of preparation of
mind, and,
it
may
be, another kind of diet, than
are ordinarily supplied with." The subjects of which Vane treated are of the most difficult
men
kind. Readers, in general, are unfamiliar with the topics, and unacquainted with the phraseology, of those branches of divinity, in which his mind
delighted to indulge
its
meditations.
Men
of the
world, lovers of pleasure, and votaries of ambition
SIR
HENRY VANE.
205
cannot understand, any more than they can enjoy them. There is more truth in Clarendon's sar
casm, perhaps, than he was aware of. It would have required a very different " preparation of " another kind of diet," for mind," and perhaps the
ambitious and worldly minister of the most and depraved of courts, and the most
licentious
monarchs, to appreciafa the pure and conceptions of the acute theologian and
profligate of spiritual
heavenly-minded Christian philosopher. Mackintosh, it has been seen, classes Sir Henry Vane with the Calvinists, and it is probable that
he would
fall
under that denomination more justly
other. He was, however, so conversant with Christian science, and thoroughly his mind was so liberal and enlarged, that, while
than
under any
he held
his
own views
in
a high and spiritual sense,
he sought to imbibe more truth from every system of faith, and every form of religion. Christian truth
was not
to
him a mere
intellectual
and
barren system of speculative opinions ; not one article of faith was permitted to be of that character in his mind.
But, around every doctrine of
Scripture, his noble genius, exuberant imagination, and hallowed affections gathered a living and life-
giving spirit of warmth, and love, and energy. His zeal was regulated by knowledge, and
He was the unchanging tempered with charity. and consistent advocate of religious liberty and ;
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
206 the
for
was fixed upon wn was thought imprac-
fanaticism
of
charge
chiefly
this
reason.
ticable to attempt
It
what he uniformly urged, and
faithfully labored to
ation of sects
promote, a universal tolerand opinions. He wished all Chris-
tians to be perfectly free, and, in the eye of the He was opposed law, to be regarded as equals. to exclusive privileges in the government of
as
church,
every
exercised
by
He
well as state.
equally abhorred
form of persecution or bigotry, whether
by
political or ecclesiastical institutions,
societies or
individuals
;
and he proved the
sincerity of his principles by carrying them oui in practice, without partiality or exception, even when their operation was in favor of those, whose
sentiments he
most
disliked.
He
dreaded the
power of the Pope, and opposed the Church of Rome ; but, true to his principles, exerted himpromote the cause of Catholic emancipation, although in so doing he incurred the displeasure of almost all his Protestant contemself to
poraries,
and brought down upon his own head Baxter himself;*
the denunciations of Richard
and when John Biddle, the founder of the denomination of Unitarians in England, was arraigned for publishing his sentiments, Sir *
258,
London Monthly Repository, Vol. XVIII. ORME'S Life of Baxter, Vol. I. p. 82.
Henry pp.
257
HENRY VANE.
SIR
207
Vane, the enthusiastic champion of the Genevan Calvinists, stepped forth in his defence, and labored, with untiring zeal and the most resolute perseverance, to protect him from the blind intolerance
But he labored
of the age.
and poor Biddle, persecution,
after years of at
perished,
in
vain;
imprisonment and in a narrow and
last,
noisome dungeon.*
The Sir
passage
following
Henry Vane
will
from
show
the
what
in
writings light
oi
he re-
garded the divisions and conflicting parties in Christendom. " There are many churches in the world, that make a profession of the name of Christ, under several
the
forms
variety
rulers
and
denominations,
of judgments
also
pretends to
is
a church
headed by the Pope,
be Christ's
national churches,
according to of the
interests
There
and members thereof.
called Catholic or universal,
who
and
vicar.
There
headed either by a
are civil
Church of England, or by general assemblies, as the Church of Scotland hath been, with other Reformed churches. There magistrate,
as the
are also particular, independent, Congregational churches, distinguishing themselves into variety of sects and diversity of judgments and opinions,
* London Monthly Repository TOULMIN'S Life of Biddle, p. 33.
Vol.
XIII.
D.
347
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
208
about
well
as
the
way and
word
order of the
matters of worship and the service of God, as in what they hold fundamental in matters of in
These
faith.
owning and
make up one body,
all
upholding
a
church
in
visible form,
as to the
some
out-
all
their
who, notwithstanding and pretestings against one another, do generally agree together in one mind, as to the preferring of the church in name, show, ward,
differences
and
and
outward order, before what it is in spirit truth, as it is the real and living body of
Christ.
" Hence
it
is
that the true church indeed, the
very living,
real, spiritual
have been
for
members of Christ's body,
many hundred
years a dispersed,
captivated people, under all worldly powers, civil or ecclesiastical, and never been suffered to use r>r
enjoy
freedom
in
their
communion
together,
and the purity of God's service and worship but are, upon one pretence or other, restrained by human laws, and suppressed as heretics, schis;
matics,
fanatics,
down
and
such
as
turn
the
world
while those that have the repute and credit to be the church or churches of Christ, upside
;
under some one of the forms and outward orders before
on
mentioned, have the powers of the world side, and are contending one with an
their
other,
who
shall
of conformity in
be uppermost and give the rule doctrine, worship, and church-
HENRY VANE.
SIR order, to cution." *
the rest by compulsion and
all
Henry Vane extended
Sir
his toleration
Christian sects and professors, to ligions, chiefly for this reason. Christianity as a spiritual
sence of which
and
lowers;
reside? in
he
which
the
is
men
beyond
of
He
all
re-
regarded
religion, the
the
perse-
vital
of
hearts
its
esfol-
Indulged the benevolent and the moral and spiritual excel-
liberal beiief, that
lence,
209
of true
substance
religion,
might be found in the minds and characters of Gentiles and Jews ; and that, wherever it existed,
marked
its possessor as a Christian, although livan age and country where the name of Christ had never been heard. He, therefore, did it
ing in
not dare
to
exclude even the heathen from
charity, for fear that
those
whom
he might,
in so doing,
his
shut out
head of the church, day, acknowledge and welcome
Christ, the great
would,
at the final
as his
own.
The
following passage will exhibit
mode of thinking on this point. " But indeed, this assertion is so or lessening the number of ening his
the true heirs of salvation, that
how
it
far
from
strait-
those that are
rather discovers
they did in Elijah's they may of visible professors, of the observation out time, those that they exclude as heathens,) and (amongst lie
hid, as
* SIKES'S Life of Fane,
VOL. TV.
14
p. 45.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
210
be comprehended by Christ, their spiritual head, when as yet they may not have their spiritual senses brought forth into exercise, so as to appre*
hend him; but may be babes in Christ, walking as men, 1 Cor. iii. 1, 3, undistinguished from the rest
And
of .the world.
that respect,
seem
although they may, in be men in the flesh, yet they
to
may live according to God in the spirit, and Jind acceptance in the beloved one ; whilst they themselves .may either be without law, exercising a CHASTE NATURAL CONSCIENCE, the flie
may be under
or
law, believers so zealous of the law, as to in the face of Paul himself, for witnessing a
higher light than they have yet experience can bear." *
of,
or
He
thus clearly defines the extent of the authority of the civil magistrate. " When the Scripture saith that the rule of
magistracy this
is
over men,
of that office
we
are to understand
proper sphere, bounds, and
term the ;
which
is
by
limits
not to intrude itself into
the office and proper concerns of Christ's inward government and rule, in the conscience, but is to itself with the outward man, and to inter meddle with the concerns thereof in reference to
content
the converse which
* Retired
man ought
to
have with man,
Man's Meditations,
p.
213.
SIR
HENRY VANE.
upon the grounds of natural things appertaining
211
justice arid right, in
to this life."
*
"
Magistracy, then, is the rule, which Goti hath ordained to be exercised over the outward man,
by man himself qualified thereunto, to act in righteousness and the fear of the Lord, in discharge of this his high trust; and so is an office merely respecting rule and government of men in their outward concerns, which is capable of being rightly used or not, according as the persons intrusted
therewith are qualified and do exercise the same, the office itself being good, and the end for which
up being according to God's ordinance." f thus expresses, in connexion with the foregoing definition of the office of magistrates, the it is
set
He
duty of endeavoring to make constant improvement in the forms and institutions of civil govern-
ment. " As the principles of natural justice and right, in their highest improvement, are to be their rule
;
so the fear of the
Lord should
oblige
them
an humble
dependency upon him, and trembling posture of mind before him, to be watchful, in not suffering any thing to be done by them, in
may carry in it hinderance or opposition to the breaking in of higher discoveries upon them, as to the very exercise of the magistratical office, that
*
Ibid. p. 389.
f Ibid. p.
390
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
212 in the
purity and perfection wherein it brought forth in the last days
is
promby Christ himself; unto which they should always have willing and ready minds, to make way and to subised to be
mit." *
The
following passage presents his view of the
which such a magistracy, as he held to be way consistent with, and necessary to the full enjoyin
ment
of, civil
and
religious liberty,
might be con-
structed and established
"
For,
if
by the English people. once the Lord be pleased so far to
enlighten the minds of men in these nations, governors and people, as to show them the good of magistracy, as it is in its primitive institution,
and
is
the
last
held forth in
days
;
it
delight to inquire
debate
promise to be restored in then be their desire and
will
and consider,
in
a
way
of free
and common consent, on behalf of the
good people of these nations, how the rule over
them may be brought nearest tion
and
original
pattern,
in
to its first institu-
the
exercise
and
practice thereof amongst them, (founded upon the principles of natural right and justice, and so
exclusive to all private interest and personal concern of any singulars that shall be found to stand in competition with, or preference to, the good of the whole,) and
how
* Retired
that,
which
is
Man's Meditations,
the ordinance
p.
390,
SIR and
institution
HENRI
of God,
and natural way of
reuniting of
union resist
all
of their all
may
common
In
become the
common danger and men may be raised
order
to
in
a
consent, to the
good men as one man, in a happy and counsels, to spirits, prayers,
devils or
by
also
and statute of man, established
ordinance free
213
VA.NE.
illustrate
Sir
which * them." against opposition,
Henry's mode of
treating the abstract and speculative subjects of religion, I will extract a few passages from his The reader will discussion of the fall of man.
perceive in them, together with a remarkable clearness of discrimination and richness of expression, a subtilty and acuteness of reasoning, which might
enough be mistaken for obscurity. " In the tree of knowledge of good and eviL man had the sight of himself, in the exercise of naturally
his
natural
life
and the operations pertaining to
he became a living soul ; in the well or use whereof he might arrive unto the experi-
him, as evil
ence of the supreme good, held forth to him as the end of his creation, the endless life that was to follow
;
or else he might come,
by the
forfeiture
of the present good he enjoyed, to know the evil of a much worse condition than at first he had ; for
the avoiding of which, and to continue in a meet to receive the other, God required
posture
*Ibid. p. 395
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
2.14
him,
in
the state of innocency, to abide in a wait-
ing frame of spirit, as a sojourner
and stranger
in
the midst of his present enjoyments in the earthly Paradise, that so, through his patient forbearance
from taking up his rest or terminating his delight seen things, he might preserve in himself an
in
unengaged, unprejudiced behind of the counsel of to him, as to a
to
spirit
God
to
what was yet
be communicated
more excellent attainment and
in-
heritance to be exhibited to him in the light of the approaching day of the Lord, the beamings forth whereof, as considered in type, \vere already
present."
" soul
Now man and
all
(being furnished with a reasonable the excellencies of its operations, with
will to choose the good and refuse the honored also with the sovereignty over the
freedom of evil,
creatures) in this fair posture of preparation to receive more, was nevertheless seduced, ensnared,
and made a prey of by Satan,
sin,
and death, to
that work were) which was already passed upon him, and to the letting in of sin and death, with the deserved
the rendering (as
it
abortive
all
curse and wrath of God, through him, as through
a door, upon all his posterity. " The occasion of this was twofold
;
first,
the
present enjoyment of good from God under the ministry of the first covenant, the fruit of which, to the eye of flesh and blood even at its best, was
HENRY VANE.
SIR
215
and appeared so beautiful and dethat man was easily persuaded that it was
so glorious sirable,
the best
and highest attainment he needed
to look
and thereby, through Satan's subtilty, rendered secure and negligent as to the use of means after
;
God
given by
to carry
him on, pass him through,
and conduct him out of
less life
his
this
as from glory to glory, into
the
corruptible state,
power of an end-
(without the intervening of sin) to
the
and perfect securing of man's nature from all prevailing power of sin's assaults for ever, which
full
was not done by "
The
creation.
second
freedom of
occasion
of man's
fall
was the
wherein the judging and deof his mind were entirely commit-
his will,
siring faculties
by God
to his own free motion and operation, the terms of the covenant he was brought upon which was, to be dealt with into with God
ted
;
according unto his works, to be rewarded with life or with death, as he should rightly order or abuse this liberty of action, with which God had invested him by way of trial and probation. That man had such a power of free will as this, i{
First,
the nature and tenor of the covenant
he was taken
into
conditional
reference
and
God
in
doth
demonstrate to
;
the works
which of
is
man
;
throughout deals with man, under that
covenant, according to his works, strongly thereby asserting them to be man's own ; so as the very
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
216
-eward, which cornes thereby, is accounted to him of debt, even the thing which his own action (as left alone unto himself therein) hath brought
upon him, and entitled him unto. " Secondly, without such a power of man's
first
estate
free will,
could not have been mutable,
never have changed into corruphad been necessary to him to have stood, he could not have fallen ; and if it had been necessary to him to fall, God had thereby made
at least could tion
;
for if
it
himself the author of
" That which
which could not be."
sin,
Adam
was forbidden, was not
simply to forbear the use of his free will, but the evil and unlawful use of it, as (through an unwise
and
discerning
erroneous
judging
between
the
present temporary good which he saw, and the future durable excellency of the things unseen and
but in hope,) there did spring up an inordinate coveting and desire in him after the retaining of the
first,
to
the
despising
and rejecting of the
second." *
These passages sufficiently indicate the nature of the views and speculations in which Sir Henry Vane indulged. They show his acute and dis criminating powers of reasoning, and the refined
conceptions he was inclined to form most abstruse and forbidding docthe respecting
and
spiritual
* Retired
Man's Meditations, pp.
55, 58.
SIR trines
HENRY VANE.
217
Such
and topics of theology.
discussions
degree, passed out of and our many of the speculations vogue day, of the class of writers, to which he belonged, have become obscure and unintelligible to the
have, to
considerable
a
in
generality of readers
them, and are
for
hardly, in
;
at
but those all
who have
familiar with
a taste
them,
will
any other author, find a deeper or a
richer vein.
In June, 1641, a great debate took place in House of Commons concerning Episcopacy,
the
occupying nearly twenty days, and producing an extraordinary degree of excitement through the The enemies of the church adopted an country. t)f proceeding which was well adapted to worry out its friends. They procured the pas-
order
sage of a resolution, that when, at the close of each of its sittings,, the committee of the whole rose
vote
and reported progress to the House, every passed that day in committee should be
finally acted
on by the House previously to
its
This gave an opportunity to deadjournment. bate every motion twice each day, once in committee, and once in the House, and led to such protracted
sessions,
that
the
patience
of
those
members who were comparatively indifferent to the question was exhausted and, by the time the ;
votes were the House.
taken, they had mostly retired from
The
opposition, in
this
way, gained
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
218
much istic
advantage, which gave rise to a characterremark, by the celebrated Lord Falkland,
" that,
they
who hated
than the devil did not love
;
bishops, hated them worse and that they who loved them,
them
so well as their dinner."
