The Identification Of The Writer Of The Anonymous Letter To Lord Monteagle In 1605
William Parker Monteagle
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PREFACE
PREFACE
One of the great mysteries of English history is the anonymous letter to Lord Monteagle, warning him not to attend the opening of Parliament, appointed for the Fifth of November, 1605, which is popularly supposed to have led to the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot. The writer's identity was carefully concealed by the Government at the time; the intention being, as explained by Lord Salisbury, "to leave the further judgment indefinite" regarding it. The official statements are, therefore, as unsat
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LIST OF FACSIMILES
LIST OF FACSIMILES
1. The anonymous letter as delivered to Lord Monteagle, October 26, 1605, warning him not to attend the opening of Parliament appointed for the Fifth of November (From the original letter in the Museum of the Public Record Office) Frontispiece 2. A page of the MS. entitled "A Treatise against Lying," etc., formerly belonging to Francis Tresham, of which the handwriting was attributed by his brother, William Tresham, to William Vavasour. Now in the Bodleian Library. (Laud MSS. 655, folio 44) [1]
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I HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
I HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
Francis Tresham, of Rushton, in Northamptonshire, has recently (September 11, 1605) succeeded his father, Sir Thomas Tresham (a great sufferer for the Roman Catholic religion), in an inheritance of at least five thousand a year, in present money; after having, as he says, spent most of his time overburdened with debts and wants, and resolves within himself to spend his days quietly. His first cousin, Robert Catesby, being hard-up with funds exhausted in financing the scheme known as the Gunpowde
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II THE OFFICIAL STORY OF THE LETTER
II THE OFFICIAL STORY OF THE LETTER
The authentic, or rather the official, story of the delivery of the letter, as published by the Government at the time, states that on Saturday, October 26, 1605, Lord Monteagle "being in his own lodging, ready to go to supper, at seven o'clock [2] at night, one of his footmen (whom he had sent on an errand over the street) was met by an unknown man, of a reasonable tall personage, who delivered him a letter, charging him to put it in my lord his master's hands; which my lord no sooner received,
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III IDENTIFICATION OF THE HANDWRITING
III IDENTIFICATION OF THE HANDWRITING
The style of handwriting of the letter, as seen in the facsimile, is not in this writer's opinion, from a familiarity of thirty years with old scripts, apart from the disguise, the hand that an educated person would write at the time, but is essentially a commonplace and, no doubt intentionally, rather slovenly style of handwriting. The use of small "i's" for the first person seems, in view of modern usage, to suggest an illiterate writer; but educated writers, even the King, [12] then occasiona
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IV THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S OPINION OF VAVASOUR'S GUILT
IV THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S OPINION OF VAVASOUR'S GUILT
The Attorney-General in his speech for the prosecution at Father Garnet's trial (March 28, 1606), as given in the official report, alluding to Tresham's dying statement, said: "Upon his death-bed he commanded Vavasour his man, whom I think deeply guilty in this treason , to write a letter to the Earl of Salisbury." Henry Garnet's trial was purposely held at the City Guildhall, instead of Westminster Hall, the usual trial place where the conspirators had been tried, in order to make the occasion
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V FRANCIS TRESHAM'S CONFIDENCE WHEN IN THE TOWER
V FRANCIS TRESHAM'S CONFIDENCE WHEN IN THE TOWER
Upon Tresham's death in the Tower (December 23, 1605), the Lieutenant wrote to Salisbury: "I find his friends were marvellous confident if he had escaped this sickness, and have given out in this place that they feared not the course of justice." [43] As the late Dr. Gardiner observed: "This confidence they could only have derived from himself, and it could only have been founded on one ground." Had Tresham's committal to the Tower been otherwise than a mere formality, or "a farce," neither his
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VI THE VAVASOURS AS DEPENDANTS OF THE TRESHAM FAMILY
VI THE VAVASOURS AS DEPENDANTS OF THE TRESHAM FAMILY
The Tresham Papers [46] contain much information respecting the Vavasours as dependants of that family. Sir Thomas Tresham had a bailiff or collector, named Thomas Vavasour, an old and much valued Catholic servant, [47] who had, with perhaps other children, two sons, George and William, and a daughter, Muriel. George, who had been educated, was in June, 1596, sent up by his father with a letter to Sir Thomas, then in town, in order that he might be entered at one of the Inns of Court, as Sir Tho
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