DISCOURSES ON DAVILA. No. xxi r htervonit dtinde, his,cogitationiius,avitum malum, rcgni cupiioi atque . inde pedum cercamcn coortum. THE Queen-inothci and the Guifcs, delayed no longer the opening of'the States. They l>. gan by the protcffion of faith, drawn up by the Sol bonne, conformably to the do&nnes of the Ruman Catholic Chuich. The Cardinal de Tournon, Prefi dentof the order of the Clergy, read it with a loud voice, and each of the deputies appiovcu ond adhered to it, upon oath , a precaution which they judged neccffary to assure thcmfelves of the catholicity of thole who were to have a deliberative voice, in the general assembly. Alter this solemn a&, the Chancellor proposed, in the pretence of the King, the matters which were to be taken into consideration. At the instance of the, Provinces, the three orders Jeparated, to examine the f effective demands, and make report oj their rejtsluluns. But all this was merely theatrical : it was nothing but farcical scenery. The Guiles knew, as well as the Contlable «ie Montmorency, that the mioillry could govern the kingdom, and nation at its will, as a Court or Supreme Executive alwayi will, where it is checked pnly by a (ingle reprefetnative assembly, cfpccially if that assembly have no authority but to advise.. Nay, if it have Legislative authority, the majority in that assembly can only govern, by impofiog its own men on the Executive, in other -words, by forcing the King, to take their creatures into the minis try. So chat the minillry and the majority in the National Assem bly must always atl in concert, and be agreed ; and they general ly arc so, to the intolerable oppreflion of the minority, as 111 this cafe. Reformition of government, and liberty of conscience, and redress of grievances in religion, were fubjefb which the court had too much cunning to biing before the Assembly. That •would have, been, as the Constable expressed it,-to have prepared a formidable opposition to themselves. Had the point been then fettled, that the Sates were a Legislative affeinbly ; and had the ijueftion of religion been brought fairly into deliberation and dis cussion before them, it is very probable that liberty of conscience to the Hugonots, might have been the result, even in that age.— But these, as Davila fays, were the smallest objects they had in view : all minds expcSed with much more solicitude, the iffueof the detention of the Prince of Condi. Their doubts were soon Telolved by a declaration of council signed by the King, the Chan cellor and all the grandees, except the Guifec, who,as fufpefted of partiality, atfcfled not to appear in this affair. Acommiffion was eflablifhed for the trial of the Prince, with authority to render a definitive fentencc. De Thou, prelidcnt, and Faye and Viole, counsellors of the Parliament of Paris, were the' Judges— Bourdin, Attorncy.Geucral, Tillot, Secretary: All the interrogations and acts weru done in the pretence of the Chancellor L'Hopital They heard the depositions of the prifouers of Amboifc, Lyons and others. They made preparations to interrogate the Prince. He refufed to answer, alledging that in quality of Prince ot the blo6d, he acknowledged no other tribunal, than the Parliament of Paris. He demanded an assembly of all the chambers of Parliament ; that the King should be prcient in pn l'on, and that the twelve Peers (hould have a voice,as well as the great officers of the crown, according to the ancient usage. That he could not excuse himfdf, for not. remonstrating ajainft a proceeding so unheard of, and ir regular, and stum appealing to the King. This appeal was carri ed to council, and appeared authorized by reason, by the ordina ry formalities, and by the cuftoins ol the kingdom. But rhe spi rit of rivalry, which is the spirit of party, demanded a sudden vengcance : a party at present triumphant, but doubtful whether it were at bottom the inotl powerful, were impelled by fear, as well as hatred, to with a prompt dccitiun. The appeal was de clared null. But the Prince, having renewed it, and persisting in his protestations, the council, at the motion of lh- Attorney-Ge neral, pronounccd that they ?ught to conlider the Prince as con victed, fmce he refufed to answer to commissioners named by the King. In this manner they obliged him to submit to interroga tories, and purfucd the trial, without loss of time, to final judj- menf, The Princes oT Bourbon, at the summit of misfortune, wrre ve- ] ry near expiating with their blood, the heinous crime of daring in competition with the Guises, to patronize liberty of confcience,and to (heller Irom p rfecution the diftrrffed Hugonots : as Manlius was precipitated from the Tarpeian Rock, for being the friend of the opprellcd debtors, and the Hval of Camillus and theQuintian family. Both wereaccufed, it is true, with crimes against the state. The l'plendor of the birth of the two Bourbons, and their personal merit, inrercftcd all France. Even their ene mies pitied their dcltiny. The Gu'.fcs alone, naturally enterpriz ing, pursued constantly their designs, without regard to the merit or quality of thofc Princes, whether they judged such an ast of fc vci ity absolutely neccifdi y, to the lafety and tranquility of the kingdom, or whether, as their enemies iuppofed, th y had no thing in view but the deflru&ion of their rivals, and the ,*(bbliih mcnt of their own grandeur. They declared openly, that it was necefTdi yby two fti okes, at the fame time,to flrike off the heads of Heresy and Rebellion. Such is thefpint of fophijlry : and such is the spirit of party. The Queen-mother, although she confcnted fe cretlv, and wilhed that the resolution taken at Amboife, of dc ftroying the Princes, (hould be executed, defned nevertheless, that ' all the odiuin of it fhoitld fall upon th. Guiles, as (he had always had the address, to accomplish. She proposed to manage the two parties, for tear of those unforefeen events, which the inconstancy of fortune might produce ; and .