In
famous debate, Sir Henry Vane took a leadIt was the custom, at that time, as it ing part. now is in the Congress and other legislative assem-
this
of the United States, to publish in a separate pamphlet form the most important speeches of That of Sir Henry Vane distinguished members. blies
Episcopal debate was thus published, and presented to the reader entire, just as it was
in the is
originally printed.
memoir, and
It will
be found
at the
end of
be regarded with interest, as a specimen of Sir Henry's manner, and of the
this
will
It exhibits parliamentary oratory at the time. one side of a controversy, which absorbed the
public attention, and, more than precipitated the downfall of the
Charles the First.
all
other causes,
government of
Whatever may be thought of
sentiments or arguments of this speech, no probably be able to discern any of the " of which Burnet speaks, or peculiar darkness " to agree with Hume, that it is absolutely unin-
the
one "
will
telligible."
The Bill
proceedings in reference to the Episcopal civil commotions and
were interrupted by the
warlike preparations
of the
times.
It
is
a
re-
SIR
HENRY VANE.
markable circumstance, that
the
219
same
question,
under almost the same forms, is, at this very day, the topic upon which the public mind in England is
exercised with a predominating interest. The who now complain of the " unhappy
reformers,
condition the civil state
have a vote
in the
is in,
whilst the Bishops
Lords' House," are not utter-
ing novelties, but merely repeating the language with which the halls of Parliament resounded,
and England rang from side hundred years ago.
When
to side,
nearly two
the Assembly of Divines was summoned on the state of the church and the
to deliberate
of religion, Sir Henry by the Parliament one of
interests
inated
and
Vane was nomlay members
its
;
of that grave and learned he himself body distinguished by his theological in the consultations
attainments, as well as in debate.
by
his skill
and influence
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY
220
CHAPTER X War.
Civil
Solemn League and Covenant.
Treaty with the King. Colonel Pride's Purge.
Vane of t
the
ration
naval
retires
King.
from Parliament. Vane returned to
the
of
War
Government.
with Holland.
Vane
Trotnp.
THE
Execution the
Adminis
Conducts
the
Blake and Van
reports to Parliament a Bill
for Parliamentary Reform. gyric upon
Vane's Speech. Parliament.
Rump
Milton's Pane*
Him.
course of events was rapidly drawing on
that crisis in
discussions
which
all
theological and theoretical
would have
to give place to military
operations, and every other contest be hushed in the louder controversy of arms. The King and
had put their cause to the issue of the of the country were all drawn resources battle, the Parliament
support of the combatants, and the sad of a civil and domestic war were already deeply imprinted on many a bloody field. Although very great success, considering the circumout
in
traces
stances, it
had attended the cause of the Parliament;
was found necessary
inforcements,
in
to procure additional re order to enable them to bear up
HENRY VANE.
SIR
221
power of the King. The plan was devised of gaining the cooperation of accordingly the Scotch, by forming a close alliance with that against the
In June, 1643, commissioners were ap-
nation.
proceed to Edinburgh for this purpose. In mentioning the circumstance that Sir Henry Vane was one of these commissioners, Clarendon " Therefore the others need not be pointed to
observes,
named, since he was all, in any business where others were joined with him."
The
mission
LEAGUE
SOLEMN upon
patriots
comprehended the
also
was adapted
to secure their favor
impossible to ascribe too
the
The
of the war.
United
was- not latter,
States
more
in
and
in
alliance
It
is
to the
determining the of France with
the American
Revolution
than the alliance with Scotland was of the
to see with
speak of
what
this
It
is
very amusing
sensibility the royalist historians
brilliant
and memorable diplomatic
achievement, the glory of which they
Henry Vane
alone.
all
ascribe
" There need no more
" that? ability," says Clarendon, he was chosen to cozen and deceive i whole
be said of his that
aid.
decisive of the independence of the
triumph of the Parliament.
to Sir
upon a end
Irish,
much importance
Solemn League and Covenant issue
agreed
was formed between the
and Scotland, and
of England
which
The
successful.
COVENANT was
AND
a complete union
;
basis
was perfectly
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY. which excelled in craft and cunning, which he did with notable pregnancy and dexterity." Hume also gives the credit of the transaction to nation,
Sir
Henry, although he cannot, any more than
refrain from mingling a little abuse " In this with his praise. negotiation," says he, " the man trusted was Vane, who in to chiefly
Clarendon,
eloquence, address, capacity, as well as art and dissimulation, was not surpassed by any one, even during that age so famous for active talents. his persuasion
was framed
at
By
Edinburgh the Solemn
League and Covenant."
On Sir
the return of the commissioners to London,
Henry Vane made
a
full
report of their pro-
ceedings, which were approved and confirmed by the Parliament. His name, being next to that of list, was subscribed to the Cove22d of September. The alliance
Cromwell on the nant on the
was thus solemnly
ratified.
The
strength of
all
the opponents of Charles's government was collected and concentrated, and from that moment the tide of success continued to follow the arms of
the
Parliament
until
the
monarchy was over-
thrown. a prominent member of which were appointed from all the commissions, time to time to treat with the King, and was also Sir
Henry Vane was
employed which, on
as
one of the Parliament's committee,
special
seasons of emergency, accom
SIR their
panied cised, in
army
HENRY VANE.
movements, and exerwhole authority of Parlia-
in its
stead, the
its
223
He
was thus continually engaged, in public and in private, on the floor of the House and in committees, in council and in camp, lament.
boring without intermission in the service of the country and of the republican cause. During the negotiations with the King, he
manifested a fixed resolution to do
all
that could
make
be done to
the best of the opportunity the enjoyed, of securing to itself the
country then blessings of liberty. attempts to
make
He,
therefore,
resisted
all
a compromise with the King,
except upon a basis which would render it impossible for the executive branch of the government ever again to encroach upon the rights of the people and he was desirous of proceeding, as a Parliament, to settle the government, and :
organize
anew
all
the
civil
institutions
of
the
country, upon the principles of liberty and justice, without meddling with the person of the King, or
removing him from
any way conBut other counsels
his retreat, or in
cerning themselves about him. prevailed.
As effects
the civil war continued to rage, the moral of such a state of things began to show
only in private life, but in the various institutions and relations of society. Pas-
themselves, not
sion,
violence,
and misrule, became more and
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
224
The military spirit gained the over ascendency every other. Military leaders to the which began belonged to the usurp powers more
prevalent.
departments of the
civil
army,
had won the
that
government
and the
;
now
victories of liberty,
turned their swords against her faithful guardians and violated her sacred form. Cromwell had long before
permitted the
and wicked ambition
false
As
soul.
fatal
to
suggestions of a
steal
in
upon
his
the vision of a crown gradually became
painted before his imagination, he developed more and more clearly the scheme of operations by
which he was to secure
its
And
possession.
he
his purpose with the most immovable perseverance and consummate skill.
pursued
Mutual
jealousies
were
artfully
ly infused into the hearts of
members
of
the
and industrious-
many
Parliament.
of the leading
Divisions
were
A
fomented, and party struggles provoked. of the spirit of hostility towards the members legislature
was
the officers and to
believe
until
that
they took hands.
diffused
through
the
army, and induced
men were persuaded and the its
state
would never prosper,
whole government into
their
own At
length the hour arrived, when the conflicts of the several factions were to be brought to a crisis,
and the principles of Sir Henry Vane put most painful trial. The majority
to the test of a
HENRY VANE.
SIR
Parliament had
,n
a
manifested
close with the terms of the King,
him
to the throne.
republican
minority
that those terms for
required
disposition
to
and again admit
Vane was
the leader of the
who were
firmly of opinion
were not such
the
225
future
as
security
ought
of the
to
be
public
The
and safety.
purpose, however, was formed by the ruling party in the House to accept the terms, and relinquish the controversy liberty
with the King. On the 1st of December, 1648, the commissioners appointed to treat with his the House, and their report the occasion of a long and angry debate.
Majesty appeared
became
in
The motion was made that the King's terms ought to be considered satisfactory and sufficient.
And to
Henry Vane
Sir
led the
way
in
opposition
it.
Clarendon gives the substance of
which I the
will
reader
his speech,
in part repeat, after again
that
it
is
from his
reminding enemies that in
all instances, as in the present, we derive It is a misfortune, the materials of his history. not only to the fame of the individuals concerned,
almost
but, in
a vastly greater degree, to the cause of
truth, that we have to rely, for all that we can learn of many of the purest and noblest men that ever lived, upon the assertions and liberty
and
records of their bitterest foes.
VOL.
r
v.
15
"
AMERICA!) BIOGRAPHY.
226 "
Young Sir Harry Vane," says Clarendon, " had begun the debate with the highest insolence and provocation telling them, that they should ;
day know and discover, who were their or, that he friends, and who were their foes
that
;
might speak more plainly, who were the King's party in the House, and who were for the people. That they had been diverted from their old settled resolution
and declaration, that they would make after which the to the King
no more addresses
;
kingdom had been governed
in great
peace, and
sweet of that republican form of government which they intended and begun to establish, when the Houses had, by clamor and
begun
to taste the
noise,
been induced
their former votes
and compelled to reverse and resolution, and enter into a
personal treaty with the King ; with whom they had not been able to prevail, notwithstanding the
low condition he was curity
but be had
;
self, .or
at
the
were
least
to his
_
tyrannical a
to give them any sereserved a power in him-
in,
posterity, to
as
exercise as
he had done
government which had so
insurrections,
now
still
;
that
all
terrified
them, there was
subdued, so that but their own consent and resoncumig wanting, lution, to make themselves the happiest nation and people in the world ; and to that purpose he totally
desired, that they might, without any more loss of time, return to their former resolution of mak-
SIR
HENRY VANE.
227
ing no more addresses to the King, but proceed to the settling the government without him."
These sentiments were
in
direct conflict with
the previously determined course of the majority Signs of disapprobation were heard during their The House refused to adjourn until the delivery.
motion had been put, and,
at five o'clock in the
morning, the previous question was carried by a vote of 140 to 104. The main question was then taken, and
and 83
it
was resolved, 129
in the affirmative,
the negative, that the King's terms This vote was equivalent ought to be accepted. to a restoration of Charles to the government, in
and Sir Henry Vane considered notwithstanding his tion,
it
in this light
;
own
strong personal opposito the will of the majority, and
he bowed
regarded the war between the King and his Parliament as legally brought to a close. Not so with Cromwell. His ambitious schemes
and projects were too deeply involved to allow him to submit to the decision of Parliament.
Apprehending from
such
a
result,
he
had hastened
London, and on the morning of army the 6th of December, the day after the vote of Pan iamentj a regiment of horse was stationed in his
fron: of the
to
two Houses, and a regiment of
foot
was arranged along the passage leading to the lower House, and at their head, near the door, Colonel Pride was stationed with a list in his
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY. names of those members Forty-one were
the
hand,
containing
whom
he was directed to arrest
thus seized.
This
extraordinary operation is commonly the name of ' Colonel Pride's
known under
purge," and the Parliament which remained, was called scoffingly, alists
by the Presbyterians and Roy-
who had been
name which,
" ejected,
The Rump,"
a
spite of the scorn in which it was originally applied, soon became invested with the most brilliant glory.
But
Sir
in
Henry Vane could
not countenance or
tolerate the transaction, although
it
removed
his
opponents from the House, and secured to his views and principles undisputed sway. He alone, of all the republicans, refused to partake in a
triumph thus obtained.
He
could not look with
composure upon the exercise of military force in violating the forms of a representative legislature.
He too
understood the principles of republican liberty well to be contented with such a course of
procedure.
He
retired,
from that hour, disgusted
and shocked, to private life. And for the vio lence and bloodshed, which afterwards occurred,
he
is not, in any degres, responsible. In the impeachment, ttiaJ, and execution of King Charles, S.'r Jfi^Dfy Vane took no part,
It except to tj&press bis disapprobation of them. was fortunate lor him that he had retired from
SIR
HENRY VANE.
229
As
Parliament before these events occurred.
his
heart loathed the idea of bloodshed, he could not
well have participated in bringing the King to the block ; and, as he unquestionably believed him guilty of
what was charged upon him, and had
long before become convinced that monarchy was a curse to any country, he could not well have appeared in his defence.
As, in the providence of God, the blood of a misguided monarch was permitted to ba shed by his irritated and injured subjects, we have cause the friends of humanity and free-
to congratulate
dom,
that the pure hands of liberty's purest
pion were not dipped
in
cham-
it.
Whether absolute
formed
the purpose of possessing himself of power had not then been distinctly
by Cromwell, or whether he
circumstances it is
were
not
ripe
evident that he did not
tion of
for
its
felt
that
execution,
make any demonstra-
such a design at the time of the King's
death.
The
bold and extraordinary proceeding of dethroning, impeaching, and beheading a monarch,
by his own subjects, under the forrr^ of low, an event which .was regarded with universal astonishment, appalled every heart, and shook every throne ia
Europe, seems
nizing influence self,
have operated with a solemupon the mind of Cromwell him-
driving from
to
his
bosom
his
unworthy and
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
230
designs, and compelling him to feel, thai, order to justify to the nation, to the world, and to posterity, the extreme act of laying violent hands upon the sacred person and life of a lawselfish
in
sovereign, it was necessary to administer the government, thus established in blood, upon the ful
He accordpurest and most righteous principles. into endeavored to call the government the ingly best and ablest
Charles
On
1649. of
the
was
state
men
the country afforded. on the 30th of January, 17th of February a Council
suffered
installed,
whose
into
hands
the
executive government of the nation was commit-
Henry Vane was appointed a member Cromwell used great pains to induce him to accept the appointment, and, after
ted.
Sir
of the Council.
many
he so
consultations,
Vane of
isfying
reference to the
prevailed in satof his principles in
far
the purity
* It
is
as to
Commonwealth,
his reluctance again to enter the
overcome
public service.*
a circumstance of considerable interest, as
indicating the importance attached to his services at this time, and also as illustrative of his own principles, that, in order to induce
him
to take
a seat at the council-
board, the form of oath, prepared for
As
its
members, was
drawn
up, it contained a clause in reference to the trial of the proceedings approving and condemnation of Charles. Sir Henry refused to altered.
originally
take the oath with tha stricken out.
4
clause,
and
it
was accordingly
SIR
He
took his seat
HENRY VANE. in
the Council
231
nine days alter
instalment, and immediately entered, with his accustomed energy and ability, upon the duties its
of the
He
office.
continued to be
in
the Council
The powers exercised by body were very great. They were intrusted the entire command of the military force of
from 1649 to 1653. that
with
England and Ireland, and were authorized to raise and control a navy, and to conduct the whole administration of the country in reference both to offensive
and
Henry Vane
its
Sir operations in war. wao for some time President of the
defensive
Council, and, as Treasurer and Commissioner for the Navy, he had almost the exclusive direction
of that branch of the public service.
The
foreign
were wholly under his management. He and conducted the war with the United planned Provinces, in which Blake gathered his laurels,
relations
and won
country the proud title of mistress and he imparted his own patriotic
for his
of the seas
;
and generous spirit to his countrymen by exhibit ing an example of disinterested devotion to the In order to lighten the burden of public cause. the war, and to encourage the people to carry it on with vigor, he voluntarily relinquished, as has
been before observed, the profits of the immensely lucrative office he held, and appropriated them to the
common
treasury.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
232 was
in this period that the genius of Eng" both in the cabinet and on the waves, shone forth with its most resplendent lustre. The It
5
land.
fire
'
of liberty seemed, for a time, to burn bright in every heart, and its spirit to nerve
and clear
The trident was shaken from the every arm. hand of Holland. The world resounded with the Commonwealth, and every place empire became subject to its power.
fame of
the
the
in
Scilly, ginia,
Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of man, Virand Barbadoes, one after another, all sub-
mitted.
