sake especially, to moderate her sorrows and apprehensions
for him; I beseech thee (saith the excellent Person) take care of thy
health, sorrow not unsoberly, unusually, but preserve thy self for
the benefit of our dear Children; to whom the occasion of my
death will be as much honor, as my death its self is now sadness.
He kept himself in a very chearful and well-composed temper of
minde, till his parting with his dear Lady, which indeed was the
saddest spectacle, writes a Reverend man, that ever I beheld. In
which occasion he could not chuse but confess a little of humane
frailty; yet even then he did not forget both to Comfort and
Counsel her, and the rest of his friends, particularly in blessing
the young Lord, whom he commanded not to revenge his death,
though it should be in his power, intreating the like of his Lady;
adding to his Son a Legacy out of Davids Psalms, viz. Lord lead me
in a plain path, for Boy (said he) I would have you a plain ho∣nest
man, and hate dissimulation.
This being over, which he said was the hardest part of his life
in this world; he dealt seriously with a Reverend Minister about
his heart and his sins, reflecting much upon his Cowardly compliance
with (as he called it) and fear of a prevailing party, his 〈◊〉〈◊〉 my Lord
of Straffords death, and then addressed himself to the blessed Sa∣crament
(as he would call it emphatically) (after a private prayer
of half an hour long, in an excellent method, very apt expressi∣ons,
and a most strong, hearty, and passionate affections for his
Sins, for his Relations, for the King, Church, and State, and for
his Enemies) with great Humility, Zeal, and Devotion, confessing
himself much better, stronger, and ••hearfuller for that heavenly re∣past:
and after that, he desired the Reverend Person that admi∣nistred,
to pray preparatively to his death, that in the last action
he might behave himself as might be most for Gods glory, for the
indearing of his dead Masters Memory, and for the advancing of
his present Masters Service; and that he might avoid the say∣ing
or doing any thing which might savor either of vanity or sul∣lenness.
Whence ascending the Scaffold in the Pallace-yard Westminster,
and forbidding all Effeminate tears about him, he very Christianly
forgave his Enemies and Executioner; very resolutely declared
his Faith (dying in the blessed Profession as he called it, of the
Church of England) and his hope, professing that he loved good
works well, for which he had been suspected a Papist, but his An∣chor-hold,
which was Jesus, loved him, and gave himself for him
He very couragiously owned his late Masters Cause and Person, whom
he declared there (after a consideration he had, being a very ex∣cellent
Scholar,) of all the Images of Princes that ever were,
that he was the most vertuous and sufficient Prince known in the
world; very heartily prayed for the Restauration of his then So∣veraign,
his people, and the peoples Obedience, Peace, and Pro∣sperity
under him, and very solemnly desiring the peoples ear∣nest,
but secret prayer (with holy Ejaculations, that God Al∣mighty
would stench that issue of Blood; adding, This will not do