Devon, Its Moorlands, Streams and Coasts - BestLightNovel.com
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'LORD FAWKLAND. That they be sent to all at once.
'SIR NEVILL POOLE. That Lord Keeper be forth coming.
'MR CONTROLLER. That respect be had to Judges. That none be urged to be accuser, but concluded that all be sent to.
'SIR JO. CULPEPER. Of twelve one was a Judas. To send to all the Judges that gave the Judgment, and to send immediately.'
Another debate shows the King and Parliament for the moment on unusually good terms. Sir Benjamin Rudyard said: 'G.o.d blest his Majesty with hopeful and fruitful progeny. To put in mind to provide for them. The first prince born amongst us this 100 years. Queen's good affection to Parliament. Concern her Majesty to uphold the glory and government of this kingdom.'
When the crisis came, most of the Devons.h.i.+re members seem to have supported the Parliament, guided, no doubt, to some extent by the wonderful influence of 'King' Pym. Pym sat for Tavistock; 'his colleague was a son of the House of Russell. William Strode sat for Buralston, and his elder brother for Plympton.' Northcote was slightly connected with the Strodes, and when war broke out he followed the Earl of Bedford. In September, 1642, Sir Hugh Pollard wrote to the Earl of Bath: 'The Earl of Bedford is now at Taunton, in want of men and money; he hath sent to his friends Chudleigh, Bampfield, and Northcote, for a supply of both, whose oratory cannot get one trained man to move, nor above eight volunteers.'
The letter receives a curious comment from the succeeding ones. At that very time the Earl of Bedford was issuing orders for the arrest of Sir Hugh Pollard, and four days afterwards Sir George Chudleigh and Sir John Northcote wrote to Major Carey, expressing their approval of Captain Dewett's conduct in capturing the Earl of Bath. Sir John was now at the head of a regiment of twelve hundred men, and seems to have held the command during the first two years of the Civil War. He took an active part in the defence of Plymouth, and in 1643 at Modbury a victory was won by the forces under Lieutenant-General Ruthen, Sir J. Bampfield, and Sir John Northcote, over Lord Hopton's troops. Many of the Parliamentarian gentlemen were anxious for peace, and just after this skirmish tried to arrange an 'a.s.sociation' or neutrality between Devon and Cornwall; but the idea was quashed by Commissioners from London. A few months later Clarendon mentions that Sir John was sent by the Earl of Bedford, the Parliamentary General of Horse, to negotiate a treaty with the Marquis of Hertford.
Sir John was elected to the Parliament of 1656, and showed himself a constant lover of liberty. He inveighed against the powers granted to Cromwell's House of Peers. 'It was minded you ... that no law was rightly made but by King, Lords, and Commons. I am sure this law was not made so.' He lays stress on the point that the old House of Lords ventured all that they had, and protests against their being superseded by new-comers. 'That they should be excluded and these advanced is not just nor reasonable.' A little later he spoke again on the same subject: 'We thought in the long Parliament we might restrain the inordinate power of the Chief Magistrate. That was the ground of our quarrel in the late war; but ... it seems we cannot bound these Lords' exorbitant powers.... I did fight against an exorbitant power in the King's hands, and _I will fight against it again to the last drop of blood_, if his Highness command me, whenever such power shall be set up, if it be to-morrow, and in whatever hands it be.'
John Northcote was one of the two Knights of the s.h.i.+re for Devon in the Convention Parliament, the other being the Lord General Monk. The Restoration was gladly welcomed by him, but he 'spoke repeatedly in favour of pardon and amnesty, and when necessity arose, he seems to have confronted the triumphant Cavaliers in debate as boldly as he had met them, or their fathers, in the field.' This was the last Parliament that Sir John sat in. A little later he turned to the West, and spent most of the days that were left him in Devon.
List of Authorities Consulted
BARING-GOULD (S.): A Book of Dartmoor.
BARING-GOULD (S.): A Book of the West.
BARING-GOULD (S.): Devons.h.i.+re Characters and Strange Events.
BLOUNT (T.): Tenures of Lands.
BLUNDELL'S Worthies, edited by M. L. Banks.
BRAY (MRS.): The Borders of the Tamar and the Tavy.
BRITTON (J.) and BRAYLEY (E. W.): Beauties of England and Wales.
BRITTON (J.) and BRAYLEY (E. W.): Devons.h.i.+re Ill.u.s.trated.
CAMDEN (W.): Britannia.
CAREW (BAMPFYLDE MOORE): Life and Adventures.
CAREWE (SIR PETER), Dyscourse and Dyscoverye of the Lyffe of, ...
collected by John Vowell, als. Hoker, of the Citie of Excester, gent.
CARRINGTON (N. T.): Dartmoor.
CHANTER (J. F.): A History of the Parishes of Lynton and Countisbury.
CHANTER (J. R.): Lundy Island.
CHICHESTER (Sir A. P.): History of the Chichester Family.
CLEAVELAND (E.): Genealogical History of the n.o.ble and Ill.u.s.trious Family of Courtenay.
CLERMONT (LORD): History of the Fortescues.
COTTON (R. W.): Barnstaple and the Northern Part of Devons.h.i.+re during the Great Civil War.
COTTON (W.): An Elizabethan Guild of the City of Exeter.
COTTON (W.) and WOOLLCOMBE (H.): Gleanings from Munic.i.p.al and Cathedral Records of Exeter.
DARTMOOR Preservation a.s.sociation's Transactions.
DEFOE (D.): A Tour through the Whole Island of Great Britain.
DEVON Notes and Queries.
DEVONs.h.i.+RE a.s.sociation's Transactions.
EDMONDS (Chancellor): Exeter Cathedral.
EVERITT (W.): Devons.h.i.+re Scenery.
FIENNES (CELIA): Through England on a Side-Saddle in the Time of William and Mary.
FOX (S. P.): Kingsbridge and its Surroundings.
FREEMAN (E. A.): Exeter.
FRIEND (H.): Bygone Devons.h.i.+re.
FROUDE (J. A.): History of England.
FULLER (T., D.D.): Worthies of England.
GILPIN (W.): Observations on the Western Parts of England.
HARDING (W.): History of Tiverton.
HARRIS (J. H.): My Devons.h.i.+re Book.
IZACKE (R. and S.): Remarkable Antiquities of the City of Exeter.
KELLY'S Directory of Devons.h.i.+re.
KING (R. J.): Sketches and Studies.