But
was not without
it
Dutch surrendered the ocean. For more than that the
test
a
desperate their
struggle
supremacy on
three years the con-
continued, and a series of naval engagements
took place, which for the courage and resolution manifested on both sides, have never been surpassed.
As
English
increased
seemed
to
the war advanced, their
naval
the
Dutch and and
armaments,
gather strength from exhaustion.
In
1652, Van Tromp, after immense preparations, in which the power of Holland was
November,
strained to the utmost, took the sea with a fleet
of more than seventy ships, and
Biake
in
protracted
the
Downs,
action
a
took
falling
in
with
most sanguinary and long place.
They
fought
as
though they felt that the fate of both nations was Blake's fleet was much suspended on the issue.
SIR less,
HENRY VANE.
233
numsrous than that of Van Tvomp.
After
maintaining the conflict from noco urrtil night, the English admiral retired, with considerable loss,
up the
and the victorious
river,
Ho
-nrxJer
rode
master of the ocean, and paraded ).L'S tte**i up and down the English channel with a broom fixed to his his
mast-head, thus vaunting that he had swept enemy from the sea.
The
effect
of this defeat was
felt
throughout
The national deep and a was wounded, general gloom and depride
England, as
misfortune.
a
spondency pervaded
the
It
people.
course, particularly disastrous to Sir
was,
of
Henry Vane,
he had promoted and conducted the war, which seemed to have been brought to so inglorious a as
close.
was
was supposed that the power of Britain permanently broken down, and the period It
was commonly spoken
of,
at
the time,
" as the
present day of England's adversity by her wars with Holland."
But Vane was
not disheartened.
His energy
The batlose with the difficulties of his position. He tle was fought on the 29th of November. reported
the
estimates of the to the
House.
navy immediately December it was resolved,
that
expenses of the
On
the 4th of
one hundred and
twenty thousand pounds per month should be appropriated to the support of the armaments by land and sea, of which forty thousand were for the
234
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
,
navy.
The
next point was, to
meet such an appropriation Vane was no* for a moment
to
On
the means.
the 6th of
introduced and read a sell
;
raise
the revenue
and the genius of a loss to devise
at
December
a bill
was
and second time, to
first
Windsor Park, Hampton Court, HYiU* Park, Park at Greenwich, Enfield Castle,
the Royal
and Somerset House, the proceeds of the whole be for the use of the navy and, by the beginof Blake sea with eighty to ning February, put to
;
ships of war, and soon fell in with Tromp, at the head of a squadron of equal size, convoying two
hundred merchantmen.
A
battle
commenced on
of February, off the Isle of Portland, for the weight of the armaments engaged, which, the determined bravery of the combatants, the
the
18th
length of time during which it lasted, and the brilliancy of its results, far transcended every previous naval action on record, and, all things considered,
may since.
days. ed.
safely
be said not to have been
their ships of war,
men.
surpassed
The battle raged incessantly for iliree The power of England at length prevailThe Dutch lost seventeen or eighteen of From
that
and seventy of their merchant-
moment
supremacy of England,
to the present day, th
as
never been, to any decisive shaken.
a
naval extent,
power, has reduced or
SIR
HENRY VANE.
But the genius of
Sir
235
Henry Vane was
not
confined to the conduct of foreign wars, and wonderful as was its exercise in that department. At this period of his life his labors were so brilliant
various, so complicated,
and so constant, that they
From an were regarded as almost incredible. early hour in the morning until late at night, he was every moment engaged in the actual transaction
of business.
In
May, 1649, he had been
placed at the head of a committee of which Ireton and Algernon Sydney were members, to consider the state of the Representation ; death of the King, and when the
and, after the
Commonwealth
had become established, he reported a bill for REFORM in Parliament, which continued for a long rime to engage the attention of the
House when-
ever they had the necessary leisure to deliberate upon so important a measure. Every Wednes-
day was set apart for the discussion of its details, and there was good reason to indulge the hope that the
bill
reform was
would this.
The plan of finally pass. The House was to consist
the
of
hundred members, the small boroughs were be disfranchised, the elective privilege was to
four to
be
secured
equally to persons of all religious the rights of the people were
persuasions, and
carefully guarded against corruption and sion
oppre?
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY. It
was while Sir Henry Vane was thus con-
ducting operations, which were covering the name of England with glory, and securing to her the position of the
power
in
first
commercial nation and naval
the world, and at the
same time con-
triving and constructing a just, and equal, and free government for her people, that his career
of usefulness and honor arrested the attention of the great POET OF LIBERTY. John Milton addressed to him the following just tribute of praise. u
Vane, young
in years, but in
sage counsel
old,
Than whom a better senator ne'er held The helm of Rome, when gowns, not arms, repelled The fierce Epirot, and the African bold, Whether to settle peace, or to unfold The drift of hollow states hard to be spelled Then to advise how war may best upheld Move by her two main nerves, iron and gold, In all her equipage besides to know ;
;
Both
What
spiritual
power and
civil,
what each means,
serves each, thou hast learnt, which few have
done
;
The bounds
of either sword to thee
we owe
Therefore on thy firm hand Religion leans In peace, and reckons thee her eldest son."
j
SIB
HENRY VANE
237
CHAPTER XL Cromwell's treasonable Ambition.
Disperses tht
Parliament by military Force. Character of the Long Parliament. Vane returns to pri" Retired Man's Meditations." vate Life. Cromwell's religious Professions.
IN the mean time Cromwell was maturing his There plans, and preparing for their execution. is
much
reason to believe, as
intimated, that he
has already been
had long allowed himself
to in-
dulge the ambition of becoming supreme in the As far back as the battle of Worgovernment. Peters had expressed such a suspicion, suggested by Cromwell's conversation and deportment while travelling with him on the road cester,
Hugh
had heightened his brilfame, and thrown unbounded power into his The traitorous and wicked thought was hands. * permitted to visit his mind until it became a fam-
shortly after that victory liant
iliar
guest,
and then every sentiment of
ism,
and
at its
approach.
He
every compunction
well
that noble *
knew
that while the
patriot-
of conscience flod
Long
Parliament,
company, who had fought the
HARRIS'S Life of Cromwell,
p.
318.
great
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
238
of liberty from the beginning, remained in and such men as Vane were enabled to
battle
session,
in
mingle
useless for
And he
its
him
deliberations,
it
would be
utterly
to think of executing his purpose.
could not but perceive, that every hour of
delay was dangerous, and might prove fatal to his He knew that if the Reform Bill should plan. be suffered to pass, and a House of Commons be convened, freely elected on popular principles,
and constituting a full and fair and equal representation, it would be impossible ever after to overthrow the liberties of the people, or break
down the government of the country. In such an event, too, the glory he had won at the head of his victorious army, and which had already "been nearly paralleled by the splendid success of Vane in conducting the war upon the ocean,
would be in danger of being eclipsed, at least in the minds of the more intelligent part of the nation, by the equally difficult and important services
which
the
Commonwealth
the
Parliament in
was rendering
the construction of a
to
new
form of government, which promised to combine the blessings of liberty and law, and to become Inuniversally popular throughout the country. fluenced by such considerations as these, Cromcourse, and
well resolved
upon
to
every hazard, the
defeat, at
bill.
When
all
his
determined
passage
of the
other means failed, and he found
SIR
HENRY VANE.
239
he could not stop the deliberations of the
that
House, or throw out the bill, no alternative remained but by the use of military force and actual violence to dissolve and disperse the Parliament
And he
itself.
formed the desperate purpose.
But, great as was the energy and firmness of his character, it was with difficulty that he could brace himself up to the perpetration of the crimOliver Cromwell was inal and audacious design. well acquainted with the
government. opinions, an can
He
principles of liberty
and
was, at least in his speculative
and
intelligent
thorough
Republi-
and, in yielding to the tempting suggestions of a profligate ambition, he sinned against ;
the light that was in him, and permitted himself
be
to
drawn
into
what he knew and saw to be
He delayed the the vortex of guilt and infamy. moment when the fatal blow was to be struck from day to day, then, putting
a
until
the last hour arrived
forcible
restraint
upon
his
;
and con-
science, and foot,
trampling reason and honor under he rushed like a mad, blind man to the com-
mission of the deed.
The
bill
originally
by
presented
Vane had been amended and
Sir
altered,
Henry commit-
ted and recommitted, times without
ing the years
At it
length
it
number, durhad been pending in Parliament. was brought into a form, in which it
was prepared
for the final action
of the House
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
240
Unfortunately no copy has been preserved of bill in its matured shape. Ludlow informs us
the
that
it
provided for an equal representation of the
people, disfranchised several boroughs which had ceased to have a population in proportioi to the representation, fixed the number of the House at four hundred, and, with the exception of a few of
the largest cities which were to be allowed to send special representatives, the members were to be
chosen
in counties, apportioned as nearly as posaccording to the sums charged upon them for the service of the state ; and every man, with
sible
two hundred pounds in lands, was to be an elector. If this although
it
was not
all
that the
leases, or bill
goods,
had passed,
more enlightened
republicans wished, it would unquestionably have confirmed the government, rescued the country
from tyranny and
misrule, and secured
to
Eng-
land and to the rest of the world the blessings of republican institutions, two centuries earlier than
can now be expected. On the 20th of April, 1653, the House having concluded all the preliminary measures re specting the
bill,
nothing remained but to give
lion
it its
A
mo and engross and enact it. was made, that these forms be forthwith ob-
third reading,
served and the
bill
become
a law
;
in
the event of
which motion passing, the Long Parliament would, according to the provision of the bill, be dissolved
HENRY VANE.
SIR
and a new one be summoned.
was
who
Harrison,
Cromwell's confidence on
in
241
this
occasion,
rose to debate the motion, merely in order to gain
Word was carried to Cromwell, that the House were on the point of putting the final mo-
time.
tion
and Colonel Ingoldsby hastened him, that, if he intended
;
hal. to tell
to
Whitc-
to
do any
thing decisive, he had no time to lose.
Cromwell
at
and evidently against the
last,
most powerful struggles of
his
himself for the
and
He
House.
occasion,
was drest
in
conscience, roused
the
to
repaired
a suit of plain black,
He took his seat, with grey worsted stockings. and appeared to be listening to the debate. As the Speaker was about to rise to put the question, Cromwell whispered to Harrison, " Now is the
time
;
I
must do
As he
it."
counte-
rose, his
nance became flushed and blackened by the terWith rific passions, which the crisis awakened. the
most reckless
violence of
manner and
lan-
guage, he abused and aspered the character of the House ; and, after the first burst of his denunciations
had passed, suddenly changing
he exclaimed, "
You
parliamentary language
;
I
know
expect such from me." out into the middle of the
to
and
fro, like a
man
beside
TV.
16
is
not
He
nor are you ; then advanced
hall,
and walked to
it
himself.
moments he stamped upon the VOL.
his tone,
think, perhaps, that this
In
floor, the
a
few doors
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY. flew open, and a file of musketeers entered 'As they advanced, Cromwell exclaimed, looking over the House, " You are no Parliament ; 1 are
say you
no Parliament
:
begone, and give
place to honester men."
His whole manner was
who had which
To
his
stifle
seemed
surrendered
like
that of a
himself up
to
a
person design,
mind and heart equally condemned. the voice of reason and conscience, he
to resort
most extravagant ges
to the
He sought refuge, from the compunctions of his better nature, in the transports of blind fury. Raising his voice to a loud pitch, he poured forth invectives and and
tures, exclamations,
reproaches
against the
them by name, as
actions.
in
leading members, calling language so gross and indecent
would have shocked the most vulgar and de-
praved
ears.
He
the chair; and,
ordered
when
his
the Speaker to leave eye fell upon the mace,
he shouted out, " What have we fool's bawble ? Take it away."
to
do with that
While this extraordinary scene was transacting, the members, hardly believing their own ears and eyes, sat in mute amazement, horror, and pity of the maniac traitor before strate,
them.
and
call
At
who was storming and raving length Vane rose to remon-
him
instead of listening
to his senses to
;
but Cromwell,
him, drowned
repeating with great vehemence, and
his
as
voice,
though
SIR
HENRY VANE.
243
drunk with the desperate excitement of the mo" Sir Sir Harry Vane Harry Vane Good Lord deliver me from Sir Harry Vane " ment,
!
!
!
He
then
seized
the
records,
snatched
the
bill
hands of the clerk, drove the mem bers out at the point of the bayonet, locked the from
the
doors, put the key in his pocket, and returned to On reaching his palace, he related Whitehall.
"
When the exploit, and in conclusion observed, I went to the House, I did not think to have done But, perceiving the
this.
upon me, blood
spirit
of
God
would no longer consult
I
so strong flesh
and
"
!
Thus was
the
melancholy lesson
again repeated to a world
determined never to
that, alas
profit
by
it.
!
of
history
seems to be
In one short
hour, a great hero and patriot blasted his own glorious fame for ever, the cause of liberty was
openly trodden under potism established
by
and the reign of desa bold military usurper, in
foot,
a country which had been struggling for years in the conflict for liberty, and whose soil was still
wet with the blood of a lawful and constitutional
whom the people had sacrificed for die of securing themselves against an arbipurpose monarch,
trary
and absolute government.
In relating the dispersion of the famous Parliament,
it
moment and
Long
impossible not to pause for a contemplate the character of tbn is
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
244
renowned body, and foes.
has been painted both by it Justice has not been done them,
as
friends
and ter
until the
known,
history of their proceedings
that of
England
itself
is
bet-
cannot be writ-
ten or appreciated. Ludlow, who knew its members well, speaks of this Parliament in the fol-
lowing terms, which are not stronger than truth requires.
Thus Cromwell
" to be rid of
contrived
this
Parliament, that had performed such great things, having subdued their enemies in England, Scotland, and Ireland, established the liberty
of the
people, reduced the kingdom of Portugal to such terms as they thought fit to grant, maintain-
ed a war against the Dutch with that conduct
and success that
py
conclusion,
it
seemed now drawing
recovered
to a hapour reputation at sea,
secured our trade, and provided a powerful fleet for the service of the nation. And, however the malice
of
their
enemies
may endeavor
prive them of the glory which they
to
de-
justly merit-
ed, yet it will appear to unprejudiced posterity that they were a disinterested and impartial Par-
who, though they had the sovereign of three nations iri .their hands for the power of ten or twelve years, did not in all (hat space time give away among themselves so much as liament,
their forces spent in three
,
months."
HENRY VANE.
SIR
24
" When Van Algernon Sydney says, Tromp set upon Blake in Folkestone Bay, the Parlia-
ment had not above
thirteen ships
against three
score, and not a man that had ever seen any other fight at sea, than between a merchant ship
and a world.
to
pirate,
oppose the best captain
in
the
But such was the power of wisdom and
integrity, in those that sat at the in
diligence,
choosing
men
helm, and their
only for their merit,
was attended with such success, that in two years our fleets grew to be as famous as our land armies, and the reputation and power of our nation rose to a greater height than when we possessed
the better half of France, and had the Kings of France and Scotland for our prisoners."
But even their opponents could not refrain from acknowledging the merits of this illustrious Roger Coke, whom Godwin describes and scornful enemy " of the Parlia" To ment, thus speaks of them say the truth,
legislature.
as
" a
bitter
;
they were a race of for
it,
indefatigable and
business, always seeking for men and never preferring any for favor, nor
industrious fit
men most
in
by importunity. You scarce ever heard of any no murmur or complaint of revolting from them ;
seamen or
soldiers. in
pressed any celled in the
all
Nor do
I find that
their wars.
