قراءة كتاب What was the Gunpowder Plot? The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence

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What was the Gunpowder Plot? The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence

What was the Gunpowder Plot? The Traditional Story Tested by Original Evidence

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 4

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6.    "   "   "   V. 229 7. Discovery of the Gunpowder Plot 136 8. Monteagle and Letter 115 9. Arrest of Faukes 125 10. Guy Faukes' Lantern 139 11. Group of Conspirators 3 12. Thomas Percy 149 13. Houses of Parliament in 1605 56-7 14. Ground Plan of the Same 59 15. House of Lords in 1807 61 16. Interior of House of Lords, 1755 97 17. Interior of "Cellar" 71 18. Arches from "Cellar" 75 19. Vault under Painted Chamber 73 20. Cell adjoining Painted Chamber 83 21. Facsimile of part of Winter's Confession, Nov. 23 168 22. Signatures of Faukes and Oldcorne 173 23. Facsimile of part of Faukes' Confession of Nov. 9 199

"Quis hæc posteris sic narrare poterit, ut facta non ficta esse videantur?"

"Ages to come will be in doubt whether it were a fact or a fiction."

Sir Edw. Coke on the trial of the Conspirators.


WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT?

CHAPTER I.

THE STATE OF THE QUESTION.

On the morning of Tuesday, the 5th of November, 1605, which day was appointed for the opening of a new Parliamentary session, London rang with the news that in the course of the night a diabolical plot had been discovered, by which the king and legislature were to have been destroyed at a blow. In a chamber beneath the House of Lords had been found a great quantity of gunpowder, and with it a man, calling himself John Johnson, who, finding that the game was up, fully acknowledged his intention to have fired the magazine while the royal speech was being delivered, according to custom, overhead, and so to have blown King, Lords, and Commons into the air. At the same time, he doggedly refused to say who were his accomplices, or whether he had any.

This is the earliest point at which the story of the Gunpowder Plot can be taken up with any certainty. Of what followed, at least as to the main outlines, we are sufficiently well informed. Johnson, whose true name was presently found to be Guy, or Guido, Faukes,[3] proved, it is true, a most obstinate and unsatisfactory witness, and obstinately refused to give any evidence which might incriminate others. But the actions of his confederates quickly supplied the information which he withheld. It was known that the "cellar" in which the powder was found, as well as a house adjacent, had been hired in the name of one Thomas Percy, a Catholic gentleman, perhaps a kinsman, and certainly a dependent, of the Earl of Northumberland. It was now discovered that he and others of his acquaintance had fled from London on the previous day, upon receipt of intelligence that the plot seemed at least to be suspected. Not many hours later the fugitives were heard of in Warwickshire, Worcestershire, and Staffordshire, the native counties of several amongst them, attempting to rally

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