-tfedted much grief and melan cho'ly in hef behaviour, and reserve in her discourse. She had even frequent conferences with the two Ciiatillons, the Admiral and Cardinal, in which (he appeared disposed to seek some expe dient, to extricate from danger the Princes of the blood. She amused in the fame manner, the Dutchefs of Montoenfier, a Prin ce fl full of the best inreutions, an enemy of all diliimulation, and who judged of i he chara&ers of others by the re&itudc of her own. ■Her inclination to Calvinism, and her intimate connexions with the King of Navarre,»had enabled her to commence and continue between that Prince and the Queen, a secret correfpondefrce. These intrigues, although oppofice to the condu& which the court held in public, were palliated with so much artifice,that the most could not unravel their genuine deli m,even when thev reflettcd on the depths of the secrets ofinankind, and the diversity ot interests and pailions which serve as motives to their a£hons. Already the comraiflirmers had rendered their judgment against the Prih'cc of Conde. They had condemned him, as convi&ed of high treason and rebellion, to be beheaded, before the palace of the King, at the hour of the aflem bly of the States General. They delayed the execution, only to draw into the fame {dare the Con liable; who, in fpight of the repeated inftanccs of the court, still delayed his journey to the States. They wished to involve in the fame prolcriprion the King of Navarre, but they had not proofs agaiuft him, fufficient to fatisfy their own crcaturcs when one morning the King, in drefling himfelf, fell all at once into a swoon, so deep and violent, that his officers believed him to be dead. He recovered his senses, it is true : but his malady was judged to be mortal, and his life was despaired off This fa tal mischance terrified the Guiles. They pressed the Oueen mo ther, to execute the sentence against the Prince of Conde, while the breath remained in the bodv of the King, and to take the fame resolution against the Kino; of Navarre, to prevent :>ll the revolu tions which they might have to fear, in cafe of the King's death. They represented to her, with warmth, that this was the sole means of prelcrving the crown to her other infant children, and of diflipaling the storm which menaced France : that, although the Couftablc was uot arretted, and ia the present dclicau cTr cumftaiioe«, it would not be prudent to seize hint, yet >\hen they (hould have no longer tp fear, neither the credit, nor the prctenfions of the Princes of the blood, the ConlUble would be less formidable, as he would neither have the nobility in his ln terells nor the Hugonots of his party : that to deliberate in the moment of execution, and fulpend it in this critical lituation o the King, would be to lose thelruitof so many projefls cm.- du3ed to their end, with so much artifice and patience : that even the death of the King ought not to be an obstacle, becaule that b.others succeeding him of right, the fame reasons and the fume intcrefts dill fubfilUd, both for them and their mother. The Queen who had known'how topieferve herielf neuter, at least in appearance, and who had not motives so urgent to pre cipitatcmcalures, confidcred th.it under a minority, Kings might change their afpeft, and that the excLflive grandeur of the Guiles remaining without opposition, might become to her as forimda ble as the ambition of the Princes of the blood. Thus lome times by supposing the distemper ol the King to be leis d.mgei °" s ' sometimes by spreading favorable reports of a Ipeedy cure, lhe gained time, delayed the execution of the Prince and rcferved the liberty of acting according to circumlbnces, conformably to those views, in which {he was confirmed by the councils ol the Chancellor de L'Hofpital. As soon as !he had known that the Kings life was in danger, (he requclled the son of the Dukede Montpenfier, to conduit her fecretlyone night into the apartment of the King of Navarre, and in a long convention which ilie had with him, foe endeavoied, with her orainary diflimulation, to pcrfuade him, that (he wasvery far from approving all that had palled, and wiftied to ast in concert with him, to oppose the am bition of Ihe Guises. The Prince depended little on the finceritv of these protections : they had however an effect in the sequel.— On the fifth of December the King died. Charles the ninth, second son of the Queen, succeeded to Fran cis the second his brother.—He was but eleven years of age, and mutt have a tutor, and the Kingdom a regent. TO ALL WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME. BE IT KNOWN, That Robert Yates, John Lanfing, jun. Gulian Verplanck, Simeon De Witt, Egbert Benfon,and Melanuns each blown up, arid five ihips of the line disabled. This, if it be tine, is a considerable drawback on their triumph. In the