And
they ever
as they ex-
management of civil affairs, so it must be owned that they exercised in matters eo-
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
246 clesiastic
no such
severities, as
either the
ward
Nor were they
them.
dissented from
Cove
upon such
nanters, or others before them, did
less
as
for-
reforming the abuses of the Common law." had thus established his au-
in
When Cromwell thority
on the ruins of the Commonwealth, Sir
Henry Vane and, in the
retired to his estate at
bosom of
his family
Raby
Castle,
and the pursuits
of learning, philosophy, and religion, waited with patience for the day to come when he could again be of service to the " good cause," as he termed it,
of the people's rights and
liberties.
was during this period of retirement that he wrote and published his principal theological work, It
being a quarto vol Ame of about four hundred and thirty pages, from which extracts have already The was its title. " The been made. following
Retired Man's Meditations, or the Mystery and Power of Godliness shining forth in the Living VVord, to the in all
Unmasking the Mystery
of Iniquity
And The Riches and
\vith-
II.
The
their proper
Dis-
the most refined and purest Forms.
presenting to
ness of Christ's
View, Person as Mediator. I.
Natural and Spiritual tinction. in the
III.
Man,
in
The Reign and Kingdom
Ful-
of Christ,
Nature, Limits, and Extent thereof, as well over his Enemies. In which Old
in his Saints, as
Light
is
restored,
the Witness which
Vane, Knight."
and is
New
Light
given to this
justified,
being
Age by Henry
SIR
HENRY VANE.
published at this time a political work, Letter from a true and quarto, entitled lawful Member of Parliament to one of the Lords fit? ttfec
"A
ru
of his Highness's Council."
At length he was
again brought before the under circumstances of considerable inpublic, I to will which terest, explain. proceed Cromwell had risen to power on the strength
party in the nation, which
of that
who were
the
consisted of
sincerely and deeply en-
persons He first brought in the subject of religion. himself into notice, by the superior valor and
gaged
prowess of his own regiment, which he had on the principle, that no one should enter
raised its
ranks
who was not men
well knew, that
ligious zeal could,
upon
in
a praying Christian. He actuated by a sincere re-
more than
the hour of
trial,
and
all
others, be relied
at the
post of dan-
His troop was accordingly distinguished for ger. every quality that was desirable in a military association. They were hardy, because they were temperate and virtuous fully advance to every
"the
imminent
;
deadly
and they would cheerscene of peril, even to breach,"
because
their
were sustained by that lofty spirit of holy enthusiasm, which, more than any other spirit, " casteth out fear." hearts
Knowing
the importance of preserving the con men, the Protector was studiously
fidence of such
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
248
to manifest
careful
an
apparently deep
sorbing interest in religion
he acted
extraordinary
Whenever
success.
his invariable refuge
the people.
in
unfailing
wonderful
his
administration,
the religious zeal of
practice had made him perwith their sentiments and feel-
and with the ideas and
which
with
subjects,
familiar;
skill,
and
Long
fectly acquainted
ligious
And
looked inauspicious
affairs
was
and ab-
exercises.
ability,
and troubles gathered around
ings,
its
part with inimitable
his
adroitness,
and
and he could,
in
associations,
their
on
re-
minds were
a moment, and with
the most exact precision, touch the spring, which would instantly revive their sympathy, and renew their zeal in his
In lished,
government. pursuance of this policy,
on the
14th
laration, calling
Cromwell pub-
of March,
1656, a decupon people to observe a the purpose of " applying themthe
general fast for to the Lord to discover the Achan,
selves
had so long obstructed
the settlement
who
of these
distracted
It is remarkable, that, kingdoms." whenever Cromwell contemplated any measure that was of an arbitrary and critical character,
in
order
secure
to
the
the eyes support of the blind
religious
party,
he
he so well knew how, the garb sanctity, humility, and self-abasement*
would assume, of great
of the people, and
Accordingly,
as
on
this
occasion,
as
he
was
just
SIR
HENRY VANE.
249
plan of making himthe crown upon his desettling scendants for ever, he expressed the idea in his
preparing to develope
self a king,
his
and
proclamation that he and others associated with in the government desired to humble them-
him
God
selves before estly
longed
their errors
for
and
for their
light faults,
sins, that
they earn-
that
they might discern and that it became them,
of lowliness and minds open to conto receive counsel and direction, in whatviction,
with a
spirit
ever methods Providence might adopt to instruct and guide them.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
250
CHAPTER
XII.
Vhe " Healing Question." a
Written
defined and described. " Healing Question."
MUCH well, Sir
to the surprise
his
A
Constitution
Extracts
from
the
Remarks.
and indignation of Cromat his word, and
Henry Vane took him
composed a state
First Proposal oj
Constitution.
the
tract,
object of which was, to
view of the course, which ought to be
adopted in order to settle the government upon such a basis, as would secure the interests of the people, and perpetuate their liberty. titled
"
solved,
It
was en-
A
Healing Question propounded and reupon Occasion of the late public and sea-
sonable Call to Humiliation in order to
Love and a De-
Union amongst the honest Party, and with sire
to
come
apply
Balm
incurable.
to
the
Wound,
before
it
be-
By Henry
This production
is
Vane, Knight." one of the most remarkable
It contains the papers, ever written. civil and of religious liberty, in a great principles and complete exposition, lays down the rules to
political
be observed
in
constructing a
civil
government. developes and illustrates, perhaps it may with safety be said, for the first time, the idea of a It
HENRY VANE.
SIR
written constitution or
251
body of fundamental laws,
by which the government
itself is to
be controlled,
This plan of a constirestrained, and limited.* to be tution, agreed upon in the beginning, by
which the people impose ercise of their
own
restrictions
sovereignty, and
own
daries, within which their
power
shall
culiarity
upon the exfix
the boun-
legislative
and
civil
be confined, constitutes the great pegovernments, federal and state,
of the
within the American union. tive principle of
It
is
our institutions.
the preserva-
It gives to their
action the highest practicable and desirable
degree of stability and consistency, and is the sure protection of minorities or individuals against oppression
and
injustice
government
on the part of majorities, or of
as such.
It distinguishes
a Republic
from a Democracy. The former is a limited, the latter an absolute government. A Republic is a free country.
A
Democracy
i Republic, the sovereignty reside in the cise *
by a
people, but
constitution,
is
is is
a
In
despotism.
acknowledged
restrained in
its
to
exer-
which marks the boundaries
The paper signed by
the
Pilgrims, in the
May-
on the llth of November, 1620, previous to their landing at Plymouth, is one of the most interesting documents in the history of civilization. But, as it is merely an agreement to form a political society, and does not flower,
contain any restrictions upon the future government of that society, it cannot be considered as a constitution, in the sense in which that
word
is
used in the
text.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
252
rf the authority of the people as a government that is, as a sovereign, and secures against that authority,
beyond those boundaries, the
rights
and
freedom of individuals.
In a democracy, the sovis also ereignty acknowledged to be in the peobut no are imposed upon its exlimitations ple ; ercise,
and the individual, or the minority, has no
security or refuge from the
power of the
and, of course, the government
is
majority, absolute and
despotic.
The governments ion were, in
of the North American the
truth,
first
the world ever witnessed.
archy
A
is
limited, but
Un-
limited governments
In England, the mon~
the government
is
absolute.
passed by the Lords and Commons, and an act of Parliament, is signed by the King, the law of the land, and, whatever may be its enbill
actments,
will
be
sustained
in
the
must be obeyed by the people. But where written constitutions are placed
courts, in
and
America,
at the foun-
dation of the social organization, a portion of what is called the sovereignty of the people is fettered it were, and rendered inoperative ; so reference to this portion, no power exists in the country to bind by law the action of the in-
down,
as
that, in
dividual.
For
instance,
by tne Constitution of the United
States, the general government of the Union, and *\Q governments of all the several States, are ds
SIR
HENRY VANE.
253
clared incapable and are forbidden to "grant any
of nobility," to " pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation
title
The people have solemnly agreed and determined, and have recorded the agreement and determination, that no legislative proceedings of contracts."
ever be had, and no laws ever be passed, in the country, of the kind here specified. In the beginning men may be considered as hav-
shall
ing entered into social relations voluntarily, and with a deliberate and express agreement in refer-
ence to the extent to which, as individuals, they As we have should be subject to the civil power. no records of any such compacts, it is impossible to determine how much authority was thus lodged in
the hands of the state.
Hence have
arisen
perpetual and interminable controversies respecting the extent of the civil power, that is, of the authority of the community over individuals. By written constitutions
more or
these controversies
may
be
In framing and adopting the them, people expressly ordain and determine the boundaries of the civil power, and mark out less
avoided.
the sphere within which
its
action shall be con-
fined. this, the people of a country must be not considered, merely as restraining their governbut as ment, putting limitations to their own pow-
In doing
er as a people, as impairing their
own
sovereignty
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
254
With respect
to the points,
upon which they may
have forbidden their government to encroach, they have also deprived themselves of the power of And this is in fact the case in the United acting.
There
States.
no power in the United States
is
to grant titles of nobility,
pass bills of attainder, or ex post facto laws, or laws impairing the obliIf all the people in the Ungation of contracts. ion
should
for
call
such laws,
if
and Congress
all
the legisla-
should pass them, it would be the duty of the courts to declare them null and void ; and, until the frame of tures of the States
itself
should be altered, they would much blank paper. On these points, the people have shorn themselves of their sovereignty, and have made them-
government
itself
be of no more force than so
selves
free
and
secure
from
themselves.
And
the only way, in which the liberty of the individual can be rescued from the power of the this
is
community. bulwark of
It
is
liberty.
the
only sure and other device
No
effectual
has
yel
been discovered, by which the freedom of the citizen can be placed beyond the reach of the civil
power; or by which the government, in a strict It is in this and adequate sense, can be limited. sense, that the
American States
are limited gov-
ernments. Sir
Henry Vane was
security for the
liberties
desirous of providing this
of his countrymen, and
SIR
HENRY VANE.
255
"
Healing Question/' proposed, so far as I can discover, for the first time in the history of the world, the expedient of organizing a govern" certain fundament, as he expressed it, upon mentals not to be dispensed with." in
his
The
extracts
phlet
this
grasped
now
to
be made from
show the reader how
will
The work
great
discovery
in
this
clearly he
political
pamhad
science.
fraught with practical wisdom and and forecast, may well be studied by the modern is
statesman, as illustrating some of the most important, and even some of what are regarded as the latest, improvements in the principles of govern-
As
ment.
" the " Healing Question
is
not only
intrinsically excellent and remarkable, but so rare as to have escaped the notice of most of the his-
torians,
of
himself,
I
from It
its
of Hallam
not refrain from drawing largely
pages.
commences with
as follows
"
Hume, and perhaps even shall
The
a
statement of the question,
;
question propounded
ty doth yet remain
(all
is,
What
possibili-
things considered) of re-
conciling and uniting the dissenting judgments of honest men, within the three nations, who still
pretend to agree in the spirit, justice, and reason of the same good cause, and v/hat is the means to effect this?
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
256
" Answer.
If
it
be taken
for granted, (as
on
the magistrates' part, from the ground of their inviting the people of England and Wales to a sol-
emn day
of fasting and humiliation,
may
not be
despaired of,) that all the dissenting parties agree still in the spirit and reason of the same righteous cause, the resolution seems very clear in the af; arguing, not only for a possibility, but
firmative
a great probability hereof, nay a necessity, daily approaching nearei and nearer to compel it, if
any or
all
to be safe
of the dissenting parties intend or desire from the danger of the common enemy,
who is not out of work, though at present much out of sight and observation. " The grounds of this are briefly these ; first, the cause hath still the same goodness in it as ev er
;
of
and
all
is,
or ought to be, as
people, that
good
much
in
have adhered
the hearts to
it
it is
;
be valued now, than when neither blood nor treasure were thought too dear to carry it out and hold it up from sinking and hath the not less to
;
same omnipotent God, whose great name cerned
in
it,
and welfare vival to
as well as his people's
it,
;
who knows
also
how
is
con
outward safety to give a re-
when secondary instruments and
visi-
means
fail, or prove deceitful. Secondly, the persons concerned and engaged n this cause are still the same as before, with the
ble
"
advantage of being more
tried,
more inured
*o
HENRY VANE.
SIR
257
danger and hardship, and more endeared to one by their various and great experiences, as
another,
well of their
these are the
own
hearts as their fellow brethren's
same
still
in
heart,
and desire
;
after
the same thing, which is, that, being freed out of the hands of their enemies, they may serve the
Lord without
fear in holiness
and righteousness
all
the days of their lives.
" As they have had this great good finally in heir aims (if declarations to men and appeals to
God
any thing), so, as a requisite to attain did with great cheerfulness and unanimthey draw out themselves to the utmost in the ity signify
this,
maintenance of a war, when
all
other means,
first
In the
ineffectual.
essayed, proved management of this war it pleased God, the righteous Judge, (who was appealed to in the controversy,) so to bless the counsel
and forces of the persons conin this cause, as in the end to
cerned and engaged
make them over their
absolute
and complete and by
common enemy
;
conquerors this
means,
they had added unto the natural right, which was in them before, (and so declared by their representatives, in
Parliament assembled,) the right of claim
conquest, for the strengthening of their just to
be governed by national councils, and succesown election and set-
sive representatives of their
This they once thought they had been possession of, when it was ratified, as it were.
ting up. in
VOL.
IV.
17
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
258 in the
blood of the
But of
last king.
late a great
interruption having happened unto thrn in ineir former expectations, and, instead thereof, some-
thing rising up that seems rather accommxibted to the private and selfish interes' of a parnculai part (in comparison), than
common good and gaged
this
in
pacted body
truly adequate ro the concern of the wli^e body en-
cause
is
now
;
hence
falling
it
com-
thai this
is,
asunder into
many
dis-
unthing all the common along as hoped for, by enemy their last if these breaches be not and relief);
senting
parts
not unforeseen, nor
(a
timely healed, and the offences (before they take too deep root) removed, they will certainly work more to the advantage of the common enemy, than any of their own unwearied endeavors, and dangerous contrivances in foreign parts, put all together.
"
A
serious discussion and sober enlarging upon these grounds will quickly give an insight into the state of the question, and naturally tend to a plain
and familiar resolution thereof.
"That, which
is first
to be
ture and goodness of the cause
carried in
it
found so
many
it
within
the
their counsels, their
own
its
opened, ;
the nait
no!
evidence, would scarce havs
of the people of three
is
which, had
God
adherers
nations, contributing
tc
eithei
their purses, their bodily pains, 01
affections
and
prayers,
as
a
combined
HENRY VANE.
