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THE JOURNAL OF THE House of LORDS.
An Exact and perfect Journal of the Passages of the Upper House in the Parliament holden at Westminster, Anno 28 Reginae Eliz. Anno Domini 1586. which began there on Saturday the 29th Day of October (after two Several Prorogations thereof) and then and there continued until it was at length Dissolved on Thursday the 23th Day of March, Anno 29 Reginae ejusdem.
THE Journal of this Parliament both in respect of the greatness of the matter handled in it, being the bu∣siness of Mary Queen of Scots, as also of the many rare Precedents which happened in the Carriage of it, the Queens Person being represented and the Lord Chancellors place supplied by others, with the Ad∣journment and re-assembling again of the same, somewhat extraordinary, is and ought to be esteemed most worthy of observation. And it is most plain that this Parliament was at the first (beyond the Queens own expectation) sum∣moned and afterwards Assembled upon no other cause or ground than the timely and strange dis∣covery of that bloody and merciless Treason Plotted by Babington and others for the violent cutting off her * 1.1 Majesties life, of which Mary Queen of Scots had been first by a most Just and Honourable Tryal fully Convicted, and af∣terwards Judicially pronounced to have been in a high nature guilty. But yet her Majesty not satisfied with her so just a Tryal and Attainder, assembled the Parliament on purpose, that so all those former proceedings how just so ever might be further Committed and referred to the impartial examination and final Judgment of the whole Realm. And that this great Council of the Kingdom was merely called together at this time about this business is most plain, because the last Prorogation of ths former Parliament holden in Anno 27 Regin. Eliz. Anno Dom. 1584. was from the 26th day of April Anno 28 Regin. Eliz. Anno Dom. 1586. un∣to the 14th day of November then next ensuing: But long before the said day the former Conspi∣racy being discovered about the latter end of July in Anno eodem, the former Parliament was dissolved on Wednesday the fourteenth day of September following, in the 28th year of her Majesty; And this new one Assembled on Sa∣turday the 29th day of October immediately after ensuing: At which time the Queen came not to the Upper House in Person, but was represented by three Commissioners; not as her Majesty afterward professed, * 1.2 because she feared the Violence of any Assassinte; but because she abhorred to be an hearer of so foul, and unnatural a conspiracy plotted against her by the Scottish Queen, a Kinswoman so near to her Highness; Yet by this means her absence doubt∣less drew on the greater safety; and her Loving and Loyal Subjects did the more clearly per∣ceive in how great and unavoidable danger she stood as long as that Queen lived, and were therefore doubtless stirred up to consult in this so important a Cause with the greater Zeal and earnestness for the preservation of Religion, the Security of her Majesties Life, and the safety of