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wonderful delivery; which shut out, says Clarendon, all doubts
whether there had been such a deliverance, and whether the plot was
real or fictitious.
On June 11, the Earl of Portland and Lord Conway were committed, one
to the custody of the mayor, and the other of the sheriff; but their
lands and goods were not seized.
Waller was still to immerse himself deeper in ignominy. The Earl of
Portland and Lord Conway denied the charge; and there was no
evidence against them but the confession of Waller, of which
undoubtedly many would be inclined to question the veracity. With
these doubts he was so much terrified, that he endeavoured to
persuade Portland to a declaration like his own, by a letter extant
in Fenton's edition. "But for me," says he, "you had never known
anything of this business, which was prepared for another; and
therefore I cannot imagine why you should hide it so far as to
contract your own ruin by concealing it, and persisting unreasonably
to hide that truth, which, without you, already is, and will every
day be made more manifest. Can you imagine yourself bound in honour
to keep that secret, which is already revealed by another? or
possible it should still be a secret, which is known to one of the
other sex?--If you persist to be cruel to yourself for their sakes
who deserve it not, it will nevertheless be made appear, ere long, I
fear, to your ruin. Surely, if I had the happiness to wait on you,
I could move you to compassionate both yourself and me, who,
desperate as my case is, am desirous to die with the honour of being
known to have declared the truth. You have no reason to contend to
hide what is already revealed--inconsiderately to throw away
yourself, for the interest of others, to whom you are less obliged
than you are aware of."
This persuasion seems to have had little effect. Portland sent
(June 29) a letter to the Lords, to tell them that he "is in
custody, as he conceives, without any charge; and that, by what Mr.
Waller hath threatened him with since he was imprisoned, he doth
apprehend a very cruel, long, and ruinous restraint:- He therefore
prays, that he may not find the effects of Mr. Waller's threats, a
long and close imprisonment; but may be speedily brought to a legal
trial, and then he is confident the vanity and falsehood of those
informations which have been given against him will appear."
In consequence of this letter, the Lords ordered Portland and Waller
to be confronted; when the one repeated his charge, and the other
his denial. The examination of the plot being continued (July 1),
Thinn, usher of the House of Lords, deposed, that Mr. Waller having
had a conference with the Lord Portland in an upper room, Lord
Portland said, when he came down, "Do me the favour to tell my Lord
Northumberland, that Mr. Waller has extremely pressed me to save my
own life and his, by throwing the blame upon the Lord Conway and the
Earl of Northumberland."
Waller, in his letter to Portland, tells him of the reasons which he
could urge with resistless efficacy in a personal conference; but he
overrated his own oratory; his vehemence, whether of persuasion or
entreaty, was returned with contempt.
One of his arguments with Portland is, that the plot is already
known to a woman. This woman was doubtless Lady Aubigny, who, upon
this occasion, was committed to custody; but who, in reality, when
she delivered the commission, knew not what it was.
The Parliament then proceeded against the conspirators, and
committed their trial to a council of war. Tomkyns and Chaloner
were hanged near their own doors. Tomkyns, when he came to die,
said it was a "foolish business;" and indeed there seems to have
been no hope that it should escape discovery; for, though never more
than three met at a time, yet a design so extensive must by
necessity be communicated to many who could not be expected to be
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