SiR
which the
strength, without
would have been
common enemy, and
military
available
little
restore
their just natural rights
in
to
259
whole body things, and true
to
this
civil
freedom in matters of conscience. " The two last-mentioned
particulars,
staled,
evidence
will
ral
is
rightly
the nature
sufficiently
goodness of this cause. " For the first of these, that
alone
force
subdue the
and
to say, the natu-
which the whole party of honest men
right,
adhering to this cause are by the success of their
arms restored unto,
fortified
in,
and may claim, as
their undeniable privilege, that righteously cannot
be
from
taken
them,
bringing into exercise
"
;
nor it
they
debarred from
lies in this.
enjoy the freedom (by of dutiful compliance and condescension from way all the parts and members of this society) to set are to have and
They
up meet persons ture
may
in
the place of supreme judica-
and authority amongst them, whereby they have the use and benefit of the choicest light
and wisdom of the nation, that they are capable to call forth, for the rule and government undei
which they
will live
orcise of such
;
and, through the orderly ex-
measure of wisdom and counsel as
this way, shall please to give unto them, to shape and form all subordinate actings and administrations of rule and government, so as
the Lord, in
shall best
answer the public welfare and safety of
the whole.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
260 "
This, in substance, is the right and freedom contained in the nature and goodness of the cause
wherein the honest party have been engaged of our civil right and
in this all the particulars
dom
are
comprehended, conserved
in,
;
for
free-
and derived
from their proper root in which whilst they will ever thrive, flourish, and increase. grow, they ;
Whereas, on the contrary,
if
there be never so
branches of liberty planted on the root many of a private and selfish interest, they will not long prosper, but must, within a little time, wither and degenerate into the nature of that whereinto they fair
are planted."
After given,
proceeding to
illustrate
by showing how,
the views, thus
after the
Norman Con-
of the people were gradually and insensibly undermined and taken away by the accumulation of power in the hands of rulers, who quest, the liberties
used to
it
to
promote
aggrandize
the
their
own
selfish
purposes, and
government which they
established, Sir
Henry
division of the
subject.
had
upon the remaining Another long extract is
enters
presented to the reader, from a persuasion that it amply reward any one, who peruses it, in the
will
clearness and fulness, with which
expresses the all-important
it
defines
and
principle of religious
liberty.
"
The
second branch which remains briefly to is that which also, upon the grounds
be handled,
HENRY VANE.
SIR of natural right,
is
to
be
261 unto, but dis-
laid claim
from the former, as it respects a tinguishes more heavenly and excellent object, wherein the freedom is to be exercised and enjoyed ; that is itself
to say, matters of religion, or that concern service and worship of God.
"Unto
the
freedom the nations of the world
this
have right and
by the purchase of Christ's who, by virtue of his death and resurrecIS BECOME THE SOLE LORD AND RULER IN title
blood, tion,
AND OVER THE
CONSCIENCE
;
to
for
this
end
Christ died, rose, and revived, that he might be Lord both of the dead and the living, and that
every one might give an account of himself,
in all
matters of God's worship, unto God and Christ unto whom they alone, as their own master ;
stand
or
fall
to
judgment, and are not
in
be
or
oppressed For judgment-seats of men. things
brought
why
in these
before
the
shouldst thou
nought thy brother in matters of his faith and conscience, and herein intrude into the piopei
set at
office
of Christ, since
we
of Christ,
are
all
to stand
at
the
whether governors
01 judgment-seat governed, and by his decision only are capable of being declared with certainty to be in the right
or in the
"
and
By
wrong
?
virtue then of this
confirmed
men (whose
in
the blood
supreme law, sealed of Christ, unto
souls he challenges a
all
propriety in, to
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
262
bring under his inward
of God),
worship
it
rule in the
is,
that all
and
service
magistrates are
and forbear intermeddling with, giving or imposing, in those matters; they are to content themselves with what i? plain in their fear
to
rule,
commission, as ordained of God to be his ministers unto men for good, whilst they approve themselves the doers of that which is good in the sight of men, and whereof earthly and worldly judicatures are capable
iudgment for praise
ner he
is
in
;
p.nd
to
to
make
and
a clear
perfect
which case the magistrate is to be In like manprotection to them.
be a minister of terror and revenge
to
those that do evil in matters of outward practice, converse, and dealings in the things of this life
between man and man, for the cause whereof the judicatures of men were appointed and set up.
But
to
exceed these
warrantable is
limits, as
it
is
for the magistrate, (in
not safe nor
that
He, who
higher than the highest, regards and will show
iimself displeased at ,ne people,
it,)
who hereby
ma, devouring, wrathful
so neither
is it
are nourished spirit,
up
good
for
a bit-
in
one against anoth-
and are found transgressors of that royal law, which forbids us to do that unto others, which
er,
we would
not have them do unto us, were
we
in
their condition." it
would be
religious liberty
difficult
more
to find
the principle
clearly, justly, or
po^f
of
ffully
SIR
HENRY VANE.
263
The expressed than in the preceding extract. writer goes on to develope the method by whicn it
might be secured to the people, and suggests, perceive, the idea of a FUNDA-
as the reader will
MENTAL, CONSTITUTION. " This freedom then
and enjoyed, as well for the people's
hath been said,
is
of high concern to be had magistrate's sake as
for the
common good
;
and
it
consists, as
the magistrate's forbearing to forth of rule and coercion in things the put power that God hath exempted out of his jurisdiction.
So
in
care requisite for the people's obtainmay be exercised with great ease, if it be
that
all
ing this
proper season, and that this restraint
taken in
its
be laid
the supreme power before it be erectFUNDAMENTAL CONSTITUTION among oth-
ed, as a
upon
upon which the free consent of the people is given to have the persons brought into the exerers,
supreme authority over them and on their behalf; and if besides, as a further confirmation
cise of
hereunto, it be acknowledged the voluntary act of the ruling power, when once brought into a capac'ty of acting legislatively, that herein they
bound up and judge it their duty so to be, (both in reference to God, the institutor of magistracy, and in reference to the whole body by
are
whom
they are intrusted,) this great blessing will hereby be so well provided for, that we shall ftave so cause to fear, as it may be ordered
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
264
" By this means a great part of the outward exercise of antichristian tyranny and bondage will be plucked up by the very roots, which, till some such course be held
new and
in
it,
will
be always apt to resome new form
sprout out afresh under
or refined appearances, as
by
late
experi-
years'
we have been taught." The reader has observed in the foregoing extracts much that must have borne heavily on the conscience of Cromwell. The whole production, ence
it is throughout respectful, dignified, and from personality, was adapted to hold up before him a picture which could not fail to be rec-
while
free
ognised as his own, to exhibit a view of the deformity of his past conduct, and to point out a course of procedure, which, however disagreeable to his selfish ambition,
science would
tell
both his reason and con-
him he ought
reproofs and admonitions were in
expressed ing against
them.
The
most part
such general terms that their bear-
Cromwell would only be perceived by
himself, and those
ed
to pursue. for the
In
who knew how
well he d
.'serv-
the
following passage, ho\/ever, a plainer and more direct style. offence, which causes such great thoughts
Vane adopts "
The
of heart amongst the honest party,
(if
may, when
it
may
be
the magistrate himself professes he doth but desire and wait for conviction therein,) is in short this ;
freely expressed, as sure
it
SIR "~
HENRY VANE.
That when the restored
is
nay,
265
and privilege is returned, by conquest unto the whole body right
(that forfeited not their interest therein), cf freely disposing themselves in such a constitution of righ-
teous
government
as
may
held forth in this cause
;
answer the end
best
that nevertheless, either
through delay they should be withheld as they are, or through design they should come at last to
be utterly denied the exercise of
upon
yet to use if
this their right,
pretence that they are not in a capacity as
those,
it
which indeed hath some truth
;
who
are
now
in
power and
in
in
it,
command
of the arms, do not prepare all things requisite thereunto, as they may, and like faithful guardians to the
Commonwealth, admitted
to
be
in its
non
age, they ought.
" But cise
if
the bringing of true freedom Into exeryea, so refined a party of men.
among men,
why hath this been concealed all And why was it not thought on be-
be impossible, this
while
?
much blood was spilt, and treasure spent ? Surely such a thing as this was judged real and practicable, not imaginary and notional. fore so
'
Besides,
why may
it
not suffice to have been
thus long delayed and withheld from the whole body, at least as to its being brought into exercise
now at last ? Surely the longer it is withheld, the stronger jealousies do increase, that it is intended to be assumed and engrossed by a party only,
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY
266 to the
leaving the rest of the body, (who, in
all
reason and justice, ought to be equally participants with the other in the right and benefit of the
aged
conquest, forasmuch as the war was man at the expense, and for the safety of the
whole,) in a condition almost as much exposed, and subject to be imposed upon, as if they had been enemies and conquered, not in any sense conquerors. cc If ever such an unrighteous, unkind, &nd deceitful dealing with brethren should hapoen, ii
though it might continue above the reach of queG tion from human judicature, yet can we think it possible
it
should escape and go unpunished by
the immediate hand of the righteous Judge of the whole world, when he ariseth out of his place to
" oppressed ? After this solemn and searching admonitory reproof, Sir Henry proceeds with admirable ingenu-
do right
to the
present such a view of events and affairs, without as, any personal allusion, made it clear to all that the ambition of Cromwell was the eyes, ity, to
of the establishment of a just " the Achan government, that he was
obstacle in the
and
who
free
way
obstructed the settlement of these distracted
kingdoms," and that, in preferring his own aggrandizement to the common good, and seizing an unlawful power, he had taken " of the accur id (Joshua vii. 1.) thing. 5 '
9IR
HENRY VANE.
267
tie thes goes on to throw out some general views respeeiiag government, in the course of " It is not dewhich he thus expresses himself. nied but that the supreme power, when by free consent it is placed in a single person, or in some
few persons, may be capable to administer righteous government ; at least the body that gives this liberty, when they need not, are to thank themselves
ommends "
" prove otherwise that it should be made an if it
He
also rec-
article
of the
Constitution," that the executive and legislati
powers should be vested
in
'e
different bran^nes :f
the government. And in the following passage he delineates the course of proceedings by which a constitution might be agreed upon, and estab-
The method,
lished.
it
will
be observed,
is
the
substance, that was adopted more than a in the North American States. afterwards, rt^ntury ({ The most natural way for which would seem
same,
tr
in
be
iKithful,
by a general council, or CONVENTION of honest, and discerning men, chosen for
purpose, by the free consent of the whole body of adherents to this cause, in the several parts of the nations, and observing the time and that
place of meeting appointed to them, (with other circumstances concerning their election,) by order from the present ruling power, considered as general
of the army.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
268
" Which convention
is not properly to exercise but power, only to debate freely, and agree upon the particulars, that, by way of fundamental constitutions, shall be laid and invio-
the legislative
upon which the whole body so represented doth consent to cast itself into a civil and politic incorporation, and lably observed, as the conditions
under the
visible
form and administration of govto be by each indi-
ernment therein declared, and vidual
member
of the body subscribed
in
testimo-
ny of his or their particular consent given thereunto.
Which
them an
conditions so agreed (and amongst
act of oblivion for all) will be without
danger of being broken or departed from, considering of what it is they are the conditions, and convention wherein they are of the people represented in their highest state of sovereignty, as they have the sword in their hands unsubjected unto the rules of the
nature of the
made, which
is
government, but what themselves, orderly as sembled for that purpose, do think fit to make. civil
And, the sword, upon these conditions, itself to the supreme judicature thus up,
how suddenly might harmony,
subjecting to be
set
righteousness,
and safety unto the whole body follow hereupon, as the happy fruit of such a settlelove, peace,
ment, us."
if
the
Lord have any
delight to be amongst
HENRY VANE.
SIR After again
became him
make
to
such
about
a
" the
reminding
happy
the
first
269
general," that
move
it
in bringing
he approaches the
result,
conclusion in language of the most earnest exhortation, of which the following passage is a speci-
men. " This then being the state of our present fairs and differences, let it be acknowledged on hands,
let
yea
all
be convinced that are concerned,
all
that there
af-
not only possibility but probability,
is
a compelling necessity of a firm union in this
gveat body, the setting of
which
and tune
in joint
again by a spirit of meekness and fear of the Lord, is the work of the present day, and will prove the only remedy, under God, to uphold ;
and cany on
Lord
in
this blessed
the three
thus far onwards in
nations, that its
Now
readiness
unto in
this reuniting
all
the
already
its
come
desired and
in Christ, the desire
nations, as the chief ruler
"
is
progress to
expected end, of bringing all
cause and work of the
amongst
work
dissenting
of
us.
let
parts,
there be a
from
highest to the lowest,
the forth
by cheerfully coming of self-denial and love, instead of war and wrath, and to cast down themto
one another
in a spirit
selves before the Lord,
who
their spirits, in self-abasement
the mutual
is
the Father of
and humiliation
offence they have been in for
all
for
some
time past, one unto another, and great provoca-
270
A
unio
lion
&
God
BIOGRAPHY.
AN
11 1
ar\d
reproach
name, who expected
to
unto his glorious
have been served by
them, with reverence and godly is a consuming fire."
As
fear, for
our
God
Henry Vane composed this treatise with desire to awaken the conscience of Cromwell, and still entertained some hope that he
a
Sir
sincere
brought back to the service of that which he had formerly been so glorious of cause, a champion, he was studiously careful to blend
might be
with great fidelity in admonishing and reproving him, the most perfect kindness and respectful tenderness
This
towards
his
person
particularly in
and
character.
the conclusion.
appears hath been done amongst us may probmore the effect of temptation than have been ably of the product any malicious design and this sort 41
spirit
What
;
of temptation
men
in
is
very
common and
power (how good soever they
incident
may
to
be), to
be overtaken, and thereupon do sudden, unadvised action, which the Lord pardons and overrules for evidently making appear, that it is the work of the weak and fleshly part, which his own people carry about with them too much unsubAnd therefore the Lord thinks fit by theso dued.
the besr
;
show them the need of being beholden them again, and bring them into their right temper and healthful
means
to
to their spiritual part to restore
constitution.
HENRY VANE.
SIR
271
"
And thus whilst each dissenting part is aggravating upon itself faultiness and blame, and none excusing, but all confessing they deserve, in one sort or other, reproof, if not
God's sight
God
to
before
who knows how
;
come
soon
men, yet
may
it
denying frame of
please
and
into this broken, contrite,
in
self-
in the spirit
own
the three nations, and
good people within them, thus truly hum-
bled and abased, for his temple, and the place of his habitation and rest, wherein he shall abide for
ever?
of
whom
it
may be
God
said,
midst of her, she shall not be
moved
is
the
in
God
;
shall
help her, and that right early, or with his momAt which time he will sit silent ing appearance.
no longer, but Heaven will speak again, and beactive and powerful in the spirits and hearts
come
of honest men, and dences, or
when
in
by land, or remain
home
for
the
prayers a flock
solemn
people, and
of holy
feasts,
in
'
men,
I will
of his
as
their
God am
hear the
again
visibly
own them,
Jerusalem
her
in
yet for this be inquired of
by the house of Israel, saith the Lord, them and then they shall know that ;
provi-
go out to fight by sea counsel and. debates at
public weal, and
of his
as
the works
either they
to I
do
it
for
the Lord
with them, and that they are
my
people, and that ye, my flock, the flock of my pasture, are men, that have showed yourselves
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
272
1 am your God, that have and powerful God, an all-wise myself " * the Lord God.'
weak,
men, and
sinful
declared saith
The
foregoing
some idea of the
extracts
will
give
the
reader
tone, and import of the
style,
- l
It is indeed an admirable Healing Question." specimen of sincere admonition, fearless exhorta-
tion,
and respectful reproof.
to find a
more
It
would be
difficult
signal manifestation of moral
cour-
age and public virtue than was exhibited in thus Vane was answering Cromwell's proclamation. a private citizen, and he stood before the mightiest
monarch of
integrity
and
nothing but his evident that he sus-
his age, strong in
his truth.
It is
pected Cromwell of designing to perpetuate his ill-gotten power in his own person and family ; it is probable that he had received some inti mation of his being then about to assume the crown. He was determined to prevent, if possi-
and
ble, and at every hazard, the accomplishment of such a criminal purpose, and to expose himself to the Protector's wrath and vengeance, rather than
keep
silent,
when
his
country required him
duty to
to
him
as well as to his
speak out, and to
*The "Healing Question" may be found Somers Collection of Tracts," Vol. VI. p. 303.. Kdition, revised by Walter Scott, Esq. 1811.
in
his
"The
Second
SIR
273
of fearless warning,
the language
in
very face,
HENRY VANE.
may be
and plain rebuke.
Many
searched
an instance of such real he-
in vain, for
Henry Vane
roism as Sir
a battle-field
exhibited
in
an arbitrary usurper in the tone and " Healing Question."
When we
addressing of the
spirit
consider the character of this work,
the all-important principles it discloses, the power, d'gnity, and richness of its style, the complete delineation
presents of the
it
which the friends of
liberty
"good cause,"
for
ihose days con-
in
tended, and the interesting and extraordinary circumstances that occasioned and followed its production ; and then reflect, that it has either been
unknown
to such authors as
or regarded
them
beneath their
shall
how
as
Hume, notice, we
by
perceive superficially and inadequately the history of
England has,
as yet,
Although, as the
Henry Vane
failed,
been written. next chapter either
to
will
show, Sir
awaken the con-
science of Cromwell, or to procure for his conn try at that time a free constitution, the princi pies
he inculcated were not
They were
silently
lost to
the world
communicated from mind
to
mind, and transmitted from generation to geneiation, until, in these latter days, they have become the objects of desire and pursuit throughout Chris-
tendom.
The
VOL. IV.
seed
was 18
buried, for
a
season,
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
274
beneath the length to
a
branches
far
soil,
lofty
but the noble tree has risen at height,
and spread
over the face of the earth. tion
is,
its
and wide, as shade and as
at this
moment,
Every
civilized na-
either enjoying, or strug-
gling for, written constitutions,
warks of liberty
mighty shelter,
as
the only bul
SIR
HENRY VANE.
CHAPTER
276
XIIL
Conduct of Cromwell in Reference
to the
Vane imprisoned in Carising Question." brook Castle. Character of Cromwell. Godwin's Contrast of Vane and Cromwell. Vane released from Prison. Letter to James " Balance in on a Harrington Popular Government."
Cromwell continues
to
persecute
Vane.
SIR HENRY VANE, being determined to conduct with perfect good faith towards Cromwell, transmitted to him a copy of the " Healing Question," in the first place, privately, through the hands of General Fleetwood, in hopes that the Protector might be induced to follow his advice,
and adopt some such course, as he had proposed, in which event the public might never have
But after thing of the transaction. the lapse of a month the manuscript was returned without comment, and Sir Henry immediately
known any
issued
which
it
from
allusion
the
press, with
was made
to the
a
Postscript, in
fact that
it
had
previously been communicated to Cromwell. It is not known whether the manuscript was
read by the Protector.
Perhaps,
in
the multiplied
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
276
ty of his cares,
he had not
leisure to
examine
it.
Perhaps Fleetwood purposely neglected to put it into his hands, from the fear that it would pro-
And perhaps Cromwell permitted it to voke him. bs published with a design of bringing it up against author.
its
However
ifested the greatest it
appeared
it
manwhen peremptory summons was
may have
been, he
degree of exasperation
A
in print.
instantly sent to its author ; and he was brought before the Council, under circumstances, in the re-
make free use of the lan" of whose Godwin, guage History of the Com" of is the only work of the monwealth England kind, that does any thing like justice to the men lation
of which I shall
and events of that period. " The case of Vane is notice.
His high
entitled to particular recoiled from the arbitre-
spirit
proceeding of being summoned, absolutely, and without cause shown, to appear before the He had, a short time before, been secCouncil. ry
ond
to
no man
in
the island,
and
in
principal director of the councils of the
reality the
Common
No man
was ever more deeply imbued with a republican spirit and his high rank and imple fortune had. not exactly prepared him l:
wealth.
:
be
commanded by any
some years
one.
He
had now spun;
and kept aloof from ali cabals and private consults and disquisitions w of doubt
he did passed
not
over
despond. his
spirit.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
300
His confidence was founded upon a rock, and
his
the promises of God disclosed to his clear and heaven-illumined vision the sure prospect of the happy period, when there would be no more faith in
He felt that tyranny or oppression on the earth. the hour of his final trial was rapidly approaching ; and, although there was a constitutional delicacy and tenderness
in
nature, which
his
had even
made him
so sensitive
to
to lead his
enemies
charge him with a want
to
physical
suffering, as
of personal courage, he contemplated death with a singular calmness and complacency of spirit
And
well
over his tion
he might; for, when he looked back mind rested with a just satisfac-
life, his
upon the
faithful
and constant devotion of
talents to the cause of
God and
when he turned towards plated, with a glorious
his
people
;
his
and,
the fature, he contem-
hope and
blessed assur-
ance, the rewards in reserve tor sincerity, benevolence, and piety in that world, vvhere the wicked
cease from troubling and the weary are at rest.
SIR
HENRY VANE.
301
CHAPTER XV. " Jin His Occupation while a Prisoner. IZpis" The Face of the Times " tie General, fyc." " Meditations on Death " " Letter to his Wife."
Vane removed
to the
Tower.
DURING ly,
his imprisonment on the rocks of Scilhe solaced and dignified his solitude, and oc-
cupied the weary and slow-pacing hours, by composing several elaborate works in his favorite One of them was entitled branches of theology. " An to the mystical Body of General Epistle Christ on Earth, the
who
Church
universal in Babylon,
are Pilgrims and Strangers on the Earth, de-
and seeking after the Heavenly Country." This work was addressed " to the scattered seed
siring
and sheep of Christ
in all nations, the true Israel
unknown for the most part to themselves, but more to the world and worldly Christian yet, in this their unknown or dispersed estate, owned of the Lord, as the church that are by
faith,
;
in
God
the
Father,
truly
pure,
Christian, of which Jesus Christ
immediate head."
manner.
It
is
commences
catholic,
and
the alone and in the following
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY. k
:i.
1.,
Go'Jj or the
where
inward
God
it
called
is
court,
the
and those
is
intended
temple of i*>at
worship
This kingdom of Christ is capable of subsisting and being managed inwardly, in the minds of his people, in there, glorifying
a
hidden
state,
in their ?p:riis.
concealed from
the
eye of the
By the power thereof, the inward senses or eyes of the mind are opened and awakened, to the drawing them upward lo a heavenly conworld.
and carrying up the soul to the throne of God, and to the knowledge of the life verse, catching
which
is
hid, with Christ, in
God.
Those
that are
SIR in this
HENRX VANE.
307
whom
it is,
kingdom, and
in
and
ness,
to continue in
desolate condition,
such a
God
into the wilder-
solitary, dispersed,
calls
them out of
it.
opened to them in wilderness, whence they draw the waters of
They have this
till
power of
the
Church
are fitted to fly with the
wells and springs
salvation, without being in
bondage
to the life of
sense." Sir
Henry
during his
also
composed
confinement
following extracts are taken. will
regard them with
several shorter works
in Scilly,
from which the
The
reader, I trust,
interest, as illustrative of the
noble character and enlightened principles of their author, and also as invaluable expressions of the
most sublime sentiments of patriotism, piety. entitled
The first I shall notice, " The People's Case
clear, learned,
and ample
virtue,
and
a political tract stated." After a is
discussion of the
first
principles of government, with a particular reference to the history of the English Constitution,
he reaches the following conclusions, which may be considered as a declaration of his creed as a statesman.
"
Common
consent, lawfully and rightfully the body of a nation, and intrusted with given by of their own free choice, to be exerdelegates cised
by them, as their representatives, (as well for the welfare and good of the body that trusts thern^ as to the honor and well-pleasing of God, the
308
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
Supreme
Legislator,)
is
the principle and weans,
by the law of nature and nations, to and admission to the exercise of constitution give warranted
government and su-preme authority over them and amongst them.
Agreeable hereunto,
suppose, that our ancestors, in this
we
are
to
kingdom, did
proceed, when they constituted the government thereof in that form of administration, which hath
been derived
to us
in
the course and channel of
our customs and laws." " For a rational man to give up his reason and will unto the judgment and will of another, (without which no outward coercive power can be,)
whose judgment and will is not perfectly and unchangeably good and right, is unwise, and unand, by the law of nature, forbidden.
safe,
therefore
all
such
made by
gifts,
rational
must be conditional, either implied or
And men,
explicit, to
be followers of their rulers, so far as they are followers of that good and right, which is contained in
the law of the
ther
;
Supreme Lawgiver, and no
reserving to
themselves
(in
fur-
case of such
defection and declining of the ruler's actings from the rule) their primitive and original freedom, to
may, in such case, be as were before they they gave away their subjection unto the will of another and reserving also the
resort unto, that so they
;
judged by a meet and compelent judge, which is the reason of the King and
power
to
have
this
SIR
HENRY VANE.
kingdom, declared by liament;
people
in
that
the
is
to
their representatives in
say,
the
delegates
Par-
of the
House of Commons assembled, and
the commissioners
own
309
on the King's behalf, by his House of Peers, which
letters patent, in the
two concurring do very wholly.
one from
far
bind the King,
if
not
And when
these cannot agree, but break another, the Commons in Parliament
assembled, are ex officio the keepers of the liberties of the nation, and righteous possessors and defenders of it, against all usurpers and usurpa" Ancient when tions whatsoever." * foundations,
*
In his pleadings, on the day of his trial, Sir Henry enlarged, more particularly, upon the principle expressed in the above paragraph. He argued, on that occasion,
from Fortescue and others, that the government of Eng land, consisting, as it does, of three branches, rested, as true basis, on the third estate, or House of Comand that, therefore, the government was not completely overthrown during the times of the Commonwealth, but still remained fixed upon its legitimate foun-
upon
mons
its ;
House of Commons. " When," said he, the inordinate fire of the times, two ci the three estates were for a season melted down, they dd but retire
dation in the
"by
their root, and were not thereby destroyed, but rather preserved." Again, in vindicating the leading part he took in Parliament, after the death of the King and the
into
dissolution of the
House
of Lords, he said that he thought
his duty " to preserve the
government, at least, in its whatever changes and alterations it might be exposed unto in its branches, through the blusterous and stormy times that have passed over us."
it
root,
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
310
once they become destructive to those very ends for which they were first ordained, and prove hindrances to the good and enjoyment of human societies, to the true
worship of God, and the safety
of the people, are for their sakes, and upon the same reasons to be altered, for which they were laid."
first
At the time when
these pieces were written, the
all appearance, was utterly The only patriots overthrown, and for ever lost. who remained were either driven into exile, or
cause of liberty, to
immured fold.
in
And
dungeons, or perishing on the scafSir
Henry well knew that his own demanded by his enemies.
blood would soon be
He
contemplated the event with entire composure. following passages show how fully he had
The
succeeded those
in
disciplining his faith,
consolations
and
and
in acquiring
supports which
alone can secure to the mind.
I
know
religion
not, in the
range of history, a brighter or more triumphant of the higher wisdom, the nobler phiof the Gospel, than he exhibited when losophy,
illustration
in
prison, at the bar of condemnation, and in the
hour of death. " To dict,
and
"
murmur," says he, against God's verresist his doom, so solemnly given and
executed amongst
us, in the sight and concurring of the nations round about, is to acknowledgment become adversaries to God, and to betray our
country.
If
God, then, do think
fit
to permit
such
HENRY VANE.
SIR
a dispensation to pass
ishment of our
upon
and
sins,
arc the actors therein
;
us,
for a
it
is
311 for the
pun
plague to those that
to bring
more
Such
plary vengeance upon them.
swift
as
exem-
have
dis-
charged a good conscience, in what may most offend the higher powers, are not to fear, though ihey be admitted to the exercise of their rule with an unrestrained power and revengeful mind. " Though, from that mountain, the storm that
be very
will
comes,
terrible,
yet some are safest
storms, as experience shows.
Yea, best thereGod's when their in, by mercies, greatest enemies think most irrecoverably to undo them/'' in
"
How
generally,
hath
it
fared with the cause of Christ
more now than sixteen hundred
for
the common object of scorn from the base and foolish not persecution, but from the and wisest persons in noblest only, the world's esteem Yet, though our sufferings
being
years,
made
and
!
and the time of our warfare seems long,
it is very the of the short, considering kingdom perpetuity
which shall
at
last
we
shall
obtain, and
individually reign with
wherein
we
the chief sovereign the kingdoms of the
For, whereas all world have not yet lasted six thousand years, this is everlasting and without end. They that overthereof.
come by not (Rev.
xii.
loving their lives unto the death 11.) shall be pillars in the house of
this everlasting
" kingdom, never to be removed.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
312
" Evils themselves, through the wise overruling providence of God, have good fruits and effects.
The
world would be extinguished and perish,
if
were not changed, shaken, and discomposed by a variety and interchangeable course of things, wise-
it
ordered by God, the best Physician. This to honest and reasonable ought mind, satisfy every and make it joyfully submit to the worst of chan-
ly
ges,
how
strange and wonderful soever they may works of God and nature,
seem, since they are the and
that,
which
is
a loss in one respect,
is
a gain
in another."
The following passages, taken from Sir Henry's " Meditations on Death," would have established the fame of a heathen sage, and are full of the highest Christian philosophy. " True natural wisdom pursueth
the
learning
and practice of dying well, as the very end of life and indeed he hath not spent his life ill, that hath
;
learned to die well.
duty of
It is
the chiefest thing and
life.
" The knowledge of dying
is
the knowledge of
liberty, the state of true freedom, the
nothing, to live well, contentedly,
Without
this,
there
is
way
to feai
and peaceably.
no more pleasure
in
life,
than in the fruition of that thing which a man In order to which, we feareth always to lose. must, above
all,
endeavor that our
sins
may
die,
KENRY VANE
SIR
and that we may see them dead, before ourselves which alone can give us boldness in the day of
;
judgment, and make us always ready and prepared for death.
" Death is
not to be feared and fled from, as
is
as a thing natural, reasonable,
for, It
is
to
be
carrying no
looked
harm
in
enemies can do to desire and
from it
all
seek
it
patiently to be waited
by most, but sweetly and
and inevitable.
a thing indifferent, upon it This, that is all the hurt as
is
us,
after,
that
which we should
as the only
the torments of this
life
;
haven of
gives us a fuller fruition of Christ,
great gain, that the sooner
we
rest
and which, as is
a very
are possessors of the
better.
"
The
of a good man,
spirit
when he
ceases to
the body, goes into a better stale of life, than that which he exercises in this world ; and live
in
when once
in that,
he would refuse
know what
were
it.
this life
it
possible to
resume
this,
Yea, were a man capable here is, before he receives
to it,
he would scarce ever have accepted it at first. The selfsame journey men have taken, from no being to being, or from preexistent being into morlife, without fear or passion, they may take
tal
again from that
immortality
" Death
life,
by death,
into a life (hat hath
in
it.
is
the inevitable law
have put upon
us.
Things
God and
nature
certain should not
be
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
314
but expected. Things doubtful only are instead of taking away any be feared. Death, us even the perfection of from all, us, gives thing feared
to
our natures
;
sets us at liberty,
both from cur
7
and others domination
bodily desires, servant free from his muster.
own
makes the
;
doth not bring us into darkness, but takes darkness out of us, us out of darkness, and puts us into marvellous light. It
Nothing perishes or is dissolved by death, but the veil and covering, which is wont to be done away It brings us out of a dark duncrannies whereof our sight of geon, through the light is but weak and small, and brings us into an
from
all
ripe fruit.
open liberty, an and perpetual. " To be
estate of light
unwilling to die oe a man, since to be a man is
most
just,
goes
thou to
Ho
that fears
not
men
to be unwilling to to
be mortal.
to die, fears
From hence have proceeded resolutions
unveiled
It
which we are always walking. the world jzo whither ail
fearest ?
life,
reasonable, and desirable to arrive at
that place towards
Why
is is
and
and
free
the
nothing.
commendable
speeches of virtue, uttered by
whom
the world huth not been worthy. commanded by Vespasian not Roman, gallant to come to the senate, answered, He was a sena-
of
A
tor, therefore fit to
there, it
if required
be at the senate
to
as his conscience
;
and, being
give his advice, he
commanded him.
would do
Hereupon.
SIR
HENRY VANE.
jemg threatened by the Emperor, he
315 replied,
Did
Do
you
ever tell you, that I was immortall what you will; I will do what I ought. I
It is in
your power to put me unjustly to death ; and in mine to die constantly. 11 The more voluntary our death is, the more honorable.
Life
may be
man by every man,
but
taken away from every not
But
death.
it
is
greater constancy, well to use the chain wherewith we are bound, than to break it. man is
A
not to abandon his charge in
life,
without the ex-
Nerva, press command of him that gave it him. a great lawyer, Cato of Utica, and others, died, as not able to bear the sight of the weal-public in
that bad
and declining
state, into
providence it was brought, they should have considered,
in
which by God's
their times
'Multa dies variusque labor mutabilis
;
but
sevi
Retulit in melius.'
"
A
man ought
to carry himself blamelessly, and steady courage in his place and calling, against his assailants, and consider that it is better to continue firm and constant to the end, than
with a
fearfully to fly or die."
" But
let us more particularly, and upon truly and purely Christian principles, weigh and con-
sider death.
"
They,
which
that live
faith teaches,
by
faith, die
works death.
daily. It
The
leads
life
up the
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
316 mind
to things
takes
it
things seen,
not seen, which are eternal, and
with
off.
its
affections
which are temporal.
soul experimentally with
that
and desires, from It
acquaints the
heavenly way of
converse and intercourse, which is not expressed by sensible signs, but by the demonstration proper
whether angels, souls separate, or souls the body, as they live by faith, not by Such a way of living and shining forth in
to spirits,
yet
in
sense.
man's unto, is
naked,
when
essential
the
beams,
he
then
arrives
thick veil and wall of his flesh
dissolved, and his earthly tabernacle put
" The knowledge,
sight,
off.
and experience of such
a kind of subsisting and heavenly manner of life, that man is capable of, is the best preparative,
and most powerful motive, to leave the body, and surcease the use of our earthly organs. This, in effect,
is all,
that
bodily death, rightly
known and
understood, doth impart ; a lawful surceasing the use and exercise of our earthly organs, and our
and cheerful resorting to the use and exlife without the body, which man is
willing ercise of that
capable to subsist in, when made perfect in spirit, an equal arid associate with angels, under the
power and order of expressing what he inwardly This made Paul look conceives, as they do. upon life in the body, and life out of it, with no indifferent
home
in
eye, but as accounting the being at the body an absence from the Lord ;
SIK
HENRY VANE.
317
and such
a kind of absence from the body, as death causes, to be that which makes us most present with the Lord ; which therefore we should
be most willing unto, and, with greatest longing after, desire."
But the most
interesting production of his pen during this imprisonment, which remains to us, is a letter to his wife, the character of which will be
shown by the following " "
MY
(having
God
DEAR HEART,
The wind
desirous to
will
extracts.
yet continuing contrary, makes me in converse with thee,
be as much
opportunity,) as the providence of permit ; hoping these will come safe to
this
your hand.
It
is
no small
satisfaction
to
me,
in
these sharp trials, to experience the truth of those Christian principles, which God, of his grace, hath afforded you and me, in our measures, the knowl
edge, and emboldened us
make
to
the
profes-
sion of."
" This dark night and black shade, which G $d hath drawn over his work in the midst of us,
may be to
some
(for
aught
beautiful
we know)
piece, that
the
he
is
ground-color
exposing to
the light."
After dwelling, at some length, upon the to
which he and
his family
alludes to the influence
which
had been
trials
called,
he
afflictions are intend-
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
318
ed by Providence promoting
to exert
Christian
its
upon the character improvement,
presses himself in the following manner. " This God hath set before the eye of
mark
as the
God
for the
prize
is
which by conformity with Christ
him
fellowship with
in
my
faith,
of the high calling of
This
Christ Jesus.
in
in
and ex-
his
that
perfection,
in his
death, and
resurrection,
is
in a
most eminent degree attainable before our dissolution it shall
and the putting off our earthly tabernacle. be so far attained by the power and glory
of Christ, that not
much
fall
is
to be revealed in us, that
it
short of a very transfiguration.
shall
And
the state of the then glorious Church will be no less than a heaven upon earth, in the new heav-
ens and new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness. " Nor would I have it thought, that I have already attained the powerful practice of this holy it is much in my desire, The difficult circumstances 1 am still more and more every
duty and perfection, but aim, and
am
in,
hope. and that I
day cast to the
holding
into,
by God's wise-disposing providence,
sequestering all
me
from the world, and with-
sensible comforts from
me, so much
as
he doth, make me, in some sort, confident it is for a good end, and that out of love and faithfulness 1
am made
to drink of this bitter cup, the better to forward this necessary work in me, and upon help wherein consists the glorious liberty of the me,
HENRY VANE.
SIR sons of God.
would seem outward
may have and
If I
a very
enjoy
me
matter to
little
Help me, then,
solicitudes
(in
this,
it
be
in
.to
any other
bonds, banishment, want, or
afflictions.
and
019
your cares
all
about me,) to what will further
and advance this work in me. " The Lord grant me and mine
to be content, of our own, and will bring us to the daily bread of his rinding, which he will have us wait for, fresh and fresh from his own
if
he deny us to
live
table, without
knowing any thing of it beforehand. Perad venture there is a greater sweetness and
blessing in such a condition, that
we have
till
tried
it.
even our making troubles,
This
little
haste
to
till
patiently waiting
wherein he
we can
may add
to
get
imagine,
my
help, out of our
God's time come
open the prison doors, either by death, or some other way, as he please, for the will
magnifying his own great name, not suffering us to be our own choosers in any thing, as hitherto hath been his
" in
way with
us.
And why
should such a taking up sanctuary God, and desiring to continue a pilgrim and soli-
tary
in
world, whilst
this
1
am
in
it,
afford
still
matter of jealousy, distrust, and rage, as I see it doth, to those who are unwilling that I should be buried and
am.
my
lie
They trial,
do
quiet in
that little
my
grave, where I
now
press so earnestly to carry on
know what presence of God
AM
320
may be
afforded
me
in
it
and issue out of
it,
the magnifying of Christ in my body, by life or by death. Nor can they (I am sure) imagine
how much
I desire to
which of
Christ,
account best of
made
all.
be dissolved and to be with things that can befall me I And till then, I desire to be
my place and station, to make of him before men and not deny his
faithful
confession
all
in
name, if called forth to give a public testimony and witness concerning him, and to be, herein, nothing
terrified.
What
then will the
hurt be,
by the worst that man can but kill the body, and
that I can or shall receive
can do unto me,
who
thereby open my prison door, that I may ascend into the pleasures that are at Christ's right hand. " If the storm against us grow still higher and so as to higher, strip us of all we have, the earth is still
the Lord's and the fulness thereof; he hath
a good storehouse for us to live upon. " God can, and (if he think fit) will, chalk out
some way, wherein he may appear by dence to choose
for us,
his provi-
and not leave us to our
And being contracted into that choice. small compass, which he shall think fit to reduce us unto, we may, perhaps, meet with as true inown
ward contentment, and see as great a mercy in such a sequestration from the world, as if we were in the greatest outward prosperity. " T know nothing that remains to us, but like a
SIR in
iiif
HENRY VANE.
321
a storm, to let ourselves be
tossed
and driven with the winds, till He that can make these storras to cease, and bring us into a safe I haven, do work out our deliverance for us. doubt not but you will, accordingly, endeavour to
prepare for the worst." design of this prepare his wife and for his which he knew to be near death, family at hand, but also to sustain and solace them in It
be
will
letter
perceived
was not solely
that
the
to
the destitution and poverty, to which they would be left, should his estates, as was probable, be
and diverted from them by the governconsequence of his conviction and pun-
forfeited in
ment, ishment as a
Soon
March Scilly
traitor.
after the
date of this
letter,
which was
7th, Henry was removed from to the Tower of London. The grand jury
1662, Sir
having found a J
bill
against
him
as
" a
false trai-
he was arraigned before the Court of Bench on the 2d of June, 1662. King's
ler &ic.,'
*OL,. IT.
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
322
CHAPTER Pane's Arraignment.
XVI. Trial.
Sentence.
IN giving an account of the interesting and and execution of Sir Henry trial
memorable to
Vane, do
justice
taken
by the
it
is
success, to
extremely
difficult, if
not impossible,
Great pains were subject. and with too much government,
to the
destroy the reports and records thai
were made of the proceedings in the court ana on the scaffold. Foreseeing that such would be the case, Sir
leaving
the
Henry wrote down, each day prison,
ments he intended
substance
the
to use,
before
of the
argu-
and before going
to
execution he committed to writing the speech to
bs spoken on Tower Hill. These papers have been preserved, together with some of the cir-
cumstances that attended the scenes of fcnd
death.
A
faithful
friend,
at
an
his
trial
imminent
hazard, procured the secret printing of a volume
The proceedings in court, and containing them. at the execution, are also to be found in the " State Trials."
By
means we
these
are
en
abled to gain some idea, of course a very inadequate one, of a transaction, which created a great sensation at the time, and
ed
in
is
particularly celebrat-
the history of the period.
SIR
The
HENRY VANE.
323
prisoner was denied the benefit of counsel,
while the
attorney-general, the
solicitor-general,
and four others of the most eminent lawyers in the kingdom, were employed to conduct the
Among
prosecution.
these, to
their
own
ever-
lasting dishonor, and the disgrace of the bar and the country, were Sir John Glyn, and Sir John
Maynard, who in the times of the republic had been leading agents in the affairs of the Common were actually subject
wealth, and
which
charges
labored
they Their conduct
Vane. in
the
to
to
the
prove
was considered,
very
against at
the
and
it
deserved, by many, Hudibras," has given to their base ness the perpetual infamy, which justice and honor time,
Butler, in his
light
((
require.
" Did not the learned Glyn and Maynard, good subjects traitors, strain hard?"
"To make
The
prisoner was not permitted to see his init was read in court, or to have
dictment before a
copy of
it
afterwards, and
was denied the bene-
of legal advice or consultation out of court as well as in. Under all these disadvantages he
fit
was arraigned on the day already mentioned. In order to apprehend the substance and bear ing of the indictment, as fully as possible, before
commencing his defence, he asked that it might be read a second time, and his request was granted. He then prayed, that, as the indictment was
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHF.
324 recorded
m
language, it might be read to him This was necessary in order to enable
in that
Latin.
him
avail himself legally of
to
defect in
He
its
moved
then
stance and
But
form.
this
any exception or request was refused.
exceptions to the subcharacter of the indictment,
several
general
most important of which was, that, as the offences charged in it were committed in his cathe
pacity as a
under
member
of Parliament, or as
acting
commission, he could only be held to answer for them before Parliament itself, and not its
of any inferior or other tribunal. The his ruled out judges peremptorily exceptions, and required him to answer to the indictment at the bar
"
" Guilty
or
" Not guilty."
Sir
Henry then
length, those reasons which led him to decline to put himself on trial by pleading to the
urged, at
In this stage of the proceedings he with He showed great power and ability. argued
indictment
that
it
was impossible for him to have that equal trial which was his right as an English-
and just
man. That his previous and long-protracted imprisonment, without any examination or hearing, was a violation of law. On this point he quoted largely from
"
Magna Charta," and
confirmed his
by the authority of Sir Edward Coke. showed how his estates had been seized con-
quotations
He
trary to law, and, by citations from Coke, Bracton, and otters, he proved that his banishment to
HENRY VANE.
SIR
Scilly without a verdict
He
violation of law.
trary to
by
his
325
peers was also a
further argued, that, con-
the authorities and principles of Engcited, he was arraigned before
all
law, which he
lish
judges who, in another place, had prejudged his case and recorded their votes against him. He
dwelt upon the months and years that had been occupied in contriving and collecting evidence to sustain
the prosecution, while he had
the
all
He stated that time been kept a close prisoner. he was not permitted to know what would be alleged against him, or to do any thing
preparation for his
defence
;
and
that,
by way of
by
seizing
and placing his property beyond his reach, the government had involved his family in debts to the amount of more hands of
his rents in the
his
tenants,
than ten thousand pounds, thereby disabling them from rendering him any assistance towards his de-
He
fence.
of
the
showed
entered upon a particular examination
specifications
that they
.;uch as did not
as
a
member
lawfully
brought against
him,
and
were vague, and general, and
bear against him individually, but of a Parliament to which he was
elected,
and
in
which he had acted
in
concurrence with the nation from time to time.
Toward
the
conclusion
he used the following
language
"
And now,
having said to me, and doth occur man,
all that, is fit
to
as a rational
represent,
in
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
326
all humility to the court, 1 crave leave further to I stand at 'ihis bar, not add. only as a man, and
a
man
clothed with
privileges of the
the
most
sovereign court, but as a Christian, that hath
and reliance
faith
God, through whose gracious and
in
wise appointment
am
I
brought into these
cir-
cumstances, and unto this place at this tu:^ whose will I desire to be resigned up into, as weh
: :
in
what he now
calls
hath formerly called
my
me me
to suffer, as in
whai k
to act, for the
good of
country and the people of foundation (I
this
am
bless
God
in
it.
Upon
name of my God)
the
and know the issue
will be good God's strength may appear in my weakness ; and the more all things carry the face of certain ruin and destruction unto all I
fearless,
whatever
that
will
to the
}
prove.
near and dear to
is
more
it
me
in
this
world, the
divine deliverance arid salvation appear,
making good
content to lose his shall save
it,
about to save
that Scripture, that life
and he his
life
in
that,
he that
is
God's cause and way, instead thereof, goes
upon undue terms,
shall
lose it."
Before taking his seat Sir Henry, as we arc informed by one who was present, " did much press for counsel to be allowed him, to advise with him about any further exceptions to the indictment, besides those by him exhibited, and to
put
all
into
form according to the customary pro
SIR
EN
II
Y
VANE.
327
and language of the law, as also to them at the bar on his behalf, he not
ceedings
speak
II
to
being versed in the punctilios of law writings and He further said, that the indictment, which pleas. life, being long and his could not well be imagined that
so nearly concerned his
memory
short,
it
he should, upon the bare hearing it read, be able, in an instant, to find out every material exception against it, in form or matter."
The court then solemnly assured him, that if he would plead to the indictment, and put himself on the issue, he should, in that event, have counsel assigned him. After considerable urging, and with evident reluctance and distrust of the sincerity of the court
ed upon
He
to
and
promise, he was prevailto plead not guilty.
its
comply, and
was then remanded
Four days
afterwards,
to prison.
on Friday the 6th of
took place. Upon Sir Henry's claiming the benefit of counsel, according to the promise of the court, the judges informed him
June, the
trial
would be his counsel In this shamemanner was he deluded and deceived. Instead of aiding him in his defence, the judges that they
!
ful
never interfered
in the trial except to encourage the prosecuting officers, and to interrupt and reprimand the prisoner. They were known to
to Hampton Court, the royal residence, during the intervals of the public proceedings, and
repair
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
328
were, ihroughout, the willing and zealous instru-
ments of the
government.
The Chief
Justice
Forster was overheard to say, on the day of arraignment, when the convincing arguments of the pr'soner had
left the prosecuting officers without " of answering them, Though we know power not what to say to him, we know what to do with
the
him."
The attorney-general addressed the jury, and introduced the witnesses, on the part of the government. When he had gone through their testimony, Sir
Henry was informed
that
he might
but that he must say, at once, speak all that he had to say, as he would not again be for himself,
permitted to address the court or jury. In commencing his defence, he entered upon a legal argument, to prove, by citations from Coke
and others, that the acts charged against him,
as
treasonable towards the King, Charles the Second, could not be so considered, inasmuch as he was not at the time actually, but only de jure, King. The court here interrupted him, and required him to disprove, if he could, the evidence just given by
the
own
government witnesses, to bring forward his witnesses, and that afterwards it would be
time enough to attend to questions of law. The prisoner then said, that, not having been informed of the nature of the charges or of the
evidence to be brought against him, he had not
SIR been in
able
his
if
that,
329
prepare or to procure testimony he therefore desired process of
;
summon
court to plied,
to
defence
HENRY VANE.
his
his
witnesses.
The
witnesses were
judges re-
present,
they
might be called, but that they could not wait to have them sent for, as the jurymen were to be " kept without meat, drink, fire, or candle, till their verdict was delivered in." Notwithstanding these disadvantages, and the obstructions thus cruelly thrown
proceeded
learning,
ity,
to
to defend
which
his
in
his
way, he
himself with wonderful abil-
and eloquence. The main points arguments were directed are de-
scribed in the following questions, stated and re-
corded by him. " 1. Whether the collective body of the Parliament can be impeached of high treason ? " 2. Whether
any person, acting by authority of Parliament, can (so long as he acteth by that
commit treason ? Whether matters, acted by
authority)
"
3.
that authority,
can be called in question in an inferior court ? " 4. Whether a king de jure, and out of pos" session, can have treason committed against him ?
When
he had concluded, the solicitor-general in the most violent and de-
addressed the jury
Neither he, nor any one of clamatory manner. the judges took any notice of the important principles of constitutional law upon which Sir Henry
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
330
his defence. Their object was to influence the prejudices, and fears, and passions of the jury. The solicitor, accordingly, openly de-
had rested
clared in his speech " that he must be made a public sacrifice," and, in allusion to the prisoner's
urgent demands for the benefit of counsel, held such language as the following ; " What counsel, does he think, would dare to speak for him in
such a manifest case of treason, unless he could call down the heads of his fellow traitors, Brad-
shaw or " Hall ?
When
Cook,
from
the
top
of
Westminster
the solicitor had ended, the court sent
out the jury without saying a word on the merits of the case, in order that the effect of his ha-
rangue might not be impaired, and he was even permitted to hold a secret consultation with the
foreman as they were leaving the box. After an absence of half an hour, the jury returned into court with a verdict of Guilty, and the
prisoner
Upon it
was carried
was observed by
air
indicated
mind.
back
to
the
Tower.
leaving the hall, and after reaching his cell,
a
all,
that his countenance
lightened
and relieved
Although he had been
and
state of
in the bar for
more
than ten hours, without any refreshment, and engaged for a large part of the time in the most earnest and energetic efforts of argument and oratory,
he seemed,
at the conclusion, to be clothed
HENRY VANE.
SIR vviih
new
mation
331
strength, and inspired with unusual ani-
of
He
spirits.
who accompanied him,
thus
those
explained, to
this effect
upon
his feel-
which so much surprised them. along foreseen the prosecution, which
ings and strength,
He
had
all
He knew, that the him would be such, upon would equally involve the whole nation and
had then been consummated. offences to be charged as
;
that in defending himself, he might, therefore, be
defending the liberty and life of every Englishman, who had acted in the cause of the Commonwealth. He had been deeply imconsidered
as
pressed with a sense of the obligation that rested upon him to make a defence worthy of the imporand he tance and magnitude of the occasion ;
had formed the resolution
to
avail
himself of
every security which the constitution and laws of the country had
provided to protect the subject
Actuated by against injustice and oppression. these views, he had refused to plead to the indict-
ment
until
he was assured that he should have the
When, on the morning of that he found that he had been deceived and beday, trayed, and was without counsel to advise with benefit of counsel.
him, aid him, and
speak
for
him, and
that the
great cause of liberty and right was left for him alone to vindicate, he was oppressed with a sense of his incompetency to do it justice. But in
looking back, at the close of the day, upon the
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
33-2
defence he had been enabled to make, his heart
He overflowed with devout gratitude and joy. blessed the Lord, that he had been strengthened himself at
maintain
to
dence
had
left
lips
post
which
Provi-
arguments had mind, that he had not been
assigned
been suggested to
the
him,
his
that
overlook any means of defence, that his had been clothed with more than their usual to
eloquence, and that, by his gracious help, he had been enabled to discharge, to his own entire satisfaction, the duty he owed to his country, and to He had spoken, the liberty of his countrymen. " not for his own that day, as he told the judges,
He sake only, but for theirs, and for posterity." had done his best and his utmost for himself and for his
his
fellow
obligations to
mind was,
was discharged, fulfilled, and his
his conscience
men,
society were
therefore, at
with the world, and
peace with itself, at peace of satisfaction, comfort,
full
and joy. In reviewing the proceedings of the Court of Bench on this occasion, we cannot but be
King's
shocked
at the
perversion of the institution of a
That, which was intended to stand between the government and the citizen, and protect the
jury.
innocent from lawless violence, had readiest
and
most
destructive
bloody hands of a cruel despotism. did not dare to
meet the
become the
weapon
The
in
the
judges
responsibility of decid
HENRY VANE.
SIR ing the case of
Vane upon
333
principles of law, but
ihrew the issue entirely upon the jury, well knowing, that, through their weakness, and timidity, and prejudices, they could
cure
allowed at
the
more
in this
manner
same time,
to
and surely pro-
easily
Where
condemnation.
his
the
court
are
to control the jury, and,
throw the responsibility upon
them, the abuse of the institution
may
be consid-
ered as having reached its greatest height. But the influence of the administration, or of the judges, over a jury, sion
to
which that
is
not the only perveris In a exposed.
institution
country, like our own, where the sovereignty is in the people, a jury, being taken from the people and acting as their representatives, are directly, natu-
most dangerously subject to popular In opinion, and the influence of the multitude. an ignorant and barbarous community, a trial by rally,
and
would be any thing rather than a security. would enable governors and magistrates to shed the blood of citizens, with impunity, and in a
jury, It
way
that
upon the
would lead them belief, that
to
believe, and
they escaped
all
act
responsibili-
by thus throwing it back, through the jury, upon the people, who would be the victims, while they were flattering themselves that they were ty,
the judges. If, in a republic
like ours, the
become ignorant of the
people should
principles of law, disre-
AMERICAN
334
gardful of the securities
and insensible tianity
;
a
APHT, which the laws provide humanity and Chris
to the spirit of
by jury would be
trial
far
fectual to protect the innocent, far to sanction injustice,
days
more
inef
more prompt
and consummate oppression, violence, it was in the worst
and bloodshed, than
of the
worst
of tyrants
in
the
mother
country. It
very
is
necessary, at this
peculiar
King sustained
to Sir
explain the relation, which the
point, to
and
attitude
Henry Vane and
to the
As Sir Henry was not prosecution against him. one of his father's judges, and was known to have been opposed to his condemnation and execution, it was supposed that the Declaration of Charles the Second at Breda, previous to his res toration, would have secured him from the ven In framing the Act of geance of that monarch. Indemnity and Oblivion, the House of Commons
were, for these
reasons, unwilling to except Sir
Henry Vane from
its
benefit.
But
the
House of
Lords were desirous of having him excepted, so as to leave him at the mercy of the government, and thus restrain him from the exercise of his great talents in promoting his favorite republican principles, at his life. es,
it
At
any time, during the remainder of a conference between the two Hous-
was concluded
that the
Commons
should
consent to except him from the act of indemnify,
HENRY VANE.
SIR
335
the Lords agreeing, on their part, to concur with
the other of
House
petitioning the King, in case
in
the condemnation of Vane, not to carry the Such a petition was, in
sentence into execution.
pursuance of the arrangement, formally presented, on the part of the two Houses of Parliament, to the King ; and the Lord Chancellor made report to the Houses, that he had communicated the petition it,
to his Majesty,
who had
and had authorized him
ment, that, as to his
if
life,
Vane were
graciously granted
to assure the Parlia-
convicted, "execution,
should be remitted."
This was of course supposed to be an ample security, and the lower House consented to gratify
the Lords,
by excepting
Sir
Henry Vane from
the Act of Indemnity. But, when a new Parliament assembled, the influence of the government, strengthened and stimulated by those who wished to
come
in
for a share
tates, prevailed
of Sir Henry's great es through the House,
to get a bill
directing the attorney -general
to
proceed against
him according to law. The trial had been held, the jury had returned a verdict of condemnation, and it remained for the executive to act in the premises.
had arrived when
King
He
either
felt
that
The
exigency
became necessary, for the to redeem or to break his pledge. he was bound in honor, and before it
the world, to remit the sentence of the law
,
but
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
336
he was resolved,
possible, to avoid or etude or
if
promise, and seems to have become He acimpatient for the blood of the prisoner. cordingly, the very next day, wrote the following violate
his
letter to the
Chancellor. "
Hampton
Two u Sir is
The
me
of
carriage yesterday in the Hall,
the occasion of this letter
ly
Saturday,
been made to
relation, that has
Henry Vane's
Cotirt,
in the afternoon.
;
which,
am
if I
informed, was so insolent as to justify
all
right-
he had
done, acknowledging no supreme power in England but a Parliament, and
purpose.
You have had
many things to that a true account of all,
he has given new occasion to be hanged, certainly he is too dangerous a man to let live, if
and
if
we can of till
Think honestly put him out of the way. and give me some account of it to-morrow, when I have no more to say to you. C. R."*
this,
Whether Charles applied to other, and, in reference to such spiritual concerns, higher authority, or whether the Chancellor, as -keeper of his Majesty's conscience, absolution, certain
was empowered
to
grant
himself King and it was determined promise,
it
absolved from his that " execution," as
is
it
that the
respected the
felt
life
of
Vane
* London Monthly Repository, Vol. VI. p. 392. Keywood's Vindication of Fox's History. Appendix, pp. 24-26
HENRY VANE.
SIR should not
which
"be
remitted."
337
The ground upon
of a solemn and public pledge was excused by the courtiers and sycophants of the day was, that the new Parliament, by calling for the trial of Vane, had rendered null and void this violation
the proceedings, in reference to the petition, of the
former one.
But, as that petition actually constiAct of Indemnity, it was too
tuted a part of the
obvious to be overlooked by honest and discerning men, that, from the nature of such an act, no
succeeding Parliament would have a right to alter its terms, affect its substance, or counteract its design. possible
geant
In considering the transaction, dissent from the judgment
it
"
Hey wood.
Second has
left
No
is
im-
of Ser-
to
single act of Charles the
so foul a stain
upon
his
memory, Henry
as his having sought the execution of Sir
Vane.
However
valid his justification
may be
in
of tyrants, the want of feeling, with which he makes the detestable proposal to ihe Chancellor, admits of no palliation." the
ethics
Indeed the prosecution of Vane was, in all its base and illegal, that it cannot be, and
parts, so
has not been, justified by any writer, making pretentions to impartiality. It was felt even by the
government
itself to
be discreditable.
Clarendon,
the continuation of his History, passes it wholly over, with the most significant silence, and so does
in
Bishop Parker, VOL, iv.
in
the " History of his
22
own Time.'
;
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
338
must do, who have liberty of the subject and
Hallam, Fox, Burnet, as the least regard for the the
all
supremacy of the laws, have openly, and
condemned it, as involving, not only a breach of promise on the part of the King, but a palpable violation of the principles of English strongly
freedom and
justice.
On Wednesday,
the llth of June, Sir
Vane was brought
to
He
tence of death.
bar
the
seems
to
to
Henry
receive sen-
have approached make one more
the scene with a determination to
of the cause, which was identified with his person, and to render it still more clear, that, in proceeding against him, the government effort in favor
was trampling upon the laws of the land. be
said, that, in his
perhaps may and powerful exertions on it
all
that
this
he had done before.
And
noble bearing
day, he surpassed If the patriots of
England could have chosen a champion
to con-
tend and suffer for them, they would have selected him as he appeared on this occasion. It was a
most glorious display of genius,
spirit,
and public
virtue.
After the usual formalities, he was called upon
" whether he had any thing to say, why sentence of death should not be passed upon him." to
answer,
The
judges, without foubt, supposed that he
would probably make
a
solemn appeal, and pro-
HENRY VANE.
SIR with his usual
test,
ability, against
the verdict of
the jury, and that when he had ended, the sentence of the law would be pronounced, and the whole affair be despatched in an hour. If such
were
their
pointed. vail
expectations, they were sadly disap-
Difficult
over him
another
as
in the
they had found it to preprevious stages of the trial,
and long day's work was before
hard
them. Sir
Henry
rose, with
an
air
which
sufficiently
indicated that he not only had something, but a
good deal, to say, why sentence of death should not be passed upon him. He commenced by observing that he had not yet heard the indictment read in Latin, and he claimed it as a right, according to law. This led to a sharp debate between him and the judges
and lawyers,
which he
in
finally prevailed.
When
the indictment had been read in Latin, he next
claimed, also as his right as an Englishman, that counsel might be assigned him to make exceptions to the indictment, according to law.
much
discussion this
was overruled
;
After
but Sir Hen-
ry would not relinquish his claim until the court
had
distinctly
fusing
The
assumed the
responsibility of re-
it.
next thing he offered was a bill of ex want of counsel, he had
ceptions, which, in the
framed himself.
It
had been offered on the day
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY.
340 of
his
sign
and the judges had then refused
trial,
He now
it.
presented
it
more authority than he had used demanded of the judges that they should tones of
He
to
to the court, and, in
before, sign
it.
produced the statute passed in the reign of Edward the First, in which it was deliberately
if any English subject felt himself aggrieved by the proceedings against him of any
decreed, that,
justices,
he might write down
require
the
showed
same
justices
his exceptions,
to
and
He
them.
sign
had never been repealed, and he adduced passages from Sir Edward Coke that this statute
to prove, that, if the justices should refuse to sign bill of exceptions, they might be compelled by a writ to sign it, and otherwise proceeded against. This bold measure on the part of the prisoner
a
confounded and staggered the court. Tlia statute was explicit, the law clear, the right certain. But after much evasion and disputation, the court refused to sign or receive also
point claim, until
it
;
and on
this
Henry would not relinquish his the judges had, one by one, assumed
Sir
the responsibility of the refusal. The bill of exceptions, prepared by Sir HenIt is a paper of ry Vane, has been preserved. great ability, learning, and interest, setting forth all the particulars, in which he had been unjustly
used, and the law violated in his person.
course of
it,
In the
he mentions one circumstance which
SIR
HENRY VANE.
341
He says that Monk, the degraded and profligate traitor, who by sacrificing the cause, and the friends, of English liberty had become a I will repeat.
favorite at court, as the Duke of Albernarle, had taken great pains to procure his conviction, having resorted to threats and bribes, but without effect,
Captain Linn